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 31 毫秒
1.
Isolation of BamHI variants with reduced cleavage activities   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Derivation of the bamhIR sequence (Brooks, J. E., Nathan, P.D., Landry, D., Sznyter, L.A., Waite-Rees, P., Ives, C. C., Mazzola, L. M., Slatko, B. E., and Benner, J. S. (1991) Nucleic Acids Res., in press), the gene coding for BamHI endonuclease, has facilitated construction of an Escherichia coli strain that overproduces BamHI endonuclease (W. E. Jack, L. Greenough, L. F. Dorner, S. Y. Xu, T. Strezelecka, A. K. Aggarwal, and I. Schildkraut, submitted for publication). As expected, low-level constitutive expression of the bamhIR gene in E. coli from the Ptac promotor construct is lethal to the host unless the bamHIM gene, which encodes the BamHI methylase, is also expressed within the cell. We identified four classes of BamHI endonuclease variants deficient in catalysis by selecting for survival of a host deficient for bamHIM gene, transformed with mutagenized copies of the bamhIR gene, and then screening the surviving cell extracts for DNA cleavage and binding activities. Class I variants (G56S, G91S/T153I, T114I, G130R, E135K, T153I, T157I, G194D) displayed 0.1-1% of the wild-type cleavage activity; class II variant (D94N) lacked cleavage activity but retained wild-type DNA binding specificity; class III variants (E77K, E113K) lacked cleavage activity but bound DNA more tightly; class IV variants (G56D, G90D, G91S, R122H, R155H) lacked both binding and cleavage activities. Variants with residual cleavage activities induced the E. coli SOS response and thus are presumed to cleave chromosomal DNA in vivo. We conclude that Glu77, Asp94, and Glu113 residues are essential for BamHI catalytic function.  相似文献   

2.
TaqI is a metal-dependent endonuclease that recognizes T(downward arrow)CGA, with the arrow indicating the cleavage site. Mutations at K158 render the enzyme inactive and mutations at K157 significantly reduce DNA cleavage activity (W. Cao and F. Barany (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 33002-33010). Aspartate, glutamate, and histidine substitutions were made at K158 in the wild-type and K157S mutant TaqI endonuclease to understand the functional organization of the active site. None of the mutants was active with Mg(2+), but the DNA cleavage activities were partly rescued by Mn2+ for K157S-K158E and K157S-K158H mutants. The rescuing effects were observed with Mn2+ but not with other divalent cations. K157S-K158E required higher Mn2+ concentrations than the wild-type enzyme for DNA cleavage activity, suggesting that a Mn2+ ion is weakly bound at the 158 position. The need to neutralize K157 to recover the catalytic activity of K158E and K158H indicates that K158 and K157 may interact functionally. In analogy with EcoRV, Ca2+ stimulated Mn2+-mediated cleavage for the wild-type TaqI, suggesting the existence of at least two metal ions at the catalytic center. A catalytic mechanism involving two metal ions and the K157-K158 pair is proposed for TaqI endonuclease.  相似文献   

3.
The apurinic/apyrimidinic endonucleases (APE) contain several highly conserved sequence motifs. The glutamic acid residue in a consensus motif, LQE96TK98 in human APE (hAPE-1), is crucial because of its role in coordinating Mg2+, an essential cofactor. Random mutagenesis of the inactive E96A mutant cDNA, followed by phenotypic screening in Escherichia coli, led to isolation of an intragenic suppressor with a second site mutation, K98R. Although the Km of the suppressor mutant was about sixfold higher than that of the wild-type enzyme, their kcat values were similar for AP endonuclease activity. These results suggest that the E96A mutation affects only the DNA-binding step, but not the catalytic step of the enzyme. The 3' DNA phosphoesterase activities of the wild-type and the suppressor mutant were also comparable. No global change of the protein conformation is induced by the single or double mutations, but a local perturbation in the structural environment of tryptophan residues may be induced by the K98R mutation. The wild-type and suppressor mutant proteins have similar Mg2+ requirement for activity. These results suggest a minor perturbation in conformation of the suppressor mutant enabling an unidentified Asp or Glu residue to substitute for Glu96 in positioning Mg2+ during catalysis. The possibility that Asp70 is such a residue, based on its observed proximity to the metal-binding site in the wild-type protein, was excluded by site-specific mutation studies. It thus appears that another acidic residue coordinates with Mg2+ in the mutant protein. These results suggest a rather flexible conformation of the region surrounding the metal binding site in hAPE-1 which is not obvious from the X-ray crystallographic structure.  相似文献   

