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1.
King et al. (King, K., Benkovic, S. J., and Modrich, P. (1989) 264, 11807-11815) have shown that Glu-111 is required for DNA cleavage by EcoRI endonuclease and have suggested that this residue is required for activation of the cleavage center upon specific recognition. We have substituted Gln or Asp for Glu-111 by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis. First and second strand cleavage rate constants are reduced by a factor of more than 10(4) by the Gln-111 substitution. However, these rate constants are enhanced 9-fold when pH is increased from 7.6 to 8.5, which enhances strand cleavage at EcoRI sites by wild type endonuclease to a similar degree. The specific affinity of Gln-111 endonuclease for EcoRI sites is 1000 times greater than that of wild type enzyme reflecting a decrease in the rate constant governing specific complex dissociation. In contrast to Gln-111 endonuclease, the equilibrium specific affinity of Asp-111 endonuclease for the EcoRI sequence is similar to that of wild type enzyme, and first and second strand cleavage rate constants are reduced only 100-fold relative to wild type enzyme. These results suggest that a negative charge on residue 111 is required for strand cleavage and are consistent with participation of Glu-111 in activation of the DNA cleavage center, with energy associated with specific sequence recognition driving this process.  相似文献   

2.
Steady-state parameters governing cleavage of pBR322 DNA by EcoRI endonuclease are highly sensitive to ionic environment, with K(m) and k(cat) increasing 1,000-fold and 15-fold, respectively, when ionic strength is increased from 0.059 to 0.23 M. By contrast, pre-steady-state analysis has shown that recognition, as well as first and second strand cleavage events that occur once the enzyme has arrived at the EcoRI site, are essentially insensitive to ionic strength, and has demonstrated that the rate-limiting step for endonuclease turnover occurs after double-strand cleavage under all conditions tested. Furthermore, processive cleavage of a pBR322 variant bearing two closely spaced EcoRI sites is governed by the same turnover number as hydrolysis of parental pBR322, which contains only a single EcoRI sequence, ruling out slow release of the enzyme from the cleaved site or a slow conformational change subsequent to double-strand cleavage. We attribute the effects of ionic strength on steady-state parameters to nonspecific endonuclease.DNA interactions, reflecting facilitated diffusion processes, that occur prior to EcoRI sequence recognition and subsequent to DNA cleavage.  相似文献   

3.
Cleavage of specific DNA sequences by the restriction enzymes EcoRI, HindIII and TaqI was prevented when the DNA was irradiated with ultraviolet light. Most of the effects were attributed to cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers in the recognition sequences; the effectiveness of irradiation was directly proportional to the number of potential dimer sites in the DNA. Combining EcoRI with dimer-specific endonuclease digestion revealed that pyrimidine dimers blocked cleavage within one base-pair on the strand opposite to the dimer but did not block cleavage three to four base-pairs away on the same strand. These are the probable limits for the range of influence of pyrimidine dimers along the DNA, at least for this enzyme. The effect of irradiation on cleavage by TaqI seemed far greater than expected for the cyclobutane dimer yield, possibly because of effects from photoproducts flanking the tetranucleotide recognition sequence and the effect of non-cyclobutane (6-4)pyrimidine photoproducts involving adjacent T and C bases.  相似文献   

