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A survey of DNase I in nine different carp tissues showed that the hepatopancreas has the highest levels of both DNase I enzyme activity and gene expression. Carp hepatopancreatic DNase I was purified 17,000-fold, with a yield of 29%, to electrophoretic homogeneity using three-step column chromatography. The purified enzyme activity was inhibited completely by 20 mM EDTA and a specific anti-carp DNase I antibody and slightly by G-actin. Histochemical analysis using this antibody revealed the strongest immunoreactivity in the cytoplasm of pancreatic tissue, but not in that of hepatic tissue in the carp hepatopancreas. A 995-bp cDNA encoding carp DNase I was constructed from total RNA from carp hepatopancreas. The mature carp DNase I protein comprises 260 amino acids, the same number as the human enzyme, however, the carp enzyme has an insertion of Ser59 and a deletion of Ala225 in comparison with the human enzyme. These alterations have no influence on the enzyme activity and stability. Three amino acid residues, Tyr65, Val67, and Ala114, of human DNase I are involved in actin binding, whereas those of carp DNase I are shifted to Tyr66, Val68, and Phe115, respectively, by the insertion of Ser59: the decrease in affinity to actin is due to one amino acid substitution, Ala114Phe. The results of our phylogenetic and immunological analyses indicate that carp DNase I is not closely related to the mammalian, avian or amphibian enzymes, and forms a relatively tight piscine cluster with the tilapia enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
Deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) was purified 26500-fold in 39% yield from porcine pancreas to electrophoretic homogeneity using three-step column chromatography. The purified enzyme was inhibited by an antibody specific to the purified enzyme but not by G-actin. A 1303 bp cDNA encoding porcine DNase I was constructed from total RNA from porcine small intestine using a rapid amplification of cDNA ends method, followed by sequencing. Mature porcine DNase I protein was found to consist of 262 amino acids. Unlike all other mammalian DNase I enzymes that are inhibited by G-actin, porcine DNase I has H65 and S114 instead of Y65 and A114, which presumably results in the lack of inhibition. Porcine DNase I was more sensitive to low pH than rat or bovine enzymes. Compared with their primary structures, the amino acid at position 110 was N in porcine enzyme, but S in rat and bovine enzymes. A porcine mutant enzyme in which N was substituted by S alone at position 110 (N110S) became resistant to low pH to a similar extent as the rat and bovine enzymes.  相似文献   

4.
A rabbit antiserum against bovine pancreatic DNase A is used to study the immunological reaction of DNases I. As shown by double immunodiffusion, bovine pancreatic DNases A, B, C, and D are immunologically identical, so are DNases from bovine pancreas and parotid and from ovine pancreas. These DNases also behave similarly in immunotitration of DNase activity and all are tightly bound to the immunoaffinity medium, requiring an acidic buffer with 10% ammonium sulfate to dissociate. On the other hand, porcine pancreatic and malted barley DNases that do not form precipitin lines remain active in solution with the antibody; however, in spite of the lack of inhibition these DNases are retarded (but not tightly bound) in immunoaffinity chromatography, suggesting interaction with the antibody. In thin layer isoelectric focusing, the parotid DNase, purified with the immunoaffinity technique, shows only two major active components whose isoelectric points correspond to those of DNases A and C of bovine pancreas. As estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the molecular weight of parotid DNase is 34,000, approximately 3,000 more than that of the pancreatic enzyme. However, both parotid and pancreatic DNases have the same NH2-terminal leucine, an identical COOH-terminal amino acid sequence, nearly identical amino acid compositions, and almost the same peptide maps. The molecular weight difference is due to differences in the carbohydrate side chains. Results of peptide analyses indicate that parotid DNase contains two glycopeptides; pancreatic DNase has only one. In addition, both parotid glycopeptides contain glucosamine and galactosamine while the pancreatic glycopeptide has only glucosamine.  相似文献   