4.
Soluble inorganic pyrophosphatases (PPases) comprise two evolutionarily unrelated families (I and II). These two families have different specificities for metal cofactors, which is thought to be because of the fact that family II PPases have three active site histidines, whereas family I PPases have none. Here, we report the structural and functional characterization of a unique family I PPase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis (mtPPase) that has two His residues (His21 and His86) in the active site. The 1.3-A three-dimensional structure of mtPPase shows that His86 directly interacts with bound sulfate, which mimics the product phosphate. Otherwise, mtPPase is structurally very similar to the well studied family I hexameric PPase from Escherichia coli, although mtPPase lacks the intersubunit metal binding site found in E. coli PPase. The cofactor specificity of mtPPase resembles that of E. coli PPase in that it has high activity in the presence of Mg2+, but it differs from the E. coli enzyme and family II PPases because it has much lower activity in the presence of Mn2+ or Zn2+. Replacements of His21 and His86 in mtPPase with the residues found in the corresponding positions of E. coli PPase had either no effect on the Mg2+- and Mn2+-supported reactions (H86K) or reduced Mg2+-supported activity (H21K). However, both replacements markedly increased the Zn2+-supported activity of mtPPase (up to 11-fold). In the double mutant, Zn2+ was a 2.5-fold better cofactor than Mg2+. These results show that the His residues in mtPPase are not essential for catalysis, although they determine cofactor specificity.  相似文献   

5.
E. coli DNA topoisomerase I catalyzes the hydrolysis of short, single stranded oligodeoxynucleotides. It also forms a covalent protein-DNA complex with negatively supercoiled DNA in the absence of Mg2+ but requires Mg2+ for the relaxation of negatively supercoiled DNA. In this paper we investigate the effects of various divalent metals on catalysis. For the relaxation reaction, maximum enzyme activity plateaus after 2.5 mM Mg2+. However, the rate of cleavage of short oligodeoxynucleotide increased linearly between 0 and 15 mM Mg2+. In the oligodeoxynucleotide cleavage reaction, Ca2+, Mn2+, Co2+, and Zn2+ inhibit enzymatic activity. When these metals are coincubated with Mg2+ at equimolar concentrations, the normal effect of Mg2+ is not detectable. Of these metals, only Ca2+ can be substituted for Mg2+ as a metal cofactor in the relaxation reaction. And when Mg2+ is coincubated with Mn2+, Co2+, or Zn2+ at equimolar concentrations, the normal effect of Mg2+ on relaxation is not detectable. We propose that Mg2+ allows the protein-DNA complex to assume a conformation necessary for strand passage and enhance the rate of enzyme turnover.  相似文献   

6.
A genetic system was constructed for the mutagenesis of the EcoRV restriction endonuclease and for the overproduction of mutant proteins. The system was used to make two mutants of EcoRV, with Ala in place of either Asn185 or Asn188. In the crystal structure of the EcoRV-DNA complex, both Asn185 and Asn188 contact the DNA within the EcoRV recognition sequence. But neither mutation affected the ability of the protein to bind to DNA. In the absence of metal ion cofactors, the mutants bound DNA with almost the same affinity as that of the wild-type enzyme. In the presence of Mg2+, both mutants retained the ability to cleave DNA specifically at the EcoRV recognition sequence, but their activities were severely depressed relative to that of the wild-type. In contrast, with Mn2+ as the cofactor, the mutant enzymes cleaved the EcoRV recognition site with activities that were close to that of the wild-type. When bound to DNA at the EcoRV recognition site, the mutant proteins bound Mn2+ ions readily, but they had much lower affinities for Mg2+ ions than the wild-type enzyme. This was the reason for their low activities with Mg2+ as the cofactor. The arrangement of the DNA recognition functions, at one location in the EcoRV restriction enzyme, are therefore responsible for organizing the catalytic functions at a separate location in the protein.  相似文献   

