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1.
Bacteriophage-T4 UV endonuclease nicks the C(3')-O-P bond 3' to AP (apurinic or apyrimidinic) sites by a beta-elimination reaction. The breakage of this bond is sometimes followed by the nicking of the C(5')-O-P bond 5' to the AP site, leaving a 3'-phosphate end; delta-elimination is proposed as a mechanism to explain this second reaction. The AP site formed when this enzyme acts on a pyrimidine dimer in a polynucleotide chain undergoes the same nicking reactions. Micrococcus luteus UV endonuclease also nicks the C(3')-O-P bond 3' to AP sites by a beta-elimination reaction. No subsequent delta-elimination was observed, but this might be due to the presence of 2-mercaptoethanol in the enzyme preparation.  相似文献   

2.
Escherichia coli endonuclease IV hydrolyses the C(3')-O-P bond 5' to a 3'-terminal base-free deoxyribose. It also hydrolyses the C(3')-O-P bond 5' to a 3'-terminal base-free 2',3'-unsaturated sugar produced by nicking 3' to an AP (apurinic or apyrimidinic) site by beta-elimination; this explains why the unproductive end produced by beta-elimination is converted by the enzyme into a 3'-OH end able to prime DNA synthesis. The action of E. coli endonuclease IV on an internal AP site is more complex: in a first step the C(3')-O-P bond 5' to the AP site is hydrolysed, but in a second step the 5'-terminal base-free deoxyribose 5'-phosphate is lost. This loss is due to a spontaneous beta-elimination reaction in which the enzyme plays no role. The extreme lability of the C(3')-O-P bond 3' to a 5'-terminal AP site contrasts with the relative stability of the same bond 3' to an internal AP site; in the absence of beta-elimination catalysts, at 37 degrees C the half-life of the former is about 2 h and that of the latter 200 h. The extreme lability of a 5'-terminal AP site means that, after nicking 5' to an AP site with an AP endonuclease, in principle no 5'----3' exonuclease is needed to excise the AP site: it falls off spontaneously. We have repaired DNA containing AP sites with an AP endonuclease (E. coli endonuclease IV or the chromatin AP endonuclease from rat liver), a DNA polymerase devoid of 5'----3' exonuclease activity (Klenow polymerase or rat liver DNA polymerase beta) and a DNA ligase. Catalysts of beta-elimination, such as spermine, can drastically shorten the already brief half-life of a 5'-terminal AP site; it is what very probably happens in the chromatin of eukaryotic cells. E. coli endonuclease IV also probably participates in the repair of strand breaks produced by ionizing radiations: as E. coli endonuclease VI/exonuclease III, it is a 3'-phosphoglycollatase and also a 3'-phosphatase. The 3'-phosphatase activity of E. coli endonuclease VI/exonuclease III and E. coli endonuclease IV can also be useful when the AP site has been excised by a beta delta-elimination reaction.  相似文献   

3.
Addition of thiol compounds containing an anionic group to the 3'-terminal unsaturated sugar of the 5' fragment obtained from an oligonucleotide containing an AP site cleaved by beta-elimination, can be followed by gel electrophoresis. The technique enables to distinguish between two mechanisms of cleavage of the C3'-O-P bond 3' to an AP site: hydrolysis or beta-elimination. Addition of thiols to the double-bond of the 3'-terminal sugar resulting from beta-elimination prevents a subsequent delta-elimination. The interpretation of the action of enzymes that start by nicking 3' to AP sites must take into account the presence or absence of thiols in the reaction medium. In living cells, thiols might influence the pathways followed by the repair processes of AP site-containing DNA.  相似文献   

4.
Histones and polyamines nick the phosphodiester bond 3' to AP (apurinic/apyrimidinic) sites in DNA by inducing a beta-elimination reaction, which can be followed by delta-elimination. These beta- and delta-elimination reactions might be important for the repair of AP sites in chromatin DNA in either of two ways. In one pathway, after the phosphodiester bond 5' to the AP site has been hydrolysed with an AP endonuclease, the 5'-terminal base-free sugar 5'-phosphate is released by beta-elimination. The one-nucleotide gap limited by 3'-OH and 5'-phosphate ends is then closed by DNA polymerase-beta and DNA ligase. We have shown in vitro that such a repair is possible. In the other pathway, the nicking 3' to the AP site by beta-elimination occurs first. We have shown that the 3'-terminal base-free sugar so produced cannot be released by the chromatin AP endonuclease from rat liver. But it can be released by delta-elimination, leaving a gap limited by 3'-phosphate and 5'-phosphate. After conversion of the 3'-phosphate into a 3'-OH group by the chromatin 3'-phosphatase, there will be the same one-nucleotide gap, limited by 3'-OH and 5'-phosphate, as that formed by the successive actions of the AP endonuclease and the beta-elimination catalyst in the first pathway.  相似文献   

