Topoisomerase IV is one of two Type II topoisomerases in bacteria, the other being DNA gyrase. Like gyrase, topoisomerase IV is able to pass one double-strand of DNA through another double-strand of DNA, thereby changing the linking number of DNA by two in each enzymatic step. Both share a hetero-4-mer structure formed by a symmetric homodimer of A/B heterodimers, usually named ParC and ParE.

Functions

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Topoisomerase IV has two functions in the cell.

While topoisomerase IV does relax positive supercoils like DNA gyrase, it does not introduce further negative supercoiling like the latter enzyme.[1]

Topoisomerase IV can unknot right-handed knots and decatenate right-handed catenanes without acting on right-handed plectonemes in negatively supercoiled DNA molecules, based on geometrical specificity of juxtapositions.[2]

Clinical significance

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Topoisomerase IV is also a target of antibiotics, such as the quinolone drugs, which include ciprofloxacin.

References

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  1. ^ Kato, Jun-ichi; Suzuki, Hideho; Ikeda, Hideo (25 December 1992). "Purification and characterization of DNA topoisomerase IV in Escherichia coli". Journal of Biological Chemistry. 267 (36): 25676–25684. doi:10.1016/S0021-9258(18)35660-6. PMID 1334483.
  2. ^ Rawdon, Eric; Dorier, Julien; Račko, Dušan; Millet, Kenneth C.; Stasiak, Andrzej (22 April 2016). "How topoisomerase IV can efficiently unknot and decatenate negatively supercoiled DNA molecules without causing their torsional relaxation". Nucleic Acids Research. 44 (10): 4528–4538. doi:10.1093/nar/gkw311. PMC 4889953. PMID 27106058.
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