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1.
Two global helix parameters important for DNA-DNase I interaction are the geometry of the minor groove and the DNA stiffness that resists bending toward major groove. Thus, local averaging of P-O3' bonds cutting frequencies (InP) reflects global helix parameters revealed by DNase I. Using the approximation that locally averaged InP values depend only on the type of the dinucleotide steps involved in the region of interaction, we calculated the collective contribution (sigma Dd) for ten different dinucleotide steps. Our results suggest that, at the first approximation, global varying helix parameters revealed by DNase I, might be predicted from sequence. Obtained sigma Dd function can be used as a sequence-dependent measure of protein-induced DNA flexure in the direction towards the major groove, which is usually connected to widening of the minor groove. In the course of analysis of Mg2+ and Mn2+ dependent DNase I digestions, no significant difference was found, in spite of the supposed differences in enzyme activity. These results suggest that if the second Mn2(+)-dependent active site exists, its activity is lower than that of the first one.  相似文献   

2.
The 5-methyl group of thymidine residues protrudes into the major groove of double helical DNA. The structural influence of this exocyclic substituent has been examined using a PCR-made 160 bp fragment in which thymidine residues were replaced with uridine residues. We show that the dT-->dU substitution and the consequent deletion of the methyl group affects the cleavage of DNA by deoxyribonuclease I and micrococcal nuclease. Analysis of the DNase I cleavage sites, in terms of di and trinucleotides, indicates that homopolymeric tracts of d(AT) become significantly more susceptible to DNase I cleavage when uridine is substituted for thymidine residues. The results indicate that removal of the thymidine methyl groups from the major groove at AT tracts induces structural perturbations that transmit into the opposite minor groove, where they can be detected by endonuclease probing. In contrast, DNase I footprinting experiments with different mono and bis-intercalating drugs reveal that dT-->dU substitution does not markedly affect sequence-specific drug-DNA recognition in the minor or major groove of the double helix. The consequences of demethylation of thymidine residues are discussed in terms of changes in the minor groove width connected to variations in the flexibility of DNA and the intrinsic curvature associated with AT tracts. The study identifies the methyl group of thymine as an important molecular determinant controlling the width of the minor groove and/or the flexibility of the DNA.  相似文献   

3.
DNase I-induced DNA conformation. 2 A structure of a DNase I-octamer complex.   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
The structure of a complex between DNase I and d(GCGATCGC)2 has been solved by molecular replacement and refined to an R-factor of 0.174 for all data between 6 and 2 A resolution. The nicked octamer duplexes have lost a dinucleotide from the 3' ends of one strand and are hydrogen-bonded across a 2-fold axis to form a quasi-continuous double helix of 14 base-pairs. DNase I is bound in the minor groove of the B-type DNA duplex forming contacts in and along both sides of the minor groove extending over a total of six base-pairs. As a consequence of binding of DNase I to the DNA-substrate the minor groove opens by about 3 A and the duplex bends towards the major groove by about 20 degrees. Apart from these more global distortions the bound duplex also shows significant deviations in local geometry. A major cause for the observed perturbations in the DNA conformation seems to be the stacking type interaction of a tyrosine ring (Y76) with a deoxyribose. In contrast, the enzyme structure is nearly unchanged compared to free DNase I (0.49 A root-mean-square deviations for main-chain atoms) thus providing a rigid framework to which the DNA substrate has to adapt on binding. These results confirm the hypothesis that groove width and stiffness are major factors determining the global sequence dependence of the enzyme's cutting rates. The nicked octamer present in the crystals did not allow us to draw detailed conclusions about the catalytic mechanism but confirmed the location of the active site near H134 on top of the central beta-sheets. A second cut of the DNA induced by diffusion of Mn2+ into the crystals may suggest the presence of a secondary active site in DNase I.  相似文献   