5.
Deoxyribonuclease IV, a 5'-3' exonuclease degrading double-stranded DNA from intra-strand nicks, has been purified from the chromatin of rat liver cells. The enzyme, which has an Mr of 58000, excises the apurinic (AP) sites from a depurinated DNA nicked 5' to these AP sites with the chromatin AP endonuclease. The excision is not the result of hydrolysis of the phosphodiester bond 3' to the AP sites since the excision product does not behave as deoxyribose 5-phosphate but as its 2,3-unsaturated derivative. This result suggests that, to remove the AP sites from the DNA nicked by an AP endonuclease, the chromatin deoxyribonuclease IV rather acts as a catalyst of beta-elimination.  相似文献   

6.
The oligonucleotide [5'-32P]pdT8d(-)dTn, containing an apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) site [d(-)], yields three radioactive products when incubated at alkaline pH: two of them, forming a doublet approximately at the level of pdT8dA when analysed by polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, are the result of the beta-elimination reaction, whereas the third is pdT8p resulting from beta delta-elimination. The incubation of [5'-32P]pdT8d(-)dTn, hybridized with poly(dA), with E. coli endonuclease III yields two radioactive products which have the same electrophoretic behaviour as the doublet obtained by alkaline beta-elimination. The oligonucleotide pdT8d(-) is degraded by the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of T4 DNA polymerase as well as pdT8dA, showing that a base-free deoxyribose at the 3' end is not an obstacle for this activity. The radioactive products from [5'-32P]pdT8d(-)dTn cleaved by alkaline beta-elimination or by E. coli endonuclease III are not degraded by the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of T4 DNA polymerase. When DNA containing AP sites labelled with 32P 5' to the base-free deoxyribose labelled with 3H in the 1' and 2' positions is degraded by E. coli endonuclease VI (exonuclease III) and snake venom phosphodiesterase, the two radionuclides are found exclusively in deoxyribose 5-phosphate and the 3H/32P ratio in this sugar phosphate is the same as in the substrate DNA. When DNA containing these doubly-labelled AP sites is degraded by alkaline treatment or with Lys-Trp-Lys, followed by E. coli endonuclease VI (exonuclease III), some 3H is found in a volatile compound (probably 3H2O) whereas the 3H/32P ratio is decreased in the resulting sugar phosphate which has a chromatographic behaviour different from that of deoxyribose 5-phosphate. Treatment of the DNA containing doubly-labelled AP sites with E. coli endonuclease III, then with E. coli endonuclease VI (exonuclease III), also results in the loss of 3H and the formation of a sugar phosphate with a lower 3H/32P ratio that behaves chromatographically as the beta-elimination product digested with E. coli endonuclease VI (exonuclease III). From these data, we conclude that E. coli endonuclease III cleaves the phosphodiester bond 3' to the AP site, but that the cleavage is not a hydrolysis leaving a base-free deoxyribose at the 3' end as it has been so far assumed. The cleavage might be the result of a beta-elimination analogous to the one produced by an alkaline pH or Lys-Trp-Lys. Thus it would seem that E. coli 'endonuclease III' is, after all, not an endonuclease.  相似文献   

7.
It has been shown previously that the DNA deoxyribophosphodiesterase (dRpase) activity of Escherichia coli excises 2-deoxyribose 5-phosphate moieties at apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites in DNA following cleavage of the DNA at the AP site by an AP endonuclease such as endonuclease IV of E coli. A second class of enzymes that cleave DNA at AP sites by a beta-elimination mechanism, AP lyases, leave a different sugar-phosphate product remaining at the AP site, which has been identified as the compound trans-4-hydroxy-2-pentenal 5-phosphate. It is shown that dRpase removes this unsaturated sugar-phosphate group following cleavage of a poly(dA-dT) substrate containing AP sites by the action of the AP lyase endonuclease III of E. coli. The Km for the removal of trans-4-hydroxy-2-pentenal 5-phosphate is 0.06 microM; the Km for the removal of 2-deoxyribose 5-phosphate is 0.17 microM. It was verified that the sugar-phosphate product removed by dRpase from the endonuclease III-cleaved substrate was trans-4-hydroxy-2-pentenal 5-phosphate by conversion of the product to the compound cyclopentane-1,2-dione. The dRpase activity is unique in its ability to remove sugar-phosphate products after cleavage by both AP endonucleases and AP lyases.  相似文献   

