首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 656 毫秒
1.
A new restriction-like endonuclease, BalI, has been partially purified from Brevibacterium albidum. This enzyme cleaves bacteriophage λ DNA at least 18 times and adenovirus-2 DNA at least 16 times, but does not cleave simian virus 40 DNA. All sites cleaved by BalI are also cut by the specific endonuclease HaeIII from Haemophilus aegyptius. The recognition sequence of BalI is 5′-T-G-G ↓ C-C-A-3′ 3′-A-C-C ↓ G-G-T-5′ and the cleavage site is indicated by the arrows.  相似文献   

2.
An additional sequence-specific endonuclease, XmaIII, has been partially purified from Xanthomonas malvacearum. XmaIII recognizes ten cleavage sites in adenovirus 2 DNA, two sites in bacteriophage lambda and no site in either simian virus 40 DNA or φX174 DNA. It recognizes the sequence
and cleaves at the sites indicated by the arrows. No other endonuclease with this particular nucleotide sequence specificity has been reported.  相似文献   

3.
An apparently full-length complementary DNA copy of in vitro polyadenylated MS2 RNA was synthesized with avian myeloblastosis virus RNA-dependent DNA polymerase. After the MS2 RNA template was removed from the complementary DNA strand with T1 and pancreatic RNase digestion, the complementary DNA became a good template for the synthesis of double-stranded MS2 DNA with Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I. We then constructed molecular chimeras by inserting the double-stranded MS2 DNA into the PstI restriction endonuclease cleavage site of the E. coli plasmid pBR322 by means of the poly(dA)· poly(dT) tailing procedure. An E. coli transformant carrying a plasmid with a nearly full-length MS2 DNA insertion, called pMS2-7, was chosen for further study. Correlation between the restriction cleavage site map of pMS2-7 DNA and the cleavage map predicted from the primary structure of MS2 RNA, and nucleotide sequence analysis of the 5′ and 3′ end regions of the MS2 DNA insertion, showed that the entire MS2 RNA had been faithfully copied, and that, except for 14 nucleotides corresponding to the 5′-terminal sequence of MS2 RNA, the fulllength DNA copy of the viral genetic information had been inserted into the plasmid. Restriction endonuclease analysis of the chimera plasmid DNA also revealed the presence of an extra DNA insertion which was identified as the translocatable element IS13 (see following paper).  相似文献   

4.
5.
The DNA methylated by Hha I methylase was resistant against cleavage of Hae II or Aha II endonuclease indicating that the methyl group of the C5 position of the inmost cytosine nucleotide interferes with the interaction between the enzyme and the hexameric recognition sequence. Considering that Hae II or Aha II methylase has not been isolated yet, the result explained above is a useful information for protecting a double stranded DNA from being cleaved by Hae II or Aha II endonuclease. In contrast to Hae II or Aha II endonuclease, Ban I endonuclease which also has Hha I sequence as its tetrameric core was able to cleave the same DNA normally. This result suggests that the C5 position of the inmost pyrimidine nucleotide is not an important contact point between Ban I endonuclease and its hexameric recognition sequence.  相似文献   

6.
A new restriction-like endonuclease, SlaI, was found and partially purified from Streptomyces lavendulae ATCC8664. This endonuclease cleaved bacteriophage lambda DNA at only one site, and cytosine-substituted bacteriophage T4 DNA at 16 sites. The recognition sequence was determined by using SlaI fragments of cytosine-substituted bacteriophage T4 DNA. The hexanucleotide recognized by SlaI endonuclease was
5′-C?T-C-G-A-G-3′
3′-G-A-G-C-A-↑C-5′
with the sites of cleavage as indicated by the arrows. Therefore, SlaI endonuclease was an isochizomer of XhoI endonuclease.  相似文献   

7.
A DNA methyltransferase activity was identified in a strain of Bacillus thuringiensis that was found to protect DNA from cleavage by the restriction endonuclease HaeIII at overlapping sites. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to confirm the recognition sequence of the methyltransferase as ACGGC. RID= ID= <E5>Correspondence to:</E5> N. Crickmore; <E5>email:</E5> n.crickmore&commat;sussex.ac.uk Received: 13 September 2002 / Accepted: 7 October 2002  相似文献   

