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Experimental and structural evidence that herpes 1 kinase and cellular DNA polymerase(s) discriminate on the basis of sugar pucker

  1. Author:
    Marquez, V. E.
    Ben Kasus, T.
    Barchi, J. J.
    Green, K. M.
    Nicklaus, M. C.
    Agbaria, R.
    1. Year: 2004
  1. Journal: Journal of the American Chemical Society
    1. 126
    2. 2
    3. Pages: 543-549
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    Two isomers of methanocarba. (MC) thymidine (T), one an effective antiherpes agent with the pseudosugar moiety locked in the North (N) hemisphere of the pseudorotational cycle (1a, N-MCT) and the other an inactive isomer locked in the antipodean South (S) conformation (1b, S-MCT) were used to determine whether kinases and polymerases discriminate between their substrates on the basis of sugar conformation. A combined solid-state and solution conformational analysis of both compounds, coupled with the direct measurement of mono-, di-, and triphosphate levels in control cells, cells infected with the Herpes simplexvirus, or cells transfected with the corresponding viral kinase gene (HSV-tk), suggests that kinases prefer substrates that adopt the S sugar conformation. On the other hand, the cellular DNA polymerase(s) of a murine tumor cell line transfected with HSV-tk incorporated almost exclusively the triphosphate of the locked N conformer (N- MCTTP), notwithstanding the presence of higher triphosphate levels of the S-conformer (S-MCTTP)

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External Sources

  1. WOS: 000188197800046

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