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1.
Type I restriction endonucleases such as EcoR124I cleave DNA at undefined loci, distant from their recognition sequences, by a mechanism that involves the enzyme tracking along the DNA between recognition and cleavage sites. This mechanism was examined on plasmids that carried recognition sites for EcoR124I and recombination sites for resolvase, the latter to create DNA catenanes. Supercoiled substrates with either one or two restriction sites were linearized by EcoR124I at similar rates, although the two-site molecule underwent further cleavage more readily than the one-site DNA. The catenane from the plasmid with one EcoR124I site, carrying the site on the smaller of the two rings, was cleaved by EcoR124I exclusively in the small ring, and this underwent multiple cleavage akin to the two-site plasmid. Linear substrates derived from the plasmids were cleaved by EcoR124I at very slow rates. The communication between recognition and cleavage sites therefore cannot stem from random looping. Instead, it must follow the DNA contour between the sites. On a circular DNA, the translocation of non-specific DNA past the specifically bound protein should increase negative supercoiling in one domain and decrease it in the other. The ensuing topological barrier may be the trigger for DNA cleavage.  相似文献   

2.
McrBs, a modulator peptide for McrBC activity.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
D Panne  E A Raleigh    T A Bickle 《The EMBO journal》1998,17(18):5477-5483
McrBC is a methylation-dependent endonuclease from Escherichia coli K-12. The enzyme recognizes DNA with modified cytosines preceded by a purine. McrBC restricts DNA that contains at least two methylated recognition sites separated by 40-80 bp. Two gene products, McrBL and McrBs, are produced from the mcrB gene and one, McrC, from the mcrC gene. DNA cleavage in vitro requires McrBL, McrC, GTP and Mg2+. We found that DNA cleavage was optimal at a ratio of 3-5 McrBL per molecule of McrC, suggesting that formation of a multisubunit complex with several molecules of McrBL is required for cleavage. To understand the role of McrBs, we have purified the protein and analyzed its role in vitro. At the optimal ratio of 3-5 McrBL per molecule of McrC, McrBs acted as an inhibitor of DNA cleavage. Inhibition was due to sequestration of McrC and required the presence of GTP, suggesting that the interaction is GTP dependent. If McrC was in excess, a condition resulting in suboptimal DNA cleavage, addition of McrBs enhanced DNA cleavage, presumably due to sequestration of excess McrC. We suggest that the role of McrBs is to modulate McrBC activity by binding to McrC.  相似文献   

3.
T Krüger  C Wild    M Noyer-Weidner 《The EMBO journal》1995,14(11):2661-2669
Restriction of DNA by the Escherichia coli K-12 McrBC restriction endonuclease, which consists of the two subunits McrB and McrC, depends on the presence of modified cytosine residues in a special constellation. From previous work by others it was known that restriction of 5-methylcytosine-containing DNA requires two methylated 5'-PuC sites separated by approximately 40-80 non-defined base pairs. Here we show that binding of the McrBC nuclease is mediated exclusively by the McrB subunit. McrB has a low affinity for non-methylated DNA, with which it forms low molecular weight complexes. The affinity for DNA is significantly increased, with variations depending on the sequence context, by hemi- or fully methylated 5'-PuC sites. Binding to such substrates yields high molecular weight complexes, presumably involving several McrB molecules. Methylation at unique 5'-PuC sites can be sufficient to stimulate DNA binding by McrB. As such substrates are not cleaved by the nuclease, restriction apparently requires the coordinated interaction of molecules bound to neighbouring 5'-PumC sites. The binding properties of McrB exhibit some similarities to recently identified eukaryotic proteins interacting in a non-sequence-specific manner with DNA containing methylated 5'-CpG sequences and might point to a common molecular origin of these proteins. In addition to DNA, McrB also binds GTP, an essential cofactor in DNA restriction by McrBC. McrC neither binds to DNA nor modulates the DNA binding potential of McrB. As McrC is essential for restriction it appears to predominantly function in catalysis.  相似文献   