8.
Escherichia coli endonuclease III is not an endonuclease. It breaks the C3'-O-P bond 3' to an AP site in DNA by catalysing a beta-elimination and not a hydrolysis. Therefore, it is a phosphoric monoester-lyase.  相似文献   

9.
Enzymes that release 5'-deoxyribose-5-phosphate (dRP) residues from preincised apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) DNA have been collectively termed DNA deoxyribophosphodiesterases (dRPases), but they fall into two distinct categories: the hydrolytic dRPases and AP lyases. In order to resolve a number of conflicting reports in the dRPase literature, we examined two putative hydrolytic dRPases (Escherichia coli exonuclease I (exo I) and RecJ) and four AP lyases (E. coli 2, 6-dihydroxy-5N-formamidopyrimidine (Fapy) DNA glycosylase (Fpg) and endonuclease III (endo III), bacteriophage T4 endonuclease V (endo V), and rat polymerase beta (beta-pol)) for their abilities to (i) excise dRP from preincised AP DNA and (ii) incise AP DNA. Although exo I and RecJ exhibited robust 3' to 5' and 5' to 3' exonucleolytic activities, respectively, on appropriate substrates, they failed to demonstrate detectable dRPase activity. All four AP lyases possessed both dRPase and traditional AP lyase activities, albeit to varying degrees. Moreover, as best illustrated with Fpg, AP lyase enzymes could be trapped on both preincised and unincised AP DNA using NaBH(4) as the reducing agent. These results further support the assertion that the catalytic mechanism of the AP lyases, the beta-elimination reaction, does proceed through an imine enzyme-DNA intermediate and that the active site residues responsible for dRP release must contain primary amines. Further, these data indicate a biological significance for the beta-elimination reaction of DNA glycosylase/AP lyases in that they, in concert with hydrolytic AP endonucleases, can create appropriate gapped substrates for short patch base excision repair (BER) synthesis to occur efficiently.  相似文献   

10.
Human placental apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease. Mechanism of action   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The mechanism of action of the homogeneous preparation of human placental apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonuclease, described in the previous paper (Shaper, N. L., Grafstrom, R. H., and Grossman, L. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 13455-13458), has been investigated in detail. This enzyme cleaves apyrimidinic DNA both 5' and 3' to the site of damage in a ratio of 60:40, respectively. Even though this enzyme can cleave on both sides of an internal AP site, it does not release deoxyribose 5-phosphate from terminal AP sites. However, a compound, tentatively identified as alpha, beta unsaturated deoxyribose 5-phosphate, is nonenzymatically released only from 5'-terminal AP sites, presumably by a beta-elimination mechanism.  相似文献   

11.
J Kim  S Linn 《Nucleic acids research》1988,16(3):1135-1141
Treatment of DNA containing AP sites with either T4 UV endonuclease or with E. coli endonuclease III followed by a human class II AP endonuclease releases a putative beta-elimination product. This result suggests that both the T4 endonuclease and E. coli endonuclease III class I AP endonucleases catalyze phosphodiester bond cleavage via a lyase- rather than a hydrolase mechanism. Indeed, we have not detected a class I AP endonuclease which hydrolytically catalyzes phosphodiester bond cleavage. Whereas these enzymes use a lyase-like rather than a hydrolytic mechanism, they nonetheless catalyze phosphodiester bond cleavage. We suggest that the term endonuclease can be properly applied to them.  相似文献   

12.
[5'-32P]pdT8d(-)dT7, containing an AP (apurinic/apyrimidinic) site in the ninth position, and [d(-)-1',2'-3H, 5'-32P]DNA, containing AP sites labelled with 3H in the 1' and 2' positions of the base-free deoxyribose [d(-)] and with 32P 5' to this deoxyribose, were used to investigate the yields of the beta-elimination and delta-elimination reactions catalysed by spermine, and also the yield of hydrolysis, by the 3'-phosphatase activity of T4 polynucleotide kinase, of the 3'-phosphate resulting from the beta delta-elimination. Phage-phi X174 RF (replicative form)-I DNA containing AP (apurinic) sites has been repaired in five steps: beta-elimination, delta-elimination, hydrolysis of 3'-phosphate, DNA polymerization and ligation. Spermine, in one experiment, and Escherichia coli formamidopyrimidine: DNA glycosylase, in another experiment, were used to catalyse the first and second steps (beta-elimination and delta-elimination). These repair pathways, involving a delta-elimination step, may be operational not only in E. coli repairing its DNA containing a formamido-pyrimidine lesion, but also in mammalian cells repairing their nuclear DNA containing AP sites.  相似文献   

