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Parent term change for ATP-dependent DNA/DNA annealing activity #29334
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My electricity is just being shutoff for a couple hrs - so if I am silent for a bit..... But, these annealing activities are more related to helicase-type modality than adaptors, I think. |
Just talking to @colinlog |
I don't think that is correct as it is a very transient thing - nothing is being bridged but more smooshed together. Can is sit under 'catalytic activity, acting on a nucleic acid'? |
I never understood this term. There are 10 EXP annotations. |
CHAT-GPT Q is it a catalytic activity? Catalytic Activity Defined: Catalytic activities involve enzymes or catalysts that speed up a chemical reaction without being consumed or altered in the process. DNA reannealing is a physical process rather than a chemical one. It occurs when complementary single-stranded DNA molecules find each other and hydrogen bond to form a double-stranded structure. While DNA reannealing itself is not catalytic, some enzymes, like helicases, may influence DNA strand separation and reannealing indirectly by affecting the single-stranded state. |
As some require ATP hydrolysis, does not look passive. Could treat it as a class of chaperone - although this is somewhat vague. I am amenable to some sort of 'chaperone' class. AI Overview |
In these cases, is the ATP hydrolysis definitely connected to the reannealing because the ones I looked at seemed to have unwinding activity, too? |
ignore previous comment I just read the overview. |
No problem - I have had exactly the same concerns. |
When I look at the 29 EXP annotations for DNA/DNA annealing activity annealing, or have have some other activity RAD52 might be an exception but is the annealing a consequence of some other activity? POmbase has annotations for cut14 , cut3, and cnd3 with contributes to i"ll look at these |
POmbase has annotations for cut14 , cut3, and cnd3 with contributes to i"ll look at these In this study, we employed an in vitro approach, building upon our previous study, which demonstrated the ability of the condensin SMC heterodimer Cut3–Cut14 to remove single-stranded (ss) DNA-binding protein RPA or Ssb1, which had been bound to the unwound ssDNAs [12]. As the elimination of protein and/or RNA during the re-annealing reaction per se did not require ATP, we wondered how ATP interacts with condensin's ATPase domain during the re-annealing reaction. To our great surprise, we discovered that the phosphate groups of ATP bind to multiple sites on Cut3, an SMC4-like subunit, but this apparent ‘auto-phosphorylation’ is greatly diminished when the holocondensin complex, which has ample ATPase activity, is employed. We show that multiple phosphorylation sites are located in the hinge of Cut3/SMC4, and that phosphorylation is abolished in ATPase mutants. We investigated this ATPase-dependent phosphorylation of the hinge in detail; we propose that hinge phosphorylation represents a step in condensin's ATPase cycle, and that it is important for understanding condensin's dissociation from chromosomal DNA. In other words, ATP enables the mobility of condensin along chromosomes by causing it to dissociate from DNA. 3.16. ATPγS-pretreated wild-type SMC, but not ATPase mutant SMC, fails DNA re-annealing .....By contrast, the ATPase double mutant Cut3 K161I–Cut14 K38T protein treated with ATPγS could promote re-annealing (figure 5c), consistent with the notion that the intact ATPase domain is not required for DNA re-annealing. Actually, the intact domain appeared to be needed for the ATPγS-induced loss of re-annealing ability. Here it seems like the mutants affect reannealing ability. Not that reannealing is an'activity' |
Interesting. |
GO:0036310 ATP-dependent DNA/DNA annealing activity
is_a GO:0140657 ATP-dependent activity
should be moved under : GO:0008094 ATP-dependent activity, acting on DNA
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