4.
Confronted with thousands of potential DNA substrates, a site-specific enzyme must restrict itself to the correct DNA sequence. The MuA transposase protein performs site-specific DNA cleavage and joining reactions, resulting in DNA transposition-a specialized form of genetic recombination. To determine how sequence information is used to restrict transposition to the proper DNA sites, we performed kinetic analyses of transposition with DNA substrates containing either wild-type transposon sequences or sequences carrying mutations in specific DNA recognition modules. As expected, mutations near the DNA cleavage site reduce the rate of cleavage; the observed effect is about 10-fold. In contrast, mutations within the MuA recognition sequences do not directly affect the DNA cleavage or joining steps of transposition. It is well established that the recognition sequences are necessary for assembly of stable, multimeric MuA-DNA complexes, and we find that recognition site mutations severely reduce both the extent and the rate of this assembly process. Yet if the MuA-DNA complexes are preassembled, the first-order rate constants for both DNA cleavage and DNA strand transfer (the joining reaction) are unaffected by the mutations. Furthermore, most of the mutant DNA molecules that are cleaved also complete DNA strand transfer. We conclude that the sequence-specific contacts within the recognition sites contribute energetically to complex assembly, but not directly to catalysis. These results contrast with studies of more orthodox enzymes, such as EcoRI and some other type II restriction enzymes. We propose that the strategy employed by MuA may serve as an example for how recombinases and modular restriction enzymes solve the DNA specificity problem, in that they, too, may separate substrate recognition from catalysis.  相似文献   

5.
Promiscuous mutant EcoRI endonucleases produce lethal to sublethal effects because they cleave Escherichia coli DNA despite the presence of the EcoRI methylase. Three promiscuous mutant forms, Ala138Thr, Glu192Lys and His114Tyr, have been characterized with respect to their binding affinities and first-order cleavage rate constants towards the three classes of DNA sites: specific, miscognate (EcoRI*) and non-specific. We have made the unanticipated and counterintuitive observations that the mutant restriction endonucleases that exhibit relaxed specificity in vivo nevertheless bind more tightly than the wild-type enzyme to the specific recognition sequence in vitro, and show even greater preference for binding to the cognate GAATTC site over miscognate sites. Binding preference for EcoRI* over non-specific DNA is also improved. The first-order cleavage rate constants of the mutant enzymes are normal for the cognate site GAATTC, but are greater than those of the wild-type enzyme at EcoRI* sites. Thus, the mutant enzymes use two mechanisms to partially bypass the multiple fail-safe mechanisms that protect against cleavage of genomic DNA in cells carrying the wild-type EcoRI restriction-modification system: (a) binding to EcoRI* sites is more probable than for wild-type enzyme because non-specific DNA is less effective as a competitive inhibitor; (b) the combination of increased affinity and elevated cleavage rate constants at EcoRI* sites makes double-strand cleavage of these sites a more probable outcome than it is for the wild-type enzyme. Semi-quantitative estimates of rates of EcoRI* site cleavage in vivo, predicted using the binding and cleavage constants measured in vitro, are in accord with the observed lethal phenotypes associated with the three mutations.  相似文献   

6.
7.
To test their structural and functional similarity, hybrids were constructed between EcoRI and RsrI, two restriction endonucleases recognizing the same DNA sequence and sharing 50% amino acid sequence identity. One of the chimeric proteins (EERE), in which the EcoRI segment His147-Ala206 was replaced with the corresponding RsrI segment, showed EcoRI/RsrI-specific endonuclease activity. EERE purified from inclusion bodies was found to have approximately 100-fold weaker activity but higher specific DNA binding affinity, than EcoRI. Increased binding is consistent with results of molecular dynamics simulations, which indicate that the number of hydrogen bonds formed with the recognition sequence increased in the chimera as compared to EcoRI. The success of obtaining an EcoRI-RsrI hybrid endonuclease, which differs from EcoRI by 22 RsrI-specific amino acid substitutions and still preserves canonical cleavage specificity, is a sign of structural and functional similarity shared by the parental enzymes. This conclusion is also supported by computational studies, which indicate that construction of the EERE chimera did not induce substantial changes in the structure of EcoRI. Surprisingly, the chimeric endonuclease was more toxic to cells not protected by EcoRI methyltransferase, than the parental EcoRI mutant. Molecular modelling revealed structural alterations, which are likely to impede coupling between substrate recognition and cleavage and suggest a possible explanation for the toxic phenotype.  相似文献   