4.
Deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) footprinting methodology was used to analyze oligodeoxyribonucleotide duplexes containing unique and single, site-specific adducts of trinuclear bifunctional platinum compound, [{trans-PtCl(NH3)2}2 mu-trans-Pt(NH3)2{H2N(CH2)6NH2}2]4+ (BBR3464) and the results were compared with DNase I footprints of some adducts of conventional mononuclear cis-diamminedichloroplatinum(II) (cisplatin). These examinations took into account the fact that the local conformation of the DNA at the sites of the contacts of DNase I with DNA phosphates, such as the minor groove width and depth, sequence-dependent flexibility and bendability of the double helix, are important determinants of sequence-dependent binding to and cutting of DNA by DNase I. It was shown that various conformational perturbations induced by platinum binding in the major groove translated into the minor groove, allowing their detection by DNase I probing. The results also demonstrate the very high sensitivity of DNase I to DNA conformational alterations induced by platinum complexes so that the platinum adducts which induce specific local conformational alterations in DNA are differently recognized by DNase I.  相似文献   

5.
The conformation of the DNA helix is supposed to be a critical element in site-specific recognition by ligands both large and small. Groove width is one important measure of the conformation which varies with the local nucleotide composition, perhaps because of the presence of a purine 2-amino group on G.C base pairs. We have probed DNA with G-->inosine (I) and/or A-->diaminopurine (DAP) substitutions to see whether the location of the purine 2-amino group can indeed affect the minor groove width. At acid pH, the reactivity towards uranyl nitrate is modulated in substituted DNA quite differently from natural DNA, consistent with a marked narrowing of the minor groove at sites of G-->I substitution and widening at sites of A-->DAP replacement. The latter exerts the dominant effect. The expected changes in conformation are equally evident in the patterns of susceptibility to DNase I cleavage, but not to hydroxyl radical attack. Nuclease cleavage is maximal in normal and substituted DNA at regions of inferred moderate groove width which are generally little affected by the nucleotide substitutions. Consistent with models of sequence-dependent cutting by DNase I we find that the presence of a purine 2-amino group on the base pair three places upstream of the cutting site has a profound influence on the rate of reaction.  相似文献   

6.
S Kochanek  D Renz    W Doerfler 《Nucleic acids research》1993,21(25):5843-5845
DNase I binds in the minor groove of DNA and is used as an enzymatic tool to investigate the interaction of proteins with DNA. Here we show that the major groove located 5-methyldeoxycytidine can enhance or inhibit the cleavage rates of DNA by DNase I. This effect may be caused in part by changes in DNA structure affecting the accessibility of the minor groove of DNA to DNase I.  相似文献   

7.
S Cal  K L Tan  A McGregor    B A Connolly 《The EMBO journal》1998,17(23):7128-7138
Bovine pancreatic deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) is a nuclease of relatively low specificity which interacts with DNA in the minor groove. No contacts are made between the protein and the major groove of the nucleic acid. DNase I is structurally homologous to exonuclease III, a DNA-repair enzyme with multiple activities. One of the main differences between the two enzymes is the presence of an additional alpha-helix in exonuclease III, in a position suggestive of interaction with the major groove of DNA. Recombinant DNA techniques have been used to add 14 amino acids, comprising the 10 amino acids of the exonuclease III alpha-helix flanked by a glycine rich region, to DNase I. The polypeptide has been inserted after serine 174, an amino acid on the surface of DNase I corresponding to the location of the extra alpha-helix in exonuclease III. The recombinant protein, DNase-exohelix, has been purified and its catalytic activities towards DNA investigated. The recombinant protein demonstrated a high selectivity for endonucleolytic cleavage at abasic sites in DNA, a property of exonuclease III but not native DNase I. Thus the insertion of 14 amino acids at Ser174, converts DNase I to an exonuclease III-like enzyme with DNA-repair properties.  相似文献   

8.
A Yonezawa  J Kuwahara  N Fujii  Y Sugiura 《Biochemistry》1992,31(11):2998-3004
In view of the cationic amphipathic structure of tachyplesin I and antiparallel beta-sheet as a general DNA binding motif, DNA binding of the antimicrobial peptide has been examined. Several footprinting-like techniques using DNase I protection, dimethyl sulfate protection, and bleomycin- (BLM-) induced DNA cleavage were applied in this study. Some distinct footprints with DNase I are detected, and also the sequence-specific cleavage mode of the BLM-Fe(II) complex clearly is altered in the presence of tachyplesin I. In addition, methylation of the N-7 residue of guanine situated in the DNA major groove is not entirely inhibited (or activated) by tachyplesin I. The results suggest that tachyplesin I interacts with the minor groove of DNA duplex. Disappearance of the footprints by dithiothreitol-treated tachyplesin I and Ala-tachyplesin strongly suggests a significant contribution of secondary structure containing an antiparallel beta-sheet to the DNA binding of tachyplesin I. This is the first report on DNA interaction with a small peptide which contains a unique antiparallel beta-sheet structure. The mechanism for antimicrobial action of tachyplesin I has also been inferred.  相似文献   