8.
B C Lin  M C Chien    S Y Lou 《Nucleic acids research》1980,8(24):6189-6198
A type II restriction endonuclease Xmn I with a novel site specificity has been isolated from Xanthomonas manihotis. Xmn I does not cleave SV40 DNA, but cleaves phi X174 DNA into three fragments, which constitute 76.61%, 18.08% and 5.31% of the total length of 5386 base pairs, and cleaves pBR322 DNA into two fragments of 55.71% and 44.29% of the entire 4362 base pairs. The nucleotide sequences around the cleavage sites made by Xmn I are not exactly homologous, but they have a common sequence of 5' GAANNNNTTC 3' according to a simple computer program analysis on nucleotide sequences of phi X174 DNA, pBR322 DNA and SV40 DNA. The results suggest that the cleavage site of Xmn I is located within its recognition sequence of 5' GAANNNNTTC 3'.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The NgoPII restriction endonuclease, which recognizes the sequence 5-GGCC-3, differs from its isoschizomer HaeIII in being sensitive to methylation at the external cytosine residue. The entire nucleotide sequence of a cloned 3.3 kb segment of Neisseria gonorrhoeae strain P9 chromosomal DNA which harbours the NgoPII restriction-modification system has been determined. This data, coupled with sub-cloning experiments, indicates that the restriction endonuclease (R.NgoII) and modification (M.NgoII) genes are transcribed from separate promoters but are arranged in tandem, with the R.NgoPII gene being located on the 5 side of the M.NgoPII gene. Unlike all previously reported restriction systems the 3 end of the endonuclease open reading frame overlaps the 5 end of the methylase open reading frame by 8 codons. This overlap may have implications for the regulation of the NgoPII restriction-modification system.  相似文献   

10.
A HaeIIl monomer of a repetitive DNA family from Pennisetum glaucum (L.) R. Br. cv. Massue has been cloned and characterized. The repeat is 137 bp long and is organized in head-to-tail orientation in tandem arrays. The HaeIII monomer contains 55% A+T residues. The distribution of this highly repetitive sequence in different Pennisetum species and in other cereals was investigated. The HaeIII satellite is present in all Pennisetum species investigated but absent from other genera examined. In situ hybridization revealed a centromeric localization of this sequence on all seven chromosome pairs and indicated chromosome-specific differences in copy number. Methylation was investigated by comparative restriction enzyme analysis (Msp/HpaII) which showed a greater extent of methylation of the internal C of the enzyme recognition site 5-CCGG. A South-Western analysis, using an anti-methylcytosine antibody to examine the methylation status in P. glaucum confirmed that the sequence is not highly methylated.  相似文献   

11.
The relative distribution of bound cis- and trans-(NH3)2PtCl2 at specific sites in SV40 DNA is evaluated by monitoring the extent to which five restriction endonucleases, each of which cleave at a single, unique site, are inhibited as a result of the DNA modification. The order of cleavage inhibition is Bgl 1 ? Bam HI > Hpa II, Kpn I > Eco RI. Both isomers produce a comparable effect for any particular endonuclease. Inhibition correlates with the % (G+C) content within and about the recognition sequences. That modified sequences immediately adjacent to the recognition sequence influence cleavage is further supported by differential cleavage observed with the multicut Hind III endonuclease. The binding of cis-(NH3)2PtCl2 at the hyper-reactive Bgl 1 site may well be directly responsible for inhibiting SV40 replication.  相似文献   

12.
We have determined the relative location of pancreatic DNAase (DNAase I), spleen acid DNAase (DNAase II) and staphylococcal nuclease cleavage sites in the nucleosome core. Each of these three enzymes cleaves the DNA of chromatin at 10. n nucleotide intervals (n integer); this specificity presumably reflects the internal structure of the nucleosome. We have already reported that DNAase I cleaves nucleosomal DNA so that nearest adjacent cuts on opposite strands are staggered by 2 nucleotides, 3′ end extending (Sollner-Webb and Felsenfeld, 1977). Here we show that the nearest cuts made by DNAase II in nucleosomal DNA are staggered by 4 nucleotides, 3′ end extending, while cuts made by staphylococcal nuclease have a stagger of 2 nucleotides, 5′ end extending. The cutting sites of the three enzymes thus do not coincide. Each pair of staggered cuts, however, is symmetrically located about a common axis-that is, the “dyad axes” that bisect nearest pairs of cutting sites coincide for all three enzymes. This result is consistent with the presence of a true dyad axis in the nucleosome core.Our results support the conclusion that a structural feature of the nucleosome, having a 10 nucleotide periodicity, is the common recognition site for all three nucleases. The position of the cut is determined, however, by the individual characteristics of each enzyme. Sites potentially available to nuclease cleavage span a region of 4 nucleotides out of this 10 nucleotide repeat, and a large fraction of these sites are actually cut. Thus much of the nucleosomal DNA must in some sense be accessible to the environment.  相似文献   