8.
To determine whether RsrI endonuclease recognizes and cleaves the sequence GAATTC in duplex DNA similarly to its isoschizomer EcoRI we initiated a functional comparison of the two enzymes. Equilibrium binding experiments showed that at 20 degrees C RsrI endonuclease binds to specific and nonspecific sequences in DNA with affinities similar to those of EcoRI. At 0 degrees C the affinity of RsrI for its specific recognition sequence is reduced 7-fold whereas the affinity for noncanonical sequences remains relatively unchanged. Unlike EcoRI, incubation of RsrI endonuclease with N-ethylmaleimide inactivates the enzyme; however, preincubation with DNA prevents the inactivation. The N-ethylmaleimide-treated enzyme fails to bind DNA as assayed by gel mobility shift assays. Comparison of the deduced amino acid sequences of RsrI and EcoRI endonucleases suggests that modification of Cys245 is responsible for the inactivation. Fe(II). EDTA and methidiumpropyl-EDTA.Fe(II) footprinting results indicate that RsrI, like EcoRI, protects 12 base pairs from cleavage when bound to its specific recognition sequence in the absence of Mg2+. RsrI bends DNA by approximately 50 degrees, as determined by measuring the relative electrophoretic mobilities of specific RsrI-DNA complexes with the binding site in the center or near the end of the DNA fragment. This value is similar to that reported for EcoRI. RsrI also unwinds the DNA helix by 25 degrees +/- 5 degrees, a value close to that reported for EcoRI endonuclease. Collectively, these results indicate that the overall structural changes induced in the DNA by the binding of RsrI and EcoRI endonucleases to DNA in the absence of Mg2+ are similar. In the accompanying paper (Aiken, C. R., McLaughlin, L. W., and Gumport, R. I. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 19070-19078) we present results of studies of RsrI endonuclease using oligonucleotide substrates containing base analogues which suggest differences in the ways the two enzymes cleave DNA.  相似文献   

9.
We have probed the contacts between EcoRI endonuclease and the central phosphate of its recognition site GAApTTC, using synthetic oligonucleotides containing single stereospecific Rp- or Sp-phosphorothioates (Ps). These substitutions produce subtle stereospecific effects on EcoRI endonuclease binding and cleavage. An Sp-Ps substitution in one strand of the DNA duplex improves binding free energy by -1.5 kcal/mol, whereas the Rp-Ps substitution has an unfavorable effect (+0.3 kcal/mol) on binding free energy. These effects derive principally from changes in the first order rate constants for dissociation of the enzyme-DNA complexes. The first order rate constants for strand scission are also affected, in that a strand containing Sp-Ps substitution is cleaved 2 to 3 times more rapidly than a strand containing a normal prochiral phosphate, whereas a strand containing Rp-Ps substitution is cleaved about 3 times slower than normal. As a result, single-strand substitutions produce pronounced asymmetry in the rates of cleavage of the two DNA strands, and this effect is exaggerated in an Rp,Sp-heteroduplex. Ethylation-interference footprinting indicates that none of the Ps substitutions cause any major change in contacts between endonuclease and DNA phosphates. When an Sp-Ps localizes P = O in the DNA major groove, a hydrogen-bonding interaction with the backbone amide-NH of Gly116 of the endonuclease is improved relative to that with a prochiral phosphate having intermediate P-O bond order and delocalized charge.  相似文献   

10.
The dG residues within the EcoRI recognition sequence of ColE1 DNA have been selectively replaced with dI. Methylation of the altered sequence by the EcoRI modification enzyme is extremely slow as compared with methyl transfer to the natural recognition site. Since the affinity of the modification enzyme for the dI-containing sequence is considerably less than that for the natural sequence, we have concluded that the 2-amino group of dG has an important role in DNA site recognition by this enzyme. In contrast, the altered site is subject to cleavage by EcoRI endonuclease at rates essentially identical with those observed with the natural sequence. These results strongly suggest that the two enzymes utilize different contacts within the EcoRI site and are consisted with our conclusion (Rubin, R. A., and Modrich, P. (1977) J. Biol. Chem. 252, 7265-7272) that the two proteins interact with their common recognition sequence in different ways.  相似文献   