9.
Uranyl mediated photocleavage of double stranded DNA is proposed as a general probing for DNA helix conformation in terms of minor groove width/electronegative potential. Specifically, it is found that A/T-tracts known to constitute strong distamycin binding sites are preferentially photocleaved by uranyl in a way indicating strongest uranyl binding at the center of the minor groove of the AT-region. The A-tracts of kinetoplast DNA show the highest reactivity at the 3'-end of the tract--as opposed to cleavage by EDTA/Fell--in accordance with the minor groove being more narrow at this end. Finally, uranyl photocleavage of the internal control region (ICR) of the 5S-RNA gene yields a cleavage modulation pattern fully compatible with that obtained by DNase I which also--in a more complex way--senses DNA minor groove width.  相似文献   

10.
I- Dmo I is a homing enzyme of the LAGLI-DADG type that recognizes up to 20 bp of DNA and is encoded by an archaeal intron of the hyperthermophilic archaeon Desulfurococcus mobilis . A combined mutational and DNA footprinting approach was employed to investigate the specificity of the I- Dmo I-substrate interaction. The results indicate that the enzyme binds primarily to short base paired regions that border the sites of DNA cleavage and intron insertion. The minimal substrate spans no more than 15 bp and while sequence degeneracy is tolerated in the DNA binding regions, the sequence and size of the cleavage region is highly conserved. The enzyme has a slow turnover rate and cuts the coding strand with a slight preference over the non-coding strand. Complex formation produces some distortion of the DNA double helix within the cleavage region. The data are compatible with the two DNA-binding domains of I- Dmo I bridging the minor groove, where cleavage occurs, and interacting within the major groove on either side, thereby stabilizing a distorted DNA double helix. This may provide a general mode of DNA interaction at least for the LAGLIDADG-type homing enzymes.  相似文献   

11.
The bending of kinetoplast DNA from Crithidia fasciculata is thought to be related to the periodic distribution of AA or TT cluster sequences. The sensitivity to DNase I of the two strands of this DNA was analyzed at nucleotide resolution by sequencing gel electrophoresis. The effect on the DNase I cleavage pattern of two drugs, ditercalinium and distamycin, that are able to remove bending was analyzed. The same analysis was done on a pBR 322 DNA fragment of random sequence as a control. The periodic distribution of the AA or TT clusters in the bent DNA fragment was first analyzed by computing the autocorrelation function of the AA or TT clusters in the bent DNA fragment. It is shown that the AT tracts are on average 10.5 base pairs apart. This value is almost identical with that of the B-DNA helix pitch in solution [10.5 (Wang, 1979); 10.6 +/- 0.1 (Rhodes & Klug, 1980)]. To reveal the periodic pattern of DNase I cleavage on this bent DNA, alone or in presence of drugs, the cross correlation between the different bands obtained from DNAse I cleavage and the presence of AA or TT sequences was computed. This shows that GC and mixed sequences are the most sensitive regions. These data also suggest that there is a periodic fluctuation in the width of the minor groove in the bent fragment. Ditercalinium and distamycin alter the DNase I cutting pattern of the bent DNA fragment but in an inverse fashion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
DNA binding proteins find their cognate sequences within genomic DNA through recognition of specific chemical and structural features. Here, we demonstrate that high-resolution DNase I cleavage profiles can provide detailed information about the shape and chemical modification status of genomic DNA. Analyzing millions of DNA-backbone hydrolysis events on naked genomic DNA, we show that the intrinsic rate of cleavage by DNase I closely tracks the width of the minor groove. Integration of these DNase I cleavage data with bisulfite sequencing data for the same cell type genome reveals that the cleavage directly adjacent to CpG dinucleotides is enhanced at least eight-fold by cytosine methylation. This phenomenon we show is attributable to methylation-induced narrowing of the minor groove. Furthermore, we demonstrate that it enables simultaneous mapping of DNase I hypersensitivity and regional DNA methylation levels using dense in vivo cleavage data. Taken together, our results suggest a general mechanism through which CpG methylation can modulate protein–DNA interaction strength via the remodeling of DNA shape.  相似文献   