7.
The interaction of BamHI endonuclease with DNA has been studied crystallographically, but has not been characterized rigorously in solution. The enzyme binds in solution as a homodimer to its recognition site GGATCC. Only six base-pairs are directly recognized, but binding affinity (in the absence of the catalytic cofactor Mg(2+)) increases 5400-fold as oligonucleotide length increases from 10 to 14 bp. Binding is modulated by sequence context outside the recognition site, varying about 30-fold from the bes t (GTG or TAT) to the worst (CGG) flanking triplets. BamHI, EcoRI and EcoRV endonucleases all have different context preferences, suggesting that context affects binding by influencing the free energy levels of the complexes rather than that of the free DNA. Ethylation interference footprinting in the absence of divalent metal shows a localized and symmetrical pattern of phosphate contacts, with strong contacts at NpNpNpGGApTCC. In the presence of Mg(2+), first-order cleavage rate constants are identical in the two GGA half-sites, are the same for the two nicked intermediates and are unaffected by substrate length in the range 10-24 bp. DNA binding is strongly enhanced by mutations D94N, E111A or E113K, by binding of Ca(2+) at the active site, or by deletion of the scissile phosphate GpGATCC, indicating that a cluster of negative charges at the catalytic site contributes at least 3-4 kcal/mol of unfavorable binding free energy. This electrostatic repulsion destabilizes the enzyme-DNA complex and favors metal ion binding and progression to the transition state for cleavage.  相似文献   

8.
We have characterized cloned His-tag human RNase H1. The activity of the enzyme exhibited a bell-shaped response to divalent cations and pH. The optimum conditions for catalysis consisted of 1 mM Mg(2+) and pH 7-8. In the presence of Mg(2+), Mn(2+) was inhibitory. Human RNase H1 shares many enzymatic properties with Escherichia coli RNase H1. The human enzyme cleaves RNA in a DNA-RNA duplex resulting in products with 5'-phosphate and 3'-hydroxy termini, can cleave overhanging single strand RNA adjacent to a DNA-RNA duplex, and is unable to cleave substrates in which either the RNA or DNA strand has 2' modifications at the cleavage site. Human RNase H1 binds selectively to "A-form"-type duplexes with approximately 10-20-fold greater affinity than that observed for E. coli RNase H1. The human enzyme displays a greater initial rate of cleavage of a heteroduplex-containing RNA-phosphorothioate DNA than an RNA-DNA duplex. Unlike the E. coli enzyme, human RNase H1 displays a strong positional preference for cleavage, i.e. it cleaves between 8 and 12 nucleotides from the 5'-RNA-3'-DNA terminus of the duplex. Within the preferred cleavage site, the enzyme displays modest sequence preference with GU being a preferred dinucleotide. The enzyme is inhibited by single-strand phosphorothioate oligonucleotides and displays no evidence of processivity. The minimum RNA-DNA duplex length that supports cleavage is 6 base pairs, and the minimum RNA-DNA "gap size" that supports cleavage is 5 base pairs.  相似文献   

9.
E C Wang  J A Rose 《Biochemistry》1981,20(4):755-758
A second endonuclease with DNA single-strand specificity has been purified from KB cells, a continuous line of hunan epithelial cells. In contrast to other mammalian enzymes that cleave single-stranded DNA, this enzyme has an acidic isoelectric point (6.5 +/- 0.2). Its pH optimum is 9.5, it requires Mg2+ of Mn2+ for activity, and it has a sedimentation coefficient of 3.2 S, based on sucrose gradient centrifugation. The enzyme specifically catalyzes the endonucleolytic cleavage of synthetic DNA homopolymers and denatured viral DNA but does not attack linear duplex viral DNA. The rate of hydrolysis of poly(dT) is approximately 8-fold greater than that observed with denatured DNA. The relative rates of hydrolysis of homopolymers by the endonuclease are poly(dA) greater than poly(dT) greater than poly(dC) greater than poly(dG). Unlike other DNA single-strand-specific endonucleases isolated from human cells, this endonuclease is relatively insensitive to inhibition by KCl.  相似文献   