11.
Substrate dependence of the mechanism of EcoRI endonuclease.   总被引:7,自引:7,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
The mechanism of EcoRI endonuclease is substrate dependent. At 37 degrees dissociation of the enzyme-Form II DNA intermediates of ColE1 DNA and bacteriophage G4 RFI DNA is negligible. Therefore, both DNA strands with in the EcoRI sequence are cleaved during a single binding event. However, double strand cleavage of SV40 DNA occurs without dissociation of the enzyme in only 75% of the catalytic events. This mechanistic difference presumably reflects sequence differences about the EcoRI sites of these DNA's.  相似文献   

12.
A conformational change in the DNA plasmid ColE1 appears to occur upon specific binding of the restriction endonuclease EcoRI. Enzyme association alters the chiral discrimination found in binding metallointercalators to DNA sites. The complexes tris(1,10-phenanthroline)ruthenium(II), Ru(phen)3(2+), tris(4,7-diphenyl-1,10-phenanthroline)ruthenium(II), Ru(DIP)3(2+), and tris(4,7-diphenyl-1,10-phenanthroline)cobalt(III), Co(DIP)3(3+), in general, bind stereoselectively to DNA helices, with enantiomers possessing the delta configuration bound preferentially by right-handed B-DNA. In the presence of EcoRI, however, this enantioselectivity is altered. The chiral intercalators, at micromolar concentrations, inhibit the reaction of EcoRI, but for each enantiomeric pair it is the lambda enantiomer, which binds only poorly to a B-DNA helix, that inhibits EcoRI preferentially. Kinetic studies in the presence of lambda-Ru(DIP)3(2+) indicate that the enzyme inhibition occurs as a result of the lambda enantiomer binding to the enzyme-DNA complex as well as to the free enzyme. Furthermore, photolytic strand cleavage experiments using Co(DIP)3(3+) indicate that the metal complex interacts directly at the protein-bound DNA site. Increasing concentrations of bound EcoRI stimulate photoactivated cleavage of the DNA helix by lambda-Co(DIP)3(3+), until a protein concentration is reached where specific DNA recognition sites are saturated with enzyme. Thus, although lambda-Co(DIP)3(3+) does not bind closely to the DNA in the absence of enzyme, specific binding of EcoRI appears to alter the DNA structure so as to permit the close association of the lambda isomer to the DNA helix. Mapping experiments demonstrate that this association leads to photocleavage of DNA by the cobalt complex at or very close to the EcoRI recognition site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
As a novel approach to the structural and functional properties that give rise to extremely stringent sequence specificity in protein–DNA interactions, we have exploited “promiscuous” mutants of EcoRI endonuclease to study the detailed mechanism by which changes in a protein can relax specificity. The A138T promiscuous mutant protein binds more tightly to the cognate GAATTC site than does wild-type EcoRI yet displays relaxed specificity deriving from tighter binding and faster cleavage at EcoRI* sites (one incorrect base pair). AAATTC EcoRI* sites are cleaved by A138T up to 170-fold faster than by wild-type enzyme if the site is abutted by a 5′-purine-pyrimidine (5′-RY) motif. When wild-type protein binds to an EcoRI* site, it forms structurally adapted complexes with thermodynamic parameters of binding that differ markedly from those of specific complexes. By contrast, we show that A138T complexes with 5′-RY-flanked AAATTC sites are virtually indistinguishable from wild-type-specific complexes with respect to the heat capacity change upon binding (?C°P), the change in excluded macromolecular volume upon association, and contacts to the phosphate backbone. While the preference for the 5′-RY motif implicates contacts to flanking bases as important for relaxed specificity, local effects are not sufficient to explain the large differences in ?C°P and excluded volume, as these parameters report on global features of the complex. Our findings therefore support the view that specificity does not derive from the additive effects of individual interactions but rather from a set of cooperative events that are uniquely associated with specific recognition.  相似文献   