13.
X-ray structure of the DNase I-d(GGTATACC)2 complex at 2.3 A resolution.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The crystal structure of a complex between DNase I and the self-complementary octamer duplex d(GGTATACC)2 has been solved using the molecular replacement method and refined to a crystallographic R-factor of 18.8% for all data between 6.0 and 2.3 A resolution. In contrast to the structure of the DNase I-d(GCGATCGC)2 complex solved previously, the DNA remains uncleaved in the crystal. The general architecture of the two complexes is highly similar. DNase I binds in the minor groove of a right-handed DNA duplex, and to the phosphate backbones on either side over five base-pairs, resulting in a widening of the minor groove and a concurrent bend of the DNA away from the bound enzyme. There is very little change in the structure of the DNase I on binding the substrate. Many other features of the interaction are conserved in the two complexes, in particular the stacking of a deoxyribose group of the DNA onto the side-chain of a tyrosine residue (Y76), which affects the DNA conformation and the binding of an arginine side-chain in the minor groove. Although the structures of the DNA molecules appear at first sight rather similar, detailed analysis reveals some differences that may explain the relative resistance of the d(GGTATACC)2 duplex to cleavage by DNase I: whilst some backbone parameters are characteristic of a B-conformation, the spatial orientation of the base-pairs in the d(GGTATACC)2 duplex is close to that generally observed in A-DNA. These results further support the hypothesis that the minor-groove width and depth and the intrinsic flexibility of DNA are the most important parameters affecting the interaction. The disposition of residues around the scissile phosphate group suggests that two histidine residues, H134 and H252, are involved in catalysis.  相似文献   

14.
Human DNase I is an endonuclease that catalyzes the hydrolysis of double-stranded DNA predominantly by a single-stranded nicking mechanism under physiological conditions in the presence of divalent Mg and Ca cations. It binds to the minor groove and the backbone phosphate group and has no contact with the major groove of the right-handed DNA duplex. The aim of this study was to examine the effects of DNase I - DNA complexation on DNA and protein conformations.We monitored the interaction of DNA with DNase I under physiological conditions in the absence of Mg2+, with a constant DNA concentration (12.5 mmol/L; phosphate) and various protein concentrations (10-250 micromol/L). We used Fourier transfrom infrared, UV-visible, and circular dichroism spectroscopic methods to determine the protein binding mode, binding constant, and effects of polynucleotide-enzyme interactions on both DNA and protein conformations. Structural analyses showed major DNase-PO2 binding and minor groove interaction, with an overall binding constant, K, of 5.7 x 10(5) +/- 0.78 x 10(5) (mol/L)-1. We found that the DNase I - DNA interaction altered protein secondary structure, with a major reduction in alpha helix and an increase in beta sheet and random structures, and that a partial B-to-A DNA conformational change occurred. No DNA digestion was observed upon protein-DNA complexation.  相似文献   

15.
Preferential cleavage of active genes by DNase I has been correlated with a structurally altered conformation of DNA at the hypersensitive site in chromatin. To have a better understanding of the structural requirements for gene activation as probed by DNase I action, digestability by DNase I of synthetic polynucleotides having the ability to adopt B and non-B conformation (like Z-form) was studied which indicated a marked higher digestability of the B-form of DNA. Left handed Z form present within a natural sequence in supercoiled plasmid also showed marked resistance towards DNase I digestion. We show that alternating purine-pyrimidine sequences adopting Z-conformation exhibit DNAse I foot printing even in a protein free system. The logical deductions from the results indicate that 1) altered structure like Z-DNA is not a favourable substrate for DNase I, 2) both the ends of the alternating purine-pyrimidine insert showed hypersensitivity, 3) B-form with a minor groove of 12-13 A is a more favourable substrate for DNase I than an altered structure, 4) any structure of DNA deviating largely from B form with a capacity to flip over to the B-form are potential targets for the DNase I enzymic probes in naked DNA.  相似文献   

