Abstract

The inhibitory effects of two anionic compounds, Evans blue and aurintricarboxylic acid (ATA), on various kinds of polynucleotide‐synthesizing enzymes were examined. Under the assay conditions, optimized for each enzyme species, both these compounds strongly inhibited the activities of the purified human DNA polymerases α, β, γ, and DNA primase as well as those of DNA polymerase I and RNA polymerase from Escherichia coli and Rauscher leukemia virus reverse transcriptase. ATA was particularly effective in inhibiting retroviral reverse transcriptase and cellular DNA polymerase α. Evans blue, which is a structural analogue of suramin, exerted its inhibitory action largely by competing with the template · primer for the same binding site of the enzyme. On the other hand, ATA inhibited most, if not all, of these enzyme activities noncompetitively with respect to either the template · primers or nucleoside 5′ ‐triphosphate substrates. The inhibition constants for ATA were, in general, smaller than those for Evans blue.

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