14.
The reactions of the EcoRi and other restriction endonucleases.   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
The reaction of the EcoRI restriction endonuclease was studied with both the plasmid pMB9 and DNA from bacteriophage lambda as the substrates. With both circular and linear DNA molecules, the only reaction catalysed by the EcoRI restriction endonuclease was the hydrolysis of the phosphodiester bond within one strand of the recognition site on the DNA duplex. The cleavage of both strands of the duplex was achieved only after two independent reactions, each involving a single-strand scission. The reactivity of the enzyme for single-strand scissions was the same for both the first and the second cleavage within its recognition site. No differences were observed between the mechanism of action on supercoiled and linear DNA substrates. Other restriction endonucleases were tested against plasmid pMB9. The HindIII restriction endonuclease cleaved DNA in the same manner as the EcoRI enzyme. However, in contrast with EcoRI, the Sa/I and the BamHI restriction endonucleases appeared to cleave both strands of the DNA duplex almost simultaneously. The function of symmetrical DNA sequences and the conformation of the DNA involved in these DNA--protein interactions are discussed in the light of these observations. The fact that the same reactions were observed on both supercoiled and linear DNA substrates implies that these interactions do not involve the unwinding of the duplex before catalysis.  相似文献   

15.
N.BstNBI is a unique restriction endonuclease isolated from Bacillus stearothermophilus. We have characterized the recognition sequence and the cleavage site of N.BstNBI. Mapping of cleavage sites of N.BstNBI showed that it recognizes an asymmetric sequence, 5' GAGTC 3', and cleaves only on the top strand 4 base pairs away from its recognition sequence. To verify the nicking activity of N. BstNBI, we have constructed two plasmids containing a single recognition sequence (pNB1) or no recognition site (pNB0). When pNB1 and pNB0 were incubated with the enzyme, N.BstNBI nicked only the plasmid pNB1, suggesting that N.BstNBI is a specific nicking endonuclease.  相似文献   

16.
Strand displacement amplification (9SDA) is an isothermal in vitro method of amplifying a DNA sequence prior to its detection. We have combined SDA with fluorescence polarization detection. A 5'-fluorescein-labelled oligodeoxynucleotide detector probe hybridizes to the amplification product that rises in concentration during SDA and the single- to double strand conversion is monitored through an increase in fluorescence polarization. Detection sensitivity can be enhanced by using a detector probe containing an EcoRI recognition sequence at its 5'-end that is not homologous to the target sequence. During SDA the probe is converted to a fully double-stranded form that specifically binds a genetically modified form of the endonuclease EcoRI which lacks cleavage activity but retains binding specificity. We have applied this SDA detection system to a target sequence specific for Mycobacterium tuberculosis.  相似文献   

17.
Equilibrium binding of EcoRI endonuclease to DNA has been analyzed by nitrocellulose filter and preferential DNA cleavage methods. Association constants for pBR322 and a 34-base pair molecule containing the EcoRI site of this plasmid in a central position were determined to be 1.9 X 10(11) M-1 and 1.0 X 10(11) M-1 at 37 degrees C, respectively, with the stoichiometry of binding being 0.8 +/- 0.1 mol of endonuclease dimer per mol of DNA. In contrast, the affinity of the enzyme for a pBR322 derivative from which the EcoRI site has been deleted is 3.2 X 10(9) M-1 as judged by competitive binding experiments. If it is assumed that each base pair can define the beginning of a nonspecific binding site, this value corresponds to an affinity for nonspecific sites of 7.4 X 10(5) M-1. Furthermore, the affinity of the endonuclease for the EcoRI-methylated sequence is at least three orders of magnitude less than that for the unmodified recognition site. The dependence on temperature and ionic strength of the equilibrium constant governing specific interactions has also been examined. The temperature dependence of the reaction indicates that entropy increase accounts for 70% of the free energy of specific binding at 37 degrees C. Affinity of the endonuclease for the EcoRI site is highly dependent on NaCl concentration. Analysis of this dependence according to the theory of Record and colleagues (Record, T. M., Jr., Lohman, T. M., and deHaseth, P. (1976) J. Mol. Biol. 107, 145-158) has implicated 8 ion pairs in the stability of specific complexes, a value identical with the number of phosphate contacts determined by ethylation interference analysis (Lu, A. L., Jack, W. E., and Modrich, P. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 13200-13206). Extrapolation to 1 M NaCl suggests that nonelectrostatic interactions account for 40% of the free energy change associated with specific complex formation.  相似文献   