5.
We purified pancreatic deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) from the shark Heterodontus japonicus using three-step column chromatography. Although its enzymatic properties resembled those of other vertebrate DNases I, shark DNase I was unique in being a basic protein. Full-length cDNAs encoding the DNases I of two shark species, H. japonicus and Triakis scyllia, were constructed from their total pancreatic RNAs using RACE. Nucleotide sequence analyses revealed two structural alterations unique to shark enzymes: substitution of two Cys residues at positions 101 and 104 (which are well conserved in all other vertebrate DNases I) and insertion of an additional Thr or Asn residue into an essential Ca(2+)-binding site. Site-directed mutagenesis of shark DNase I indicated that both of these alterations reduced the stability of the enzyme. When the signal sequence region of human DNase I (which has a high alpha-helical structure content) was replaced with its amphibian, fish and shark counterparts (which have low alpha-helical structure contents), the activity expressed by the chimeric mutant constructs in transfected mammalian cells was approximately half that of the wild-type enzyme. In contrast, substitution of the human signal sequence region into the amphibian, fish and shark enzymes produced higher activity compared with the wild-types. The vertebrate DNase I family may have acquired high stability and effective expression of the enzyme protein through structural alterations in both the mature protein and its signal sequence regions during molecular evolution.  相似文献   

6.
DNase I is an endonuclease responsible to destruction of chromatin during apoptosis. However, its role in diabetes is still unclear. With blood samples from our previous study related to type 2 diabetes, we examined the DNase I activity in the serum of these patients and the role of DNase I in the injury of pancreas was further investigated in rats and INS-1 cells. Serum and pancreatic tissues from human and rats were used for the study. Insulin resistance and diabetes were induced by high fat diet and STZ injection, respectively. DNase I activity was determined by radial enzyme-diffusion method. Expressions of DNase I and caspase-3 in pancreas were determined in rat pancreatic tissues and INS-1 cells. Apoptosis of INS-1 cells was determined by both TUNEL assay and Flow Cytometry. There was a significant elevation of DNase I activity in serum of patients with type 2 diabetes and rats with STZ injection. Moreover, increase in DNase I expression was observed in the pancreas of diabetic person and rats. Furthermore, high glucose induced both DNase I and caspase-3 expression and at the same time increased apoptosis rate of INS-1 cells. In conclusion, elevated DNase I in diabetes may be related to pancreatic injury and could be one of the causes that induce diabetes.  相似文献   

7.
Deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) activities were measured in 14 different tissues from humans and 5 other mammals (bovine, pig, rabbit, rat, and mouse) by using the single radial enzyme diffusion (SRED) method, which is a sensitive and nonradioactive assay for nucleases. The results indicated that these species are classifiable into three groups on the basis of their different tissue distributions of DNase I. In human and pig, the pancreas showed the highest activity of DNase I; in rat and mouse, the parotid glands showed the highest activity; and in bovine and rabbit, both pancreas and parotid glands showed high activity. Therefore we designated human and pig DNase I as pancreas type, rat and mouse DNase I as parotid type, and bovine and rabbit DNase I as pancreas-parotid (or mixed) type. DNase I of the pancreas type was more sensitive to low pH than the other types. DNase I of pancreas type is secreted into the intestinal tract under neutral pH conditions, whereas the other types are secreted from the parotid gland and have to pass through the very acidic conditions in the stomach. Differences in the tissue distribution and acid sensitivity of mammalian DNases I may provide important information about their digestive function from the evolutionary perspective.  相似文献   

8.
Human pancreatic DNase I was purified extensively from duodenal juice of healthy subjects by a procedure including ammonium sulfate fractionation, ethanol fractionation, phosphocellulose fractionation, isoelectric focusing, and gel filtration. The final preparation was free of DNase II, pancreatic RNase, alkaline phosphatase, and protease. The enzyme had a molecular weight of approximately 30,000, as determined by gel filtration on Sephadex G-100, and showed maximum activity at pH 7.2-7.6. It required divalent cations for activity, and caused single-strand breaks by endonucleolytic attack on double- as well as single-stranded DNA molecules. The enzyme was inhibited by actin and bovine pancreatic DNase I antibody.  相似文献   