10.
M D Sam  J J Perona 《Biochemistry》1999,38(20):6576-6586
The rate constant for the phosphoryl transfer step in site-specific DNA cleavage by EcoRV endonuclease has been determined as a function of pH and identity of the required divalent metal ion cofactor, for both wild-type and T93A mutant enzymes. These measurements show bell-shaped pH-rate curves for each enzyme in the presence of Mg2+ as a cofactor, indicating general base catalysis for the nucleophilic attack of hydroxide ion on the scissile phosphate, and general acid catalysis for protonation of the leaving 3'-O anion. The kinetic data support a model for phosphoryl transfer based on wild-type and T93A cocrystal structures, in which the ionizations of two distinct metal-ligated waters respectively generate the attacking hydroxide ion and the proton for donation to the leaving group. The model concurs with recent observations of two metal ions bound in the active sites of the type II restriction endonucleases BamHI and BglI, suggesting the possibility of a similar catalytic mechanism functioning in many or all members of this enzyme family.  相似文献   

11.
Several species within the amoeboflagellate genus Naegleria harbor an optional ORF containing group I introns in their nuclear small subunit ribosomal DNA. The different ORFs encode homing endonucleases with 65 to 95% identity at the amino-acid level. I-NjaI, I-NanI and I-NitI, from introns in Naegleria jamiesoni, N. andersoni and N. italica, respectively, were analyzed in more detail and found to be isoschizomeric endonucleases that recognize and cleave an approximal 19-bp partially symmetrical sequence, creating a pentanucleotide 3' overhang upon cleavage. The optimal conditions for cleavage activity with respect to temperature, pH, salt and divalent metal ions were investigated. The optimal cleavage temperature for all three endonucleases was found to be 37 degrees C and the activity was dependent on the concentration of NaCl with an optimum at 200 mM. Divalent metal ions, primarily Mg2+, are essential for Naegleria endonuclease activity. Whereas both Mn2+ and Ca2+ could substitute for Mg2+, but with a slower cleavage rate, Zn2+ was unable to support cleavage. Interestingly, the pH dependence of DNA cleavage was found to vary significantly between the I-NitI and I-NjaI/I-NanI endonucleases with optimal pH values at 6.5 and 9, respectively. Site-directed mutagenesis of conserved I-NjaI residues strongly supports the hypothesis that Naegleria homing endonucleases share a similar zinc-binding structure and active site with the His-Cys box homing endonuclease I-PpoI.  相似文献   

12.
The DNA polymerase gene of Thermococcus fumicolans harbors two intein genes. Both inteins have been produced in Escherichia coli and purified either as naturally spliced products from the expression of the complete DNA polymerase gene or directly from the cloned inteins genes. Both recombinant inteins exhibit endonuclease activity, with an optimal temperature of 70 degrees C. The Tfu pol-1 intein, which belongs to the Psp KOD pol-1 allelic family, recognizes and cleaves a minimal sequence of 16 base pairs (bp) on supercoiled DNA with either Mn(2+) or Mg(2+) as cofactor. It cleaves linear DNA only with Mn(2+) and requires a 19-bp minimal recognition sequence. The Tfu pol-2 intein, which belongs to the Tli pol-2 allelic family, is a highly active homing endonuclease using Mg(2+) as cofactor. Its minimal recognition and cleavage site is 21 bp long either on linear or circular DNA substrates. Its endonuclease activity is strongly inhibited by the 3' digestion product, which remains bound to the enzyme after the cleavage reaction. According to current nomenclature, these endonucleases were named PI-TfuI and PI-TfuII. These two inteins thus exhibit different requirements for metal cofactor and substrate topology as well as different mechanism of action.  相似文献   