4.
The efficiency of cleavage of DNA duplexes with single EcoRII recognition sites by the EcoRII restriction endonuclease decreases with increasing substrate length. DNA duplexes of more than 215 bp are not effectively cleaved by this enzyme. Acceleration of the hydrolysis of long single-site substrates by EcoRII is observed in the presence of 11-14-bp substrates. The stimulation of hydrolysis depends on the length and concentration of the second substrate. To study the mechanism of EcoRII endonuclease stimulation, DNA duplexes with base analogs and modified internucleotide phosphate groups in the EcoRII site have been investigated as activators. These modified duplexes are cleaved by EcoRII enzyme with different efficiencies or are not cleaved at all. It has been discovered that the resistance of some of them can be overcome by incubation with a susceptible canonical substrate. The acceleration of cleavage of long single-site substrates depends on the type of modification of the activator. The modified DNA duplexes can activate EcoRII catalyzed hydrolysis if they can be cleaved by EcoRII themselves or in the presence of the second canonical substrate. It has been demonstrated that EcoRII endonuclease interacts in a cooperative way with two recognition sites in DNA. The cleavage of one of the recognition sites depends on the cleavage of the other. We suggest that the activator is not an allosteric effector but acts as a second substrate.  相似文献   

5.
The GTP-dependent restriction enzyme McrBC consists of two polypeptides: one (McrB) that is responsible for GTP binding and hydrolysis as well as DNA binding and another (McrC) that is responsible for DNA cleavage. It recognizes two methylated or hemimethylated RC sites (R(m)C) at a distance of approximately 30 to more than 2000 base pairs and cleaves the DNA close to one of the two R(m)C sites. This process is strictly coupled to GTP hydrolysis and involves the formation of high-molecular mass complexes. We show here using footprinting techniques, surface plasmon resonance, and scanning force microscopy experiments that in the absence of McrC, McrB binds to a single R(m)C site. If a second R(m)C site is present on the DNA, it is occupied independently by McrB. Whereas the DNA-binding domain of McrB forms 1:1 complexes with each R(m)C site and shows a clear footprint on both R(m)C sites, full-length McrB forms complexes with a stoichiometry of at least 4:1 at each R(m)C site, resulting in a slightly more extended footprint. In the presence of McrC, McrB forms high-molecular mass complexes of unknown stoichiometry, which are considerably larger than the complexes formed with McrB alone. In these complexes and when GTP is present, the DNA is cleaved next to one of the R(m)C sites at distances differing by one to five helical turns, suggesting that in the McrBC-DNA complex only a few topologically well-defined phosphodiester bonds of the DNA are accessible for the nucleolytic center of McrC.  相似文献   

6.
McrBC, a GTP-requiring, modification-dependent endonuclease of Escherichia coli K-12, specifically recognizes DNA sites of the form 5' R(m)C 3'. DNA cleavage normally requires translocation-mediated coordination between two such recognition elements at distinct sites. We have investigated assembly of the cleavage-competent complex with gel-shift and DNase I footprint analysis. In the gel-shift system, McrB(L) binding resulted in a fast-migrating specific shifted band, in a manner requiring both GTP and Mg(2+). The binding was specific for methylated DNA and responded to local sequence changes in the same way that cleavage does. Single-stranded DNA competed for McrB(L)-binding in a modification and sequence-specific fashion. A supershifted species was formed in the presence of McrC and GTPgammaS. DNase I footprint analysis showed modest cooperativity in binding to two sites, and a two-site substrate displayed protection in non-specific spacer DNA in addition to the recognition elements. The addition of McrC did not affect the footprint obtained. We propose that McrC effects a conformational change in the complex rather than a reorganization of the DNA:protein interface.  相似文献   