9.
Deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I)-like enzyme from the liver of the carp (Cyprinus carpio) was purified to homogeneity and further characterized. Ion exchange chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, molecular filtration on Sephacryl S-300 and Con A-Sepharose affinity chromatography were applied for enzyme isolation. Carp liver DNase, similarly to DNase I from bovine pancreas, was found to be an endonuclease that hydrolyses linear DNA from salmon sperm as well as circular DNA forms--plasmid and cosmid. The purified enzyme is a glycoprotein and shows microheterogeneity, as observed in DNase zymograms prepared after native and two-dimensional electrophoresis (2D-PAGE). The composition of sugar component of the enzyme was characterized. Special attention was focused on the ability of carp liver DNase to interact with carp liver actin. The carp liver enzyme was inhibited by endogenous actin. The estimated binding constant of carp liver DNase to carp liver actin was calculated to be 1.1 x 10(6) M(-1).  相似文献   

10.
DNase I in human urine was purified to an electrophoretically homogeneous state by column chromatographies on DEAE-lignocellulose, hydroxyapatite, DEAE-cellulose, Sephadex G-75 and elastin-celite. The purified enzyme was immunologically identical with human pancreatic DNase I, but not with bovine pancreatic DNase I. The molecular weight and isoelectric point of the enzyme were estimated to be 4.1 X 10(4) and 3.6, respectively. The amino acid analysis revealed that 1 mol of the enzyme contained 8 mol of half-cystine. The N-terminal amino acid was identified as leucine by the dansyl chloride method. The enzyme was active in the presence of Mg2+, Co2+, or Mn2+, The optimum pH was around 6.5. The enzyme was stable in the pH range from 5.0 to 9.0 and at temperatures lower than 45 degrees C. The rate of hydrolysis of native DNA by the enzyme was twice as fast as that observed with heat-denatured DNA. This enzyme exhaustively degraded about 20% of the phosphodiester bonds in native DNA. The enzyme also degraded poly(dA) and poly(dT), but hardly degraded poly(dG) and poly(dC).  相似文献   

11.
We have devised two independent detection methods for investigating possible molecular heterogeneity and genetic polymorphism in human DNase I, in terms of both its antigenicity and enzymatic activity. One was an immunoblotting method using an antibody specific to DNase I following polyacrylamide gel isoelectric focusing (IEF-PAGE). The DNase I-specific antibody was raised in a rabbit using purified enzyme from human urine as the immunogen. DNase I in urine was found to exist in multiple forms with different pI values separable by IEF-PAGE within a pH range of 3.5-4.0. This method was able to detect as little as 0.1 micrograms of the purified DNase I and facilitated classification of desialylated urine samples from different individuals into several groups according to differences in DNase I isozyme patterns. About 0.5 ml of the original urine was sufficient for analysis of the isozyme patterns. The other method was the zymogram method, which had a high sensitivity and resolution almost identical to those of the immunoblotting method for analysis of DNase I patterns. It was easier to perform, more time-saving, and more useful since it did not require antibody specific to DNase I. These two methods should prove valuable for biochemical and genetic analysis of DNase I isozymes.  相似文献   

12.
An antibody specific to a synthetic peptide corresponding to the N-terminal 27 amino acid residues of human urine DNase I (anti-DNase I peptide) was obtained. The antibody did not inhibit the activity of the enzyme, but reacted well with the enzyme upon immunoblotting following electrophoresis. The urine DNase I isozyme patterns detected using this antibody were almost identical to those produced with an antibody specific to purified DNase I. Therefore, the anti-DNase I peptide antibody should prove to be valuable for genetic analysis of human DNase I isozymes.  相似文献   