18.
Rhodobacter sphaeroides strain 630 produces restriction enzyme RsrI which is an isoschizomer of EcoRI. We have purified this enzyme and initiated a comparison with the EcoRI endonuclease. The properties of RsrI are consistent with a reaction mechanism similar to that of EcoRI: the position of cleavage within the -GAATTC-site is identical, the MgCl2 optimum for the cleavage is identical, and the pH profile is similar. Methylation of the substrate sequence by the EcoRI methylase protects the site from cleavage by the RsrI endonuclease. RsrI cross-reacts strongly with anti-EcoRI serum indicating three-dimensional structural similarities. We have determined the sequence of 34 N terminal amino acids for RsrI and this sequence possesses significant similarity to the EcoRI N terminus.  相似文献   

19.
The x-ray structure of the EcoRI endonuclease-DNA complex (3) suggests that hydrogen bonds between amino acids, glutamic acid 144, arginine 145, and arginine 200, and major groove base moieties are the molecular determinants of specificity. We have investigated residue 144 using aspartate and glutamine substitutions introduced by site-directed mutagenesis. Substitution with glutamine results in a null phenotype (at least a 2000-fold reduction in activity). On the other hand, the aspartic acid mutant (ED144) retained in vivo activity. Substrate binding and catalytic studies were done with purified ED144 enzyme. The affinity of the ED144 enzyme for the canonical sequence 5'-GAATTC-3' is about 340-fold less than the wild-type (WT) enzyme, while its affinity for nonspecific DNA is about 50 times greater. The ED144 enzyme cleaves one strand in the EcoRI site in plasmid pBR322 with a kcat/Km similar to WT. In contrast to the WT enzyme, the ED144 enzyme dissociates after the first strand cleavage. Partitioning between cleavage and dissociation at the first and second cleavage steps for the ED144 enzyme is extremely salt-sensitive. The altered partitioning results largely from a destabilization of the enzyme-DNA complex, particularly the enzyme-nicked DNA complex, with only small changes in the respective cleavage rates. The hydrogen bonds of Glu-144 are critical, they appear to act cooperatively with other specificity contacts to stabilize the enzyme-DNA complex.  相似文献   

20.
DNA damage may alter the outcome of protein-nucleic acid interactions. The malondialdehyde-deoxyguanosine adduct, 3-(2'-deoxy-beta-d-erythro-pentofuranosyl)pyrimido[1,2-alpha]purin-10-(3H)-one (M(1)dG), miscodes in vivo and in vitro. M(1)dG is an exocyclic adduct that undergoes ring-opening in duplex DNA to form the acyclic adduct, N(2)-(3-oxo-1-propenyl)-deoxyguanosine (N(2)-OPdG). These two adducts have different effects on DNA polymerase bypass and may affect other DNA processing enzymes. We employed the EcoRI restriction endonuclease as a model for the interaction of DNA binding proteins with adducted DNA substrates. The presence of M(1)dG in the EcoRI recognition sequence impaired the ability of the enzyme to cleave DNA, resulting in only 60% cleavage of the adducted strand and 75% cleavage of the complementary strand. Three adducts of similar structure to M(1)dG that are unable to ring-open were cleaved poorly, or not at all, by EcoRI. None of the adducts appeared to inactivate or sequester EcoRI. Additional studies with BssHII and PauI confirmed these results and demonstrated a positional effect of M(1)dG on cleavage efficiency. These data suggest dissimilar modes of protein-nucleic acid interactions based on differences in adduct structure. Comparison of the solution structures of DNA adducts and the crystal structure of EcoRI complexed to substrate suggest a model to explain the functional differences.  相似文献   

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