7.
DNA cleavage by type III restriction endonucleases requires two inversely oriented asymmetric recognition sequences and results from ATP-dependent DNA translocation and collision of two enzyme molecules. Here, we characterized the structure and mode of action of the related EcoP1I and EcoP15I enzymes. Analytical ultracentrifugation and gel quantification revealed a common Res(2)Mod(2) subunit stoichiometry. Single alanine substitutions in the putative nuclease active site of ResP1 and ResP15 abolished DNA but not ATP hydrolysis, whilst a substitution in helicase motif VI abolished both activities. Positively supercoiled DNA substrates containing a pair of inversely oriented recognition sites were cleaved inefficiently, whereas the corresponding relaxed and negatively supercoiled substrates were cleaved efficiently, suggesting that DNA overtwisting impedes the convergence of the translocating enzymes. EcoP1I and EcoP15I could co-operate in DNA cleavage on circular substrate containing several EcoP1I sites inversely oriented to a single EcoP15I site; cleavage occurred predominantly at the EcoP15I site. EcoP15I alone showed nicking activity on these molecules, cutting exclusively the top DNA strand at its recognition site. This activity was dependent on enzyme concentration and local DNA sequence. The EcoP1I nuclease mutant greatly stimulated the EcoP15I nicking activity, while the EcoP1I motif VI mutant did not. Moreover, combining an EcoP15I nuclease mutant with wild-type EcoP1I resulted in cutting the bottom DNA strand at the EcoP15I site. These data suggest that double-strand breaks result from top strand cleavage by a Res subunit proximal to the site of cleavage, whilst bottom strand cleavage is catalysed by a Res subunit supplied in trans by the distal endonuclease in the collision complex.  相似文献   

8.
Type III restriction/modification systems recognize short non-palindromic sequences, only one strand of which can be methylated. Replication of type III-modified DNA produces completely unmethylated recognition sites which, according to classical mechanisms of restriction, should be signals for restriction. We have shown previously that suicidal restriction by the type III enzyme EcoP15I is prevented if all the unmodified sites are in the same orientation: restriction by EcoP15I requires a pair of unmethylated, inversely oriented recognition sites. We have now addressed the molecular mechanism of site orientation-specific DNA restriction. EcoP15I is demonstrated to possess an intrinsic ATPase activity, the potential driving force of DNA translocation. The ATPase activity is uniquely recognition site-specific, but EcoP15I-modified sites also support the reaction. EcoP15I DNA restriction patterns are shown to be predetermined by the enzyme-to-site ratio, in that site-saturating enzyme levels elicit cleavage exclusively between the closest pair of head-to-head oriented sites. DNA restriction is blocked by Lac repressor bound in the intervening sequence between the two EcoP15I sites. These results rule out DNA looping and strongly suggest that cleavage is triggered by the close proximity of two convergently tracking EcoP15I-DNA complexes.  相似文献   

9.
Q Liu  X Chen  X Zhao  Y Chen  D Chen 《Gene》1992,113(1):89-93
This study is to extend our earlier observation that Dam and Dcm methylation outside the PvuII recognition sequence inhibited PvuII cleavage in one of the three PvuII sites of pGEM4Z-ras DNA. In this paper, a new recombinant plasmid DNA, pGEM4-SV40ori-anti-ras, was constructed which has only two PvuII sites, I and II. The Dam and Dcm-methylated and unmethylated DNAs were produced in Escherichia coli and linearized by ScaI. The DNA molecules were digested with different amounts of PvuII. The results show that by comparing the DNA fragment number and intensity of the partial and final products in agarose gel, PvuII site I on the methylated DNA molecule was digested four- to eight-fold more slowly than site II. In the unmethylated plasmid DNA, the two PvuII sites were cleaved at about the same rate. The difference was caused only by methylation of Dam and Dcm sites outside the PvuII recognition sequence. A methylated Dam site immediately adjacent to the less efficiently cut PvuII site I may be responsible for the inhibitory effect. We suggest that a new parameter, involving methylation of sites outside the recognition sequence, be considered in kinetic experiments on cleavage.  相似文献   

10.
McrBC: a multisubunit GTP-dependent restriction endonuclease.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
McrBC-mediated restriction of modified DNA has been studied extensively by genetic methods, but little is known of its molecular action. We have used overproducing plasmid constructs to facilitate purification of the McrBL and McrC proteins, and report preliminary characterization of the activity of the complex. Both proteins are required for cleavage of appropriately modified DNA in vitro, in a reaction absolutely dependent on GTP. ATP inhibits the reaction. The sequence and modification requirements for cleavage of the substrate reflect those seen in vivo. The position of cleavage was examined at the nucleotide level, revealing that cleavage occurs at multiple positions in a small region. Based upon these observations, and upon cleavage of model oligonucleotide substrates, it is proposed that the recognition site for this enzyme consists of the motif RmC(N40-80)RmC, with cleavage occurring at multiple positions on both strands, between the modified C residues. In subunit composition, cofactor requirement, and relation between cleavage and recognition site, McrBC does not fit into any of the classes (types I to IV) of restriction enzyme so far described.  相似文献   