13.
An approximately 60-kDa protein with chitinase activity was purified from the pancreas of the toad Bufo japonicus. Its specific activity was 4.5 times higher than that of a commercial bacterial chitinase in fragmenting crab shell chitin, and its optimal pH was approximately 6.0. A cDNA clone encoding a protein consisting of 488 amino acid residues, including part of the peptide sequence determined from the isolated protein, was obtained from a toad pancreas cDNA library. The deduced amino acid sequence indicated that the protein contained regions with high homology to those present in chitinases from different species, with the amino acid residues for the chitinase activity and the chitin-binding ability being completely conserved. We designate the protein as toad pancreatic chitinase (tPCase). Northern blot analysis revealed the mRNA of this enzyme to be expressed exclusively in the pancreas. Toad PCase is the first amphibian chitinase to be identified as well as the first pancreatic chitinase identified in a vertebrate.  相似文献   

14.
A cDNA corresponding to the BGLF5 open reading frame of the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) genome and coding for an early DNase was inserted into the procaryotic expression vector pKK223-3. One bacterial clone producing the expected 52-kilodalton DNase was used as a source of EBV DNase. The 52-kilodalton Dnase was purified in the active form to near homogeneity by ammonium sulfate precipitation and successive chromatographies on phosphocellulose, DNA-cellulose, and gel filtration columns. The purified enzyme exhibited both exonuclease and endonuclease activities, an absolute requirement for divalent cations, an alkaline pH preference, and a typical residual activity in presence of 300 mM KCl. Moreover, the enzyme was specifically inhibited by human sera with high antibody titers to EBV early antigens. These properties are similar to those observed for EBV-induced DNase from lymphoblastoid cell extracts. In addition, the enzyme was recognized by both immunoglobulin G and A serum fractions from patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC). From these results and previous studies which demonstrated the value of antibody titers to this viral DNase as an NPC marker, it appears that EBV-encoded DNase produced in a heterologous expression system could be used in the development of a specific and early NPC diagnosis test.  相似文献   

15.
Ca2+ plus Mg2+-dependent endodeoxyribonuclease was extracted from calf thymus chromatin and purified to a state free from contamination by other DNases. This DNase required both Ca2+ and Mg2+, or Mn2+ alone for its activity and the optimum pH for activity was at 6.5-7.5. No specificity for the 5'-base was observed. The molecular weight of the DNase was estimated to be about 25,000-30,000 by glycerol gradient centrifugation. Actin and antibody for pancreatic DNase (DNase I) did not inhibit the enzyme, whereas both strongly inhibited DNase I, suggesting that these two DNases are different enzymes.  相似文献   

16.
A novel DNase from the digestive tract of the spruce budworm (Choristoneura fumiferana) has been isolated and characterized. This DNase has two features that distinguish it from other known DNases: (1) it has a pH optimum of 10.5 to 11; (2) it plays an important role in the conversion of the insecticidal crystal protein from Bacillus thuringiensis to the active DNA-free toxin in the larval gut. Only one digestive DNase with an apparent molecular mass of 23 kDa was found and no associated carbohydrate was detected. It has some similarities to pancreatic DNase I in that divalent alkaline metal ion is required for activity and it is inhibited by monovalent cations. In particular, Mg(2+) and Ca(2+) were the most effective activators. Transition metal ions also activated the enzyme but were less effective. The enzyme is an endonuclease that hydrolyzes single and double stranded DNA but shows a higher specificity for single stranded DNA. The purified enzyme acted synergistically with proteases on crystals from Bacillus thuringiensis to yield the DNA-free toxin. To our knowledge, this is the first characterization of DNase activity in insect larvae and provides strong evidence that a DNase is an integral component of the larval digestive system.  相似文献   