13.
Restriction endonuclease MvaI recognizes the sequence CC/WGG (W stands for A or T, ‘/’ designates the cleavage site) and generates products with single nucleotide 5′-overhangs. The enzyme has been noted for its tolerance towards DNA modifications. Here, we report a biochemical characterization and crystal structures of MvaI in an apo-form and in a complex with target DNA at 1.5Å resolution. Our results show that MvaI is a monomer and recognizes its pseudosymmetric target sequence asymmetrically. The enzyme consists of two lobes. The catalytic lobe anchors the active site residues Glu36, Asp50, Glu55 and Lys57 and contacts the bases from the minor grove side. The recognition lobe mediates all major grove interactions with the bases. The enzyme in the crystal is bound to the strand with T at the center of the recognition sequence. The crystal structure with calcium ions and DNA mimics the prereactive state. MvaI shows structural similarities to BcnI, which cleaves the related sequence CC/SGG and to MutH enzyme, which is a component of the DNA repair machinery, and nicks one DNA strand instead of making a double-strand break.  相似文献   

14.
A new sequence specific endonuclease, MraI has been purified from Micrococcus radiodurans. This enzyme cleaves bacteriophage λ DNA at three sites, adenovirus type 2 DNA at more than 12 sites and has a unique site on ΦX174 DNA. It has no sites on SV40, PM2 and pBR322 DNA. The three sites on phage λ DNA are different from those cleaved by SmaI, XmaI and XorII. The sites of cleavage are located at 0.424, 0.447 and 0.834 fractional lengths on the physical map of λ DNA. MraI is shown to be an isoschizomer of SacII and SstII recognizing the palindromic nucleotide sequence ′5-CCGC↓GG-3′. The enzyme shows an absolute requirement of Mg2+, but is active in the absence of added 2-mercaptoethanol. The enzyme shows activity at a broad range of temperature and pH with an optimum at 45°C and pH 7.0. MraI represents the first restriction enzyme from a bacterium whose DNA lacks modified methylated bases.  相似文献   

15.
The restriction endonuclease MboII, isolated from Moraxella bovis (ATCC 10900), cleaves bacteriophage φX174am3 replicative form I DNA into ten fragments. The physical map of these fragments has been aligned with the sequence of φX174 DNA. There is no sequence with 2-fold rotational symmetry common to the region of all ten cleavage sites. However, the non-symmetrical sequence 5′-G-A-A-G-A-3′ 3′-C-T-T-C-T-5′ occurs near to each cleavage site. Precise mapping of the cleavages in both DNA strands at several sites places the cuts eight nucleotides to the right of the upper sequence and seven nucleotides to the right of the lower sequence.  相似文献   

16.
The 1.688 g/cm3 satellite DNA of Drosophila melanogaster is composed primarily of 359 base-pair units repeated in tandem. Most of these units contain a single cleavage site for both HaeIII and HinfI restriction endonucleases; however, some units lack one or both sites. Previously we had shown that the distribution of HaeIII and HinfI endonuclease sites varies widely between different regions of 1.688 g/cm3 satellite DNA; for example, some regions contain HaeIII sites in every unit and other regions (>10,000 base-pairs) contain no HaeIII sites (Carlson &; Brutlag, 1977). We have now cloned molecules of 1.688 g/cm3 satellite DNA which lack HaeIII sites and have shown that the absence of sites is caused by sequence variation rather than base modification. This result indicates that regions of 1.688 g/cm3 satellite DNA with different distributions of restriction sites differ in the sequence of their repeating units. We also show that a large fraction of the satellite DNA which is not cleaved by HaeIII endonuclease still contains HinfI endonuclease sites (and AluI sites) spaced about 359 base-pairs apart. However, one cloned segment lacking HaeIII sites was found to contain 33 tandem copies of a novel 254 base-pair unit. Sequence analysis showed that this 254 base-pair unit is homologous to the 359 repeat except for a 98 base-pair deletion. These data suggest that both units have evolved from a common ancestor and that each has subsequently become amplified into separate tandem arrays.  相似文献   