11.
The type III restriction-modification enzyme EcoP15I requires the interaction of two unmethylated, inversely oriented recognition sites 5'-CAGCAG in head to head configuration to allow an efficient DNA cleavage. It has been hypothesized that two convergent DNA-translocating enzyme-substrate complexes interact to form the active cleavage complex and that translocation is driven by ATP hydrolysis. Using a half-automated, fluorescence-based detection method, we investigated how the distance between two inversely oriented recognition sites affects DNA cleavage efficiency. We determined that EcoP15I cleaves DNA efficiently even for two adjacent head to head or tail to tail oriented target sites. Hence, DNA translocation appears not to be required for initiating DNA cleavage in these cases. Furthermore, we report here that EcoP15I is able to cleave single-site substrates. When we analyzed the interaction of EcoP15I with DNA substrates containing adjacent target sites in the presence of non-hydrolyzable ATP analogues, we found that cleavage depended on the hydrolysis of ATP. Moreover, we show that cleavage occurs at only one of the two possible cleavage positions of an interacting pair of target sequences. When EcoP15I bound to a DNA substrate containing one recognition site in the absence of ATP, we observed a 36 nucleotide DNaseI-footprint that is asymmetric on both strands. All of our footprinting experiments showed that the enzyme did not cover the region around the cleavage site. Analyzing a DNA fragment with two head to head oriented recognition sites, EcoP15I protected 27-33 nucleotides around the recognition sequence, including an additional region of 26 bp between both cleavage sites. For all DNA substrates examined, the presence of ATP caused altered footprinting patterns. We assume that the altered patterns are most likely due to a conformational change of the enzyme. Overall, our data further refine the tracking-collision model for type III restriction enzymes.  相似文献   

12.
Type III restriction enzymes have been demonstrated to require two unmethylated asymmetric recognition sites oriented head-to-head to elicit double-strand break 25–27 bp downstream of one of the two sites. The proposed DNA cleavage mechanism involves ATP-dependent DNA translocation. The sequence context of the recognition site was suggested to influence the site of DNA cleavage by the enzyme. In this investigation, we demonstrate that the cleavage site of the R.EcoP15I restriction enzyme does not depend on the sequence context of the recognition site. Strikingly, this study demonstrates that the enzyme can cleave linear DNA having either recognition sites in the same orientation or a single recognition site. Cleavage occurs predominantly at a site proximal to the DNA end in the case of multiple site substrates. Such cleavage can be abolished by the binding of Lac repressor downstream (3′ side) but not upstream (5′ side) of the recognition site. Binding of HU protein has also been observed to interfere with R.EcoP15I cleavage activity. In accordance with a mechanism requiring two enzyme molecules cooperating to elicit double-strand break on DNA, our results convincingly demonstrate that the enzyme translocates on DNA in a 5′ to 3′ direction from its recognition site and indicate a switch in the direction of enzyme motion at the DNA ends. This study demonstrates a new facet in the mode of action of these restriction enzymes.  相似文献   

13.
The SfiI restriction endonuclease is a tetramer in which two subunits form a dimeric unit that contains one DNA binding cleft and the other two subunits contain a second cleft on the opposite side of the protein. Full activity requires both clefts to be filled with its recognition sequence: SfiI has low activity when bound to one site. The ability of SfiI to cleave non-cognate sites, one base pair different from the true site, was initially tested on substrates that lacked specific sites but which contained either one or multiple non-cognate sites. No cleavage of the DNA with one non-cognate site was detected, while a small fraction of the DNA with multiple sites was nicked. The alternative sequences were, however, cleaved in both strands, albeit at low levels, when the DNA also carried either a recognition site for SfiI or the termini generated by SfiI. Further tests employed a mutant of SfiI, altered at the dimer interface, which was known to be more active than wild-type SfiI when bound to a single site. This mutant similarly failed to cleave DNA with one non-cognate site, but cleaved the substrates with multiple non-cognate sites more readily than did the native enzyme. To cleave additional sites, SfiI thus needs to interact concurrently with either two non-cognate sites or one non-cognate and one cognate site (or the termini thereof), yet this arrangement is still restrained from cleaving the alternative site unless the communication pathway between the two DNA-binding clefts is disrupted.  相似文献   

