Biology:Ada (protein)

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Ada, also called as O6 alkyl guanine transferase I (O6 AGT I), is an enzyme induced by treatment of bacterial cells with alkylating agents that mainly cause methylation damage. This phenomenon is called the adaptive response hence the name. Ada transfers the alkyl group from DNA bases and sugar-phosphate backbone to a cysteine residue, inactivating itself. Consequently, it reacts stoichiometrically with its substrate rather than catalytically and is referred to as a suicide enzyme. Methylation of Ada protein converts it into a self transcriptional activator, inducing its own gene expression and the expression of other genes which together with Ada help the cells repair alkylation damage.[1] Ada removes the alkyl group attached to DNA bases like guanine (O6-alkyl guanine) or thymine (O4-alkyl thymine) and to the oxygen of the phosphodiester backbone of the DNA.[2][3] However, Ada shows greater preference for O6- alkyl guanine compared to either O4-thymine and alkylated phosphotriesters. Ada enzyme has two active sites, one for the alkylated guanines and thymines and the other for alkylated phosphotriesters.[1]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Regulation and expression of adaptive response to alkylating agents". Annu Rev Biochem 57 (1): 133–57. 1988. doi:10.1146/annurev.bi.57.070188.001025. PMID 3052269. 
  2. Friedberg, Errol; Graham C. Walker; Wolfram Siede; Richard D. Wood; Roger A. Schultz; Tom Ellenberger (2006). DNA Repair and Mutagenesis (2 ed.). Washington, DC: ASM Press. ISBN 1-55581-319-4. OCLC 59360087. 
  3. "Methyl phosphotriesters in alkylated DNA are repaired by the Ada regulatory protein of E. coli". Nucleic Acids Res 13 (8): 2683–98. 1985. doi:10.1093/nar/13.8.2683. PMID 2987862.