topoisomerasens
Topoisomerasens, or topoisomerases, are essential enzymes that regulate the topology of DNA. They solve problems caused by DNA winding during processes such as replication, transcription, and chromosome segregation by creating transient breaks in the DNA backbone, allowing strands to pass and then resealing. This activity relieves torsional stress and untangles knots and tangles that arise as DNA is copied and read.
There are two main classes: Type I and Type II. Type I topoisomerases induce single-strand breaks and
In bacteria, distinct Type IIA topoisomerases include DNA gyrase, which introduces negative supercoils, and topoisomerase IV,
Medical relevance stems from the enzymes’ essential roles. Bacterial topoisomerases are targets of fluoroquinolone antibiotics, which