14.
McrBC from Escherichia coli K-12 is a restriction enzyme that belongs to the family of AAA(+) proteins and cuts DNA containing modified cytosines. Two proteins are expressed from the mcrB gene: a full-length version, McrB(L), and a short version, McrB(S). McrB(L) binds specifically to the methylated recognition site and is, therefore, the DNA-binding moiety of the McrBC endonuclease. McrB(S) is devoid of DNA-binding activity. We observed that the quaternary structure of the endonuclease depends on binding of the cofactors. In gel filtration experiments, McrB(L) and McrB(S) form high molecular weight oligomers in the presence of Mg(2+) and GTP, GDP or GTP-gamma-S. Oligomerization did not require the presence of DNA and was independent of GTP hydrolysis. Electron micrographs of negatively stained McrB(L) and McrB(S) revealed ring-shaped particles with a central channel. Mass analysis by scanning transmission electron microscopy indicates that McrB(L) and McrB(S) form single heptameric rings as well as tetradecamers. In the presence of McrC, a subunit that is essential for DNA cleavage, the tetradecameric species was the major form of the endonuclease.  相似文献   

15.
The recombinant plasmid pGEM4Z-ras DNA which was methylated on dam and dcm sites outside the PvuII recognition sequence was digested with restriction endonuclease PvuII, and one of the three PvuII sites was about 16-fold less efficient to cleave than either of the other two. On the contrary, the three PvuII sites were cleaved at about the same rate on the unmethylated DNA molecule. The results show that the cleavage inhibition of the methylated DNA on the certain PvuII site was caused by methylation outside the PvuII recognition sequence. Maybe a adjacent methylated dam site *A was responsible for the less efficient cleavage. This observation suggests that methylation outside the recognition sequence may be considered a new factor in the kinetic experiment of restriction endonuclease.  相似文献   

16.
Chimeric nucleases that are hybrids between a nonspecific DNA cleavage domain and a zinc finger DNA recognition domain were tested for their ability to find and cleave their target sites in living cells. Both engineered DNA substrates and the nucleases were injected into Xenopus laevis oocyte nuclei, in which DNA cleavage and subsequent homologous recombination were observed. Specific cleavage required two inverted copies of the zinc finger recognition site in close proximity, reflecting the need for dimerization of the cleavage domain. Cleaved DNA molecules were activated for homologous recombination; in optimum conditions, essentially 100% of the substrate recombined, even though the DNA was assembled into chromatin. The original nuclease has an 18-amino-acid linker between the zinc finger and cleavage domains, and this enzyme cleaved in oocytes at paired sites separated by spacers in the range of 6 to 18 bp, with a rather sharp optimum at 8 bp. By shortening the linker, we found that the range of effective site separations could be narrowed significantly. With no intentional linker between the binding and cleavage domains, only binding sites exactly 6 bp apart supported efficient cleavage in oocytes. We also showed that two chimeric enzymes with different binding specificities could collaborate to stimulate recombination when their individual sites were appropriately placed. Because the recognition specificity of zinc fingers can be altered experimentally, this approach holds great promise for inducing targeted recombination in a variety of organisms.  相似文献   