17.
Deoxyribonuclease II (DNase II) was purified from the urine of a 48-year-old male (a single individual) using a column chromatography series, including concanavalin A-agarose and an immunoaffinity column utilizing anti-human spleen DNase II antibody, and was then characterized. Based on the catalytic properties of the purified enzyme, we have devised a technique of isoelectric focusing by thin-layer polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (IEF-PAGE) combined with a specific zymogram method, for investigating the possible molecular heterogeneity of human DNase II. DNase II in urine as well as the purified form was found to exist in multiple forms with different pI values separable by IEF-PAGE within a pH range of 5-7. Since sialidase treatment of the urine sample induced simplification of the isoenzyme patterns with diminishment of anodal bands, it was clear that the multiplicity of the enzyme was in part due to differences in the sialic acid content. On screening of DNase II isoenzyme patterns in urine samples from more than 200 Japanese individuals, only the common isoenzyme pattern was observed and no electrophoretic variations were detected. However, genetic studies of urinary enzyme activity and comparative studies on the activity in urine, semen and leukocytes from the same individuals suggest that the enzyme activity level of DNase II may be under genetic control. The enzyme was widely distributed in human tissues and showed high activities in secretory body fluids such as breast milk, saliva, semen and urine, and leukocyte lysates.  相似文献   

18.
Recombinant human deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) is an important clinical agent that is inhaled into the airways where it degrades DNA to lower molecular weight fragments, thus reducing the viscoelasticity of sputum and improving the lung function of cystic fibrosis patients. To investigate DNases with potentially improved properties, we constructed a molecular fusion of human DNase I with the hinge and Fc region of human IgG1 heavy chain, creating a DNase I-Fc fusion protein. Infection of Sf9 insect cells with recombinant baculovirus resulted in the expression and secretion of the DNase I-Fc fusion protein. The fusion protein was purified from the culture medium using protein A affinity chromatography followed by desalting by gel filtration and was characterized by amino-terminal sequence, amino acid composition, and a variety of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) and activity assays. The purified fusion contains DNase I, as determined by a DNase I ELISA and an actin-binding ELISA, and an intact antibody Fc region, which was quantified by an Fc ELISA, in a 2:1 stoichiometric ratio, respectively. The dimeric DNase I-Fc fusion was functionally active in enzymatic DNA digestion assays, albeit about 10-fold less than monomeric DNase I. Cleavage of the DNase I-Fc fusion by papain resulted in a specific activity comparable to the monomeric enzyme. Salt was inhibitory for wild type monomeric DNase I but actually enhanced the activity of the dimeric DNase I-Fc fusion. The DNase I-Fc fusion protein was also less Ca2+-dependent than DNase I itself. These results are consistent with a higher affinity of the dimeric fusion protein to DNA than monomeric DNase I. The engineered DNase I-Fc fusion protein described herein has properties that may have clinical benefits.  相似文献   

19.
Recently, a putative hormone, glucagon-like peptide I (GLP I), has been identified in the predicted sequences of the precursors to pancreatic glucagon in human, rat, hamster, and ox. The distribution of GLP I immunoreactivity in canine and feline pancreas and gastrointestinal tract was examined immunohistochemically and was compared with that of two other antigenic determinants of pancreatic pro-glucagon, i.e., glucagon and the NH2 terminus of glicentin. All three determinants occurred in the same population of islet cells in normal pancreas and in pancreas consisting predominantly of islet tissue from dogs with canine pancreatic acinar atrophy. Northern blot analysis of mRNA from the latter tissue, using a rat pre-pro-glucagon complementary DNA probe, revealed a single mRNA species similar in size to the pre-pro-glucagon mRNA detected in fetal rat pancreas. The three antigenic determinants of pancreatic pro-glucagon were co-localized also in intestinal L-cells and in canine gastric A-cells. Canine and feline pancreatic pro-glucagons therefore resemble those identified in other mammals and may also occur in gastrointestinal endocrine cells. Although there is evidence that the GLP I sequence is not liberated from pancreatic pro-glucagon, our results raise the possibility that this putative hormone may be a cleavage product of pro-glucagon in the gastrointestinal tract.  相似文献   

20.
L1210 leukemia cell cytosol was analysed for the presence of DNase I activity. No free activity was determined in crude cytosol. DNase I enzyme was found to occur in a latent form bound to cytoplasmic actin. DNase-actin complex was partially isolated by Sephadex filtration and DNase I-like activity was demonstrated after SDS gel electrophoresis of the complex and enzyme renaturation. The results were compared with those for synthetic complex of pancreatic bovine DNase I and chicken muscle actin.  相似文献   

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