13.
Escherichia coli [formamidopyrimidine]DNA glycosylase catalyses the nicking of both the phosphodiester bonds 3' and 5' of apurinic or apyrimidinic sites in DNA so that the base-free deoxyribose is replaced by a gap limited by 3'-phosphate and 5'-phosphate ends. The two nickings are not the results of hydrolytic processes; the [formamidopyrimidine]DNA glycosylase rather catalyses a beta-elimination reaction that is immediately followed by a delta-elimination. The enzyme is without action on a 3'-terminal base-free deoxyribose or on a 3'-terminal base-free unsaturated sugar produced by a beta-elimination reaction nicking the DNA strand 3' to an apurinic or apyrimidinic site.  相似文献   

14.
The yeast OGG1 gene was recently cloned and shown to encode a protein that possesses N-glycosylase/AP lyase activities for the repair of oxidatively damaged DNA at sites of 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoguanine). Similar activities have been identified for Escherichia coli formamidopyrimidine-DNA glycosylase (Fpg) and Drosophila ribosomal protein S3. Both Fpg and S3 also contain a deoxyribophosphodiesterase (dRpase) activity that removes 2-deoxyribose-5-phosphate at an incised 5' apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites via a beta-elimination reaction. Drosophila S3 also has an additional activity that removes trans-4-hydroxy-2-pentenal-5-phosphate at a 3' incised AP site by a Mg2+-dependent hydrolytic mechanism. In view of the substrate similarities between Ogg1, Fpg and S3 at the level of base excision repair, we examined whether Ogg1 also contains dRpase activities. A glutathione S-transferase fusion protein of Ogg1 was purified and subsequently found to efficiently remove sugar-phosphate residues at incised 5' AP sites. Activity was also detected for the Mg2+-dependent removal of trans -4-hydroxy-2-pentenal-5-phosphate at 3' incised AP sites and from intact AP sites. Previous studies have shown that DNA repair proteins that possess AP lyase activity leave an inefficient DNA terminus for subsequent DNA synthesis steps associated with base excision repair. However, the results presented here suggest that in the presence of MgCl2, Ogg1 can efficiently process 8-oxoguanine so as to leave a one nucleotide gap that can be readily filled in by a DNA polymerase, and importantly, does not therefore require additional enzymes to process trans -4-hydroxy-2-pentenal-5-phosphate left at a 3' terminus created by a beta-elimination catalyst.  相似文献   

15.
Human AP endonuclease 1 (APE1, REF1) functions within the base excision repair pathway by catalyzing the hydrolysis of the phosphodiester bond 5 ' to a baseless sugar (apurinic or apyrimidinic site). The AP endonuclease activity of this enzyme and two active site mutants were characterized using equilibrium binding and pre-steady-state kinetic techniques. Wild-type APE1 is a remarkably potent endonuclease and highly efficient enzyme. Incision 5 ' to AP sites is so fast that a maximal single-turnover rate could not be measured using rapid mixing/quench techniques and is at least 850 s(-1). The entire catalytic cycle is limited by a slow step that follows chemistry and generates a steady-state incision rate of about 2 s(-1). Site-directed mutation of His-309 to Asn and Asp-210 to Ala reduced the single turnover rate of incision 5 ' to AP sites by at least 5 orders of magnitude such that chemistry (or a step following DNA binding and preceding chemistry) and not a step following chemistry became rate-limiting. Our results suggest that the efficiency with which APE1 can process an AP site in vivo is limited by the rate at which it diffuses to the site and that a slow step after chemistry may prevent APE1 from leaving the site of damage before the next enzyme arrives to continue the repair process.  相似文献   

16.
The thymine DNA mismatch glycosylase from Methanobacterium thermoformicicum, a member of the endonuclease III family of repair proteins, excises the pyrimidine base from T-G and U-G mismatches. Unlike endonuclease III, it does not cleave the phosphodiester backbone by a beta-elimination reaction. This cleavage event has been attributed to a nucleophilic attack by the conserved Lys120 of endonuclease III on the aldehyde group at C1' of the deoxyribose and subsequent Schiff base formation. The inability of TDG to perform this beta-elimination event appears to be due to the presence of a tyrosine residue at the position equivalent to Lys120 in endonuclease III. The purpose of this work was to investigate the requirements for AP lyase activity. We replaced Tyr126 in TDG with a lysine residue to determine if this replacement would yield an enzyme with an associated AP lyase activity capable of removing a mismatched pyrimidine. We observed that this replacement abolishes the glycosylase activity of TDG but does not affect substrate recognition. It does, however, convert the enzyme into an AP lyase. Chemical trapping assays show that this cleavage proceeds through a Schiff base intermediate and suggest that the amino acid at position 126 interacts with C1' on the deoxyribose sugar.  相似文献   