13.
3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA (HMG-CoA) lyase catalyzes the divalent cation-dependent cleavage of HMG-CoA to form acetyl-CoA and acetoacetate. In metal-dependent aldol and Claisen reactions, acidic residues often function either as cation ligands or as participants in general acid/base catalysis. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to produce conservative substitutions for the conserved acidic residues Glu-37, Asp-42, Glu-72, Asp-204, Glu-279, and Asp-280. HMG-CoA lyase deficiency results from a human mutation that substitutes lysine for glutamate 279. The E279K mutation has also been engineered; expression in Escherichia coli produces an unstable protein. Substitution of alanine for glutamate 279 produces a protein that is sufficiently stable for isolation and retains substantial catalytic activity. However, thermal inactivation experiments demonstrate that E279A is much less stable than wild-type enzyme. HMG-CoA lyase deficiency also results from mutations at aspartate 42. Substitutions that eliminate a carboxyl group at residue 42 perturb cation binding and substantially lower catalytic efficiency (104-105-fold decreases in specific activity for D42A, D42G, or D42H versus wild-type). Substitutions of alanine for the other conserved acidic residues indicate the importance of glutamate 72. E72A exhibits a 200-fold decrease in kcat and >103-fold decrease in kcat/Km. E72A is also characterized by inflation in the Km for activator cation (26-fold for Mg2+; >200-fold for Mn2+). Similar, but less pronounced, effects are measured for the D204A mutant. E72A and D204A mutant proteins both bind stoichiometric amounts of Mn2+, but D204A exhibits only a 2-fold inflation in KD for Mn2+, whereas E72A exhibits a 12-fold inflation in KD (23 microm) in comparison with wild-type enzyme (KD = 1.9 microm). Acidic residues corresponding to HMG-CoA lyase Asp-42 and Glu-72 are conserved in the HMG-CoA lyase protein family, which includes proteins that utilize acetyl-CoA in aldol condensations. These related reactions may require an activator cation that binds to the corresponding acidic residues in this protein family.  相似文献   

14.
Sun W  Li G  Nicholson AW 《Biochemistry》2004,43(41):13054-13062
The ribonuclease III superfamily represents a structurally distinct group of double-strand-specific endonucleases with essential roles in RNA maturation, RNA decay, and gene silencing. Bacterial RNase III orthologs exhibit the simplest structures, with an N-terminal nuclease domain and a C-terminal double-stranded RNA-binding domain (dsRBD), and are active as homodimers. The nuclease domain contains conserved acidic amino acids, which in Escherichia coli RNase III are E38, E41, D45, E65, E100, D114, and E117. On the basis of a previously reported crystal structure of the nuclease domain of Aquifex aeolicus RNase III, the E41, D114, and E117 side chains of E. coli RNase III are expected to be coordinated to a divalent metal ion (Mg(2+) or Mn(2+)). It is shown here that the RNase III[E41A] and RNase III[D114A] mutants exhibit catalytic activities in vitro in 10 mM Mg(2+) buffer that are comparable to that of the wild-type enzyme. However, at 1 mM Mg(2+), the activities are significantly lower, which suggests a weakened affinity for metal. While RNase III[E41A] and RNase III[D114A] have K(Mg) values that are approximately 2.8-fold larger than the K(Mg) of RNase III (0.46 mM), the RNase III[E41A/D114A] double mutant has a K(Mg) of 39 mM, suggesting a redundant function for the two side chains. RNase III[E38A], RNase III[E65A], and RNase III[E100A] also require higher Mg(2+) concentrations for optimal activity, with RNase III[E100A] exhibiting the largest K(Mg). RNase III[D45A], RNase III[D45E], and RNase III[D45N] exhibit negligible activities, regardless of the Mg(2+) concentration, indicating a stringent functional requirement for an aspartate side chain. RNase III[D45E] activity is partially rescued by Mn(2+). The potential functions of the conserved acidic residues are discussed in the context of the crystallographic data and proposed catalytic mechanisms.  相似文献   