17.
Type I restriction enzymes bind to a specific DNA sequence and subsequently translocate DNA past the complex to reach a non-specific cleavage site. We have examined several potential blocks to DNA translocation, such as positive supercoiling or a Holliday junction, for their ability to trigger DNA cleavage by type I restriction enzymes. Introduction of positive supercoiling into plasmid DNA did not have a significant effect on the rate of DNA cleavage by EcoAI endonuclease nor on the enzyme's ability to select cleavage sites randomly throughout the DNA molecule. Thus, positive supercoiling does not prevent DNA translocation. EcoR124II endonuclease cleaved DNA at Holliday junctions present on both linear and negatively supercoiled substrates. The latter substrate was cleaved by a single enzyme molecule at two sites, one on either side of the junction, consistent with a bi-directional translocation model. Linear DNA molecules with two recognition sites for endonucleases from different type I families were cut between the sites when both enzymes were added simultaneously but not when a single enzyme was added. We propose that type I restriction enzymes can track along a DNA substrate irrespective of its topology and cleave DNA at any barrier that is able to halt the translocation process.  相似文献   

18.
DNA cleavage by the type III restriction endonuclease EcoP1I was analysed on circular and catenane DNA in a variety of buffers with different salts. In the presence of the cofactor S-adenosyl methionine (AdoMet), and irrespective of buffer, only substrates with two EcoP1I sites in inverted repeat were susceptible to cleavage. Maximal activity was achieved at a Res2Mod2 to site ratio of approximately 1:1 yet resulted in cleavage at only one of the two sites. In contrast, the outcome of reactions in the absence of AdoMet was dependent upon the identity of the monovalent buffer components, in particular the identity of the cation. With Na+, cleavage was observed only on substrates with two sites in inverted repeat at elevated enzyme to site ratios (>15:1). However, with K+ every substrate tested was susceptible to cleavage above an enzyme to site ratio of approximately 3:1, including a DNA molecule with two directly repeated sites and even a DNA molecule with a single site. Above an enzyme to site ratio of 2:1, substrates with two sites in inverted repeat were cleaved at both cognate sites. The rates of cleavage suggested two separate events: a fast primary reaction for the first cleavage of a pair of inverted sites; and an order-of-magnitude slower secondary reaction for the second cleavage of the pair or for the first cleavage of all other site combinations. EcoP1I enzymes mutated in either the ATPase or nuclease motifs did not produce the secondary cleavage reactions. Thus, AdoMet appears to play a dual role in type III endonuclease reactions: Firstly, as an allosteric activator, promoting DNA association; and secondly, as a "specificity factor", ensuring that cleavage occurs only when two endonucleases bind two recognition sites in a designated orientation. However, given the right conditions, AdoMet is not strictly required for DNA cleavage by a type III enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
A partial duplex DNA substrate containing the Lac repressor binding site, within the duplex region, was constructed to examine the effect of bound Lac repressor on the unwinding reaction catalyzed by several DNA helicases. The substrate contained 90 base pairs of double-stranded DNA and, in the absence of Lac repressor, was effectively unwound by each of the seven helicases tested. The unwinding reactions catalyzed by Escherichia coli Rep protein, bacteriophage T4 Dda protein and E. coli DNA helicase I were not inhibited by the presence of bound Lac repressor. Both SV40 T antigen and E. coli helicase II were partially inhibited by bound repressor at the highest repressor concentrations tested. The helicase reactions catalyzed by E. coli DnaB protein and helicase IV were substantially inhibited by the presence of bound protein. When the length of the duplex region was increased to 323 base pairs the inhibition spectrum caused by bound Lac repressor on the unwinding reactions catalyzed by DnaB protein, helicase I and helicase II was essentially the same as that observed using the shorter partial duplex molecule. Inhibition of the unwinding reaction was due to the presence of bound Lac repressor as evidenced by the substantially weaker inhibition of helicase IV by Lac repressor in the presence of IPTG. In addition, we have shown that Rep protein displaces the bound repressor protein during the course of an unwinding reaction.  相似文献   

20.
Preferential cleavage by restriction endonuclease HinfIII   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The efficiency of endonucleolytic scission by restriction endonuclease HinfIII varies markedly for different recognition sites. The relative frequencies of cleavage at these sites have been determined on the basis of analysis of specific unit length linear molecules formed. The efficiency of restriction reaction depends also on the number of recognition sites in the DNA substrate. Cleavage by HinfIII in the absence or presence of S-adenosylmethionine is observed only when at least three recognition sites are present. HinfIII also shows preferential methylation of certain sites observable even for a substrate with one recognition site. The nucleotide sequences at sites cleaved or methylated at high frequency have been compared.  相似文献   

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