17.
The sites recognized by the Escherichia coli K12 restriction endonuclease were localized to defined regions on the genomes of phage φXsK1, φXsK2, and G4 by the marker rescue technique. Methyl groups placed on the genome of plasmid pBR322 by the E. coli K12 modification methylase were mapped in HinfI fragments 1 and 3, and HaeIII fragments 1 and 3. A homology of seven nucleotides in the configuration: 5′-A-A-C .. 6N .. G-T-G-C-3′, where 6N represents six unspecified nucleotides, was found among the DNA sequences containing the five EcoK sites of φXsK1, φXsK2, G4, and pBR322. Three lines of evidence indicate that this sequence constitutes the recognition site of the E. coli K12 restriction enzyme. The C in 5′-A-A-C and the T in 5′-G-T-G-C are locations of mutations leading to loss or gain of the site and thus are positions recognized by the enzyme. This sequence does not occur on φXam3cs70, simian virus 40 (SV40), and fd DNAs which do not possess EcoK sites, and occurs only once on φXsK1, φXsK2, and G4 DNAs, and twice on pBR322 DNA. In order to prove that all seven conserved nucleotides are essential for the recognition by the E. coli K12 restriction enzyme, the nucleotide sequences of φX174, G4, SV40, fd, and pBR322 were searched for sequences differing from the sequence 5′-A-A-C .. 6N .. G-TG-C-3′ at only one of the specified positions. It was found that sequences differing at each of the specified positions occur on DNA sequences that do not contain the EcoK sites. Thus, the recognition site of the E. coli K12 restriction enzyme has the same basic structure as that of the EcoB site (Lautenberger et al., 1978). In each case there are two domains, one containing three and the other four specific nucleotides, separated by a sequence of unspecified bases. However, the unspecified sequence in the EcoK site must be precisely six bases instead of the eight found in the EcoB site. Alignment of the EcoK and EcoB sites suggests that four of the seven specified nucleotides are conserved between the sequences recognized by these two allelic restriction and modification systems.  相似文献   

18.
A restriction endonuclease with a novel site-specificity has been isolated from the Escherichia coli strain RFL31. The nucleotide sequences around a single Eco31I cut on pBR322 DNA and two cuts of λ DNA have been compared. A common 5′GAGACC3′CTCTGG sequence occurs near each cleavage site. Precise mapping of the cleavages in both DNA strands places the cuts five nucleotides to the left of the upper sequence and one nucleotide to the left of the lower sequence. This enabled us to deduce the following recognition and cleavage specificity of Eco31I: 5 ′ G G T C T C N ↓ 3 ′ C C A G A G N N N N N ↑  相似文献   

19.
Summary SPO1 DNA contains only 5 cleavage sites for restriction enzymes which recognize and cleave the sequence 5-G-G-C-C (HaeIII or BsuR). Fragments of SPO1 DNA cloned in E. coli to substitute 5-hydroxymethyluracil (HMU) by thymine (T) remain resistant to HaeIII indicating that this unexpectedly small number of cleavages by HaeIII is not correlated with the presence of HMU in the normal phage DNA. It was previously shown that SPO1 is neither subject to B. subtilis R restriction (Trautner et al., 1974) nor modification in vivo (Günthert et al., 1975). We now show that SPO1 DNA can however be restricted and modified in vitro.  相似文献   

20.
A specific endonuclease from Arthrobacter luteus.   总被引:20,自引:0,他引:20  
A new restriction-like endonuclease, AluI, has been partially purified from Arthrobacter luteus. This enzyme cleaves bacteriophage λ DNA, adenovirus-2 DNA and simian virus 40 DNA at many sites including all sites cleaved by the endonuclease HindIII from Haemophilus influenzae serotype d. Radioactive oligonucleotides in pancreatic DNAase digests of (5′-32P)-labelled fragments of phage λ DNA released by the action of AluI had the 5′ terminal sequence pC-T-N-. The enzyme recognises the tetranucleotide sequence
and cleaves it at the position marked by the arrows.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号