15.
Measurements of binding equilibria of EcoRV endonuclease to DNA, for a series of base-analogue substrates, demonstrate that expression of sequence selectivity is strongly enhanced by the presence of Ca2+ ions. Binding constants were determined for short duplex oligodeoxynucleotides containing the cognate DNA site, three cleavable noncognate sites, and a fully nonspecific site. At pH 7.5 and 100 mM NaCl, the full range of specificity from the specific (tightest binding) to nonspecific (weakest binding) sites is 0.9 kcal/mol in the absence of metal ions and 5.8 kcal/mol in the presence of Ca2+. Precise determination of binding affinities in the presence of the active Mg2+ cofactor was found to be possible for substrates retaining up to 1.6% of wild-type activity, as determined by the rate of phosphoryl transfer. These measurements show that Ca2+ is a near-perfect analogue for Mg2+ in binding reactions of the wild-type enzyme with DNA base-analogue substrates, as it provides identical DeltaDeltaG degrees bind values among the cleavable noncognate sites. Equilibrium dissociation constants of wild-type and base-analogue sites were also measured for the weakly active EcoRV mutant K38A, in the presence of either Mg2+ or Ca2+. In this case, Ca2+ allows expression of a greater degree of specificity than does Mg2+. DeltaDeltaG degrees bind values of K38A toward specific versus nonspecific sites are 6.1 kcal/mol with Ca2+ and 3.9 kcal/mol with Mg2+, perhaps reflecting metal-specific conformational changes in the ground-state ternary complexes. The enhancement of binding specificity provided by divalent metal ions is likely to be general to many restriction endonucleases and other metal-dependent nucleic acid-modifying enzymes. These results strongly suggest that measurements of DNA binding affinities for EcoRV, and likely for many other restriction endonucleases, should be performed in the presence of divalent metal ions.  相似文献   

16.
The integrase (IN) protein of the human immunodeficiency virus mediates integration of the viral DNA into the cellular genome. In vitro, this reaction can be mimicked by using purified recombinant IN and model DNA substrates. IN mediates two reactions: an endonucleolytic cleavage at each 3' end of the proviral DNA (terminal cleavage) and the joining of the linear viral DNA to 5' phosphates in the target DNA (strand transfer). Previous investigators have shown that purified IN requires Mn2+ or Mg2+ to promote strand transfer in vitro, although Mg2+ is the likely metal cofactor in vivo. IN activity in the presence of Mg2+ in vitro requires high IN concentrations and low concentrations of salt. Here, we show that the viral nucleocapsid protein NCp7 allows efficient IN-mediated strand transfer in the presence of Mg2+ at low enzyme concentrations. This potentiating effect appears to be unique to NCp7, as other small DNA-binding proteins, while capable of stimulating integration in the presence of Mn2+, all failed to stimulate strand transfer in the presence of Mg2+.  相似文献   

17.
We have determined the crystal structure of the PvuII endonuclease in the presence of Mg(2+). According to the structural data, divalent metal ion binding in the PvuII subunits is highly asymmetric. The PvuII-Mg(2+) complex has two distinct metal ion binding sites, one in each monomer. One site is formed by the catalytic residues Asp58 and Glu68, and has extensive similarities to a catalytically important site found in all structurally examined restriction endonucleases. The other binding site is located in the other monomer, in the immediate vicinity of the hydroxyl group of Tyr94; it has no analogy to metal ion binding sites found so far in restriction endonucleases. To assign the number of metal ions involved and to better understand the role of Mg(2+) binding to Tyr94 for the function of PvuII, we have exchanged Tyr94 by Phe and characterized the metal ion dependence of DNA cleavage of wild-type PvuII and the Y94F variant. Wild-type PvuII cleaves both strands of the DNA in a concerted reaction. Mg(2+) binding, as measured by the Mg(2+) dependence of DNA cleavage, occurs with a Hill coefficient of 4, meaning that at least two metal ions are bound to each subunit in a cooperative fashion upon formation of the active complex. Quenched-flow experiments show that DNA cleavage occurs about tenfold faster if Mg(2+) is pre-incubated with enzyme or DNA than if preformed enzyme-DNA complexes are mixed with Mg(2+). These results show that Mg(2+) cannot easily enter the active center of the preformed enzyme-DNA complex, but that for fast cleavage the metal ions must already be bound to the apoenzyme and carried with the enzyme into the enzyme-DNA complex. The Y94F variant, in contrast to wild-type PvuII, does not cleave DNA in a concerted manner and metal ion binding occurs with a Hill coefficient of 1. These results indicate that removal of the Mg(2+) binding site at Tyr94 completely disrupts the cooperativity in DNA cleavage. Moreover, in quenched-flow experiments Y94F cleaves DNA about ten times more slowly than wild-type PvuII, regardless of the order of mixing. From these results we conclude that wild-type PvuII cleaves DNA in a fast and concerted reaction, because the Mg(2+) required for catalysis are already bound at the enzyme, one of them at Tyr94. We suggest that this Mg(2+) is shifted to the active center during binding of a specific DNA substrate. These results, for the first time, shed light on the pathway by which metal ions as essential cofactors enter the catalytic center of restriction endonucleases.  相似文献   