17.
V Bailly  W G Verly 《FEBS letters》1984,178(2):223-227
The 3' AP endonucleases (class I) are said to hydrolyze the phosphodiester bond 3' to AP sites yielding 3'-OH and 5'-phosphate ends; on the other hand, the resulting 3' terminal AP site is not removed by the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the Klenow fragment [1]. We show that AP sites in DNA are easily removed by the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of the Klenow fragment and that they are excised as deoxyribose-5-phosphate. It is suggested that the 3' AP endonucleases are perhaps not the hydrolases they are supposed to be.  相似文献   

18.
We have developed simple and sensitive assays that distinguish the main classes of apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonucleases: Class I enzymes that cleave on the 3' side of AP sites by beta-elimination, and Class II enzymes that cleave by hydrolysis on the 5' side. The distinction of the two types depends on the use of a synthetic DNA polymer that contains AP sites with 5'-[32P]phosphate residues. Using this approach, we now show directly that Escherichia coli endonuclease IV and human AP endonuclease are Class II enzymes, as inferred previously on the basis of indirect assays. The assay method does not exhibit significant interference by nonspecific nucleases or primary amines, which allows the ready determination of different AP endonuclease activities in crude cell extracts. In this way, we show that virtually all of the Class II AP endonuclease activity in E. coli can be accounted for by two enzymes: exonuclease III and endonuclease IV. In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the Class II AP endonuclease activity is totally dependent on a single enzyme, the Apn1 protein, but there are probably multiple Class I enzymes. The versatility and ease of our approach should be useful for characterizing this important class of DNA repair enzymes in diverse systems.  相似文献   

19.
Endonuclease IV gene, the only putative AP endonuclease of C. pneumoniae genome, was cloned into pET28a. Recombinant C. pneumoniae endonuclease I V (CpEndoIV) was expressed in E. coli and purified to homogeneity. CpEndoIV has endonuclease activity against apurinic/apyrimidinic sites (AP sites) of double-stranded (ds) oligonucleotides. AP endonuclease activity of CpEndoIV was promoted by divalent metal ions Mg2+ and Zn2+, and inhibited by EDTA. The natural (A, T, C and G) and modified (U, I and 8-oxo-G (GO)) bases opposite AP site had little effect on the cleavage efficiency of AP site of ds oligonucleotides by CpEndoIV. However, the CpEndoIV-dependent cleavage of AP site opposite modified base GO was strongly inhibited by Chlamydia DNA glycosylase MutY. Interestingly, the AP site in single-stranded (ss) oligonucleotides was also the effective substrate of CpEndoIV. Similar to E. coli endonuclease IV, AP endonuclease activity of CpEndoIV was also heat-stable to some extent, with a half time of 5 min at 60 degrees C.  相似文献   

20.
The mechanism of hydrolysis of the apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) site and its synthetic analogs by using tyrosyl-DNA phosphodiesterase 1 (Tdp1) was analyzed. Tdp1 catalyzes the cleavage of AP site and the synthetic analog of the AP site, 3-hydroxy-2(hydroxymethyl)-tetrahydrofuran (THF), in DNA by hydrolysis of the phosphodiester bond between the substituent and 5′ adjacent phosphate. The product of Tdp1 cleavage in the case of the AP site is unstable and is hydrolyzed with the formation of 3′- and 5′-margin phosphates. The following repair demands the ordered action of polynucleotide kinase phosphorylase, with XRCC1, DNA polymerase β, and DNA ligase. In the case of THF, Tdp1 generates break with the 5′-THF and the 3′-phosphate termini. Tdp1 is also able to effectively cleave non-nucleotide insertions in DNA, decanediol and diethyleneglycol moieties by the same mechanism as in the case of THF cleavage. The efficiency of Tdp1 catalyzed hydrolysis of AP-site analog correlates with the DNA helix distortion induced by the substituent. The following repair of 5′-THF and other AP-site analogs can be processed by the long-patch base excision repair pathway.  相似文献   

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