16.
We present titrations of the human δβ-globin gene region with DNA minor groove binders netropsin, bisnetropsin, distamycin, chromomycin and four bis-quaternary ammonium compounds in the presence of calf thymus topoisomerase II and DNase I. With increasing ligand concentration, stimulation and inhibition of enzyme activity were detected and quantitatively evaluated. Additionally we show a second type of stimulation, the appearance of strong new topoisomerase II cleavage sites at high ligand concentrations. The specific binding sites of the minor groove binders of the DNA sequence and their microscopic binding constants were determined from DNase I footprints. A binding mechanism for minor groove binders is proposed in order to explain these results especially when ligand concentration is increased. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

17.
B M Cons  K R Fox 《Biochemistry》1991,30(25):6314-6321
Regions of An.Tn, (GA)n.(TC)n, and (GT)n.(AC)n have been cloned into the SmaI (CCC/GGG) site of plasmid pUC19. HindIII-EcoRI restriction fragments containing these inserts have been used as substrates for footprinting experiments using DNase I, DNase II, and micrococcal nuclease as probes. These present good mithramycin binding sites (GGG) flanking repetitive regions to which the drug does not bind. In each case, mithramycin footprints are observed at the CCC/GGG sites, which are not affected by the nature of the surrounding sequences. Some weaker binding is detected at TCGA and ACCA sites and at regions of alternating GA. No binding is found to regions of alternating GT. An.Tn inserts (n = 23 or 69) are normally resistant to cleavage by all these probes; in the presence of mithramycin, a dramatic increase in DNase I cleavage is observed throughout the entire insert and is indicative of an alteration in DNA structure. Similar changes are seen with DNase II and micrococcal nuclease. These changes cannot be explained by invoking changes in the ratio of free substrate to cleavage agent. In contrast, cleavage of (GA)n.(CT)n and (GT)n.(AC)n inserts is not affected by drug binding. The results are consistent with a model in which mithramycin causes dramatic changes in the width of the DNA minor groove, generating a structure which has some properties of A-DNA, and suggest that this can be propagated into surrounding DNA regions in a sequence-dependent manner. The structural alterations with An.Tn are highly cooperative and can be transmitted over at least three turns of the DNA helix.  相似文献   

18.
Cline SD  Jones WR  Stone MP  Osheroff N 《Biochemistry》1999,38(47):15500-15507
Topoisomerase II is the target for several anticancer drugs that "poison" the enzyme and convert it to a cellular toxin by increasing topoisomerase II-mediated DNA cleavage. In addition to these "exogenous topoisomerase II poisons," DNA lesions such as abasic sites act as "endogenous poisons" of the enzyme. Drugs and lesions are believed to stimulate DNA scission by altering the structure of the double helix within the cleavage site of the enzyme. However, the structural alterations that enhance cleavage are unknown. Since abasic sites are an intrinsic part of the genetic material, they represent an attractive model to assess DNA distortions that lead to altered topoisomerase II function. Therefore, the structure of a double-stranded dodecamer containing a tetrahydrofuran apurinic lesion at the +2 position of a topoisomerase II DNA cleavage site was determined by NMR spectroscopy. Three major features distinguished the apurinic structure ( = 0.095) from that of wild-type ( = 0.077). First, loss of base stacking at the lesion collapsed the major groove and reduced the distance between the two scissile phosphodiester bonds. Second, the apurinic lesion induced a bend that was centered about the topoisomerase II cleavage site. Third, the base immediately opposite the lesion was extrahelical and relocated to the minor groove. All of these structural alterations have the potential to influence interactions between topoisomerase II and its DNA substrate.  相似文献   

19.
20.
We describe a structural model for DNA binding by the caspase-activated DNase (CAD). Results of a mutational analysis and computational modeling suggest that DNA is bound via a positively charged surface with two functionally distinct regions, one being the active site facing the DNA minor groove and the other comprising distal residues close to or directly from helix alpha4, which binds DNA in the major groove. This bipartite protein-DNA interaction is present once in the CAD/inhibitor of CAD heterodimer and repeated twice in the active CAD dimer.  相似文献   

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