18.
A specialized phage lambda ddeo carrying the deo operon of Escherichia coli is analyzed by exposing the DNA to the specific restriction endonucleases EcoRI and BamHI. Using the lambda ddeo DNA fragment, obtained by digestion with BamHI and plasmid RSF2124 as a vehicle, the hybrid plasmid pAM1 carrying all the genes of the deo operon is constructed and cloned in E. coli cells. It is shown that the activity of thymidine phosphorylase in the strain AM061, which contains hybrid plasmid pAM1 is 30-fold greater than that in strains of E. coli with chromosomal localization of the deo operon.  相似文献   

19.
A site-specific endonuclease (Endo.Sce I) which caused double-strand scission of DNA was highly purified from a eukaryote, Saccharomyces cerevisiae IAM4274. The molecular weight of the active form of Endo.Sce I was estimated to be 120,000 and 110,000 by sedimentation analysis on a glycerol density gradient and gel filtration on Ultrogel AcA34, respectively. Analysis of the fractions from the last column chromatography by polyacrylamide gel-electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate and by an assay of the endonucleolytic activities suggested that Endo.Sce I consists of two non-identical subunits with molecular weights of 75,000 and 50,000. Unlike restriction endonucleases, Endo.Sce I was active on chromosomal DNA of the cells which produced Endo.Sce I. Single-stranded DNA was not cleaved by Endo.Sce I, but inhibited the endonucleolytic activity of the enzyme on double-stranded DNA. The endonucleolytic activity of Endo.Sce I required the magnesium ions (Mg2+) as a sole cofactor; Mg2+ could not be replaced by Ca2+ or Zn2+. When Mg2+ was replaced by manganese ions (Mn2+), extensively purified Endo.Sce I cleaved double-stranded DNA at many other sites in addition to the sites at which DNA was cleaved in the presence of Mg2+. Experiments indicated that this is not the activation of contaminating endonuclease in the preparation of Endo.Sce I, but the result of relaxation in the site-specificity of cleavage.  相似文献   

20.
We previously reported a double-stranded endonuclease from HeLa cells, endonuclease R (endo R), which specifically cleaves duplex DNA at sites rich in G.C base pairs. In this report we describe the purification of endo R to near homogeneity by conventional and affinity chromatography. The molecular mass of the active form of endo R is approximately 115-125 kDa. SDS-gel electrophoresis reveals a major protein species of 100 kDa. The enzyme requires Mg2+ as a cofactor and is equally active on closed circular and linear duplex DNA substrates that contain G-rich sequences. A 50% reduction in cleavage activity is observed with Ca2+ ions and no double-stranded cleavage occurs with Zn2+. Use of Mn2+ causes an altered specificity at low concentrations of enzyme or divalent metal ion and nonspecific degradation of the substrate at higher concentrations. Endo R is strongly inhibited by sodium or potassium chloride and exhibits a wide pH optimum of 6.0-9.0. The pI of the enzyme is between 6.5 and 7.0. A 2-fold stimulation is observed with the addition of dGTP or dATP but specific cleavage is inhibited by ATP at an equivalent concentration. Cleavage activity is competitively inhibited 10-fold more efficiently by single-stranded poly(dG)12 than by other DNA competitors. The ends of endo R cleavage products contain 5'-phosphate and 3'-hydroxyl groups, and a significant portion of these products were substrates for T4 DNA ligase. Endo R appears to be a previously uncharacterized mammalian endonuclease.  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