Publication | Open Access
An Activity from Mammalian Cells That Untwists Superhelical DNA—A Possible Swivel For DNA Replication
337
Citations
17
References
1972
Year
ChromatinGenome InstabilityDna NanotechnologyDnaDevelopmental BiologyCell DivisionSuperhelical TurnsMedicineNatural SciencesDna AnalysisMolecular BiologyDna ReplicationNuclear OrganizationDna ComputingMammalian CellsCell BiologyGenome EditingSecondary Mouse-embryo Cells
Nuclei from secondary mouse-embryo cells contain an activity capable of untwisting closed-circular DNAs containing either negative or positive superhelical turns. The activity has no apparent effect on a closed-circular DNA containing no superhelical turns, and is not due to the combined action of an endonuclease and polynucleotide ligase. The enzyme apparently acts by introducing a single-strand nick into the DNA, forming a DNA-enzyme complex that allows the strands to rotate relative to the helix axis before reversing the reaction and sealing the break. The enzyme might possibly serve as a swivel during DNA replication.
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