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1.
The SalGI restriction endonuclease. Mechanism of DNA cleavage.   总被引:6,自引:2,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
The cleavage of supercoiled DNA of plasmid pMB9 by restriction endonuclease SalGI has been studied. Under the optimal conditions for this reaction, the only product is the linear form of the DNA, in which both strands of the duplex have been cleaved at the SalGI recognition site. DNA molecules cleaved in one strand at this site were found to be poor substrates for the SalGI enzyme. Thus, both strands of the DNA appear to be cleaved in a concerted reaction. However, under other conditions, the enzyme cleaves either one or both strands of the DNA; the supercoiled substrate is then converted to either open-circle or linear forms, the two being produced simultaneously rather than consecutively. We propose a mechanism for the SalGI restriction endonuclease which accounts for the reactions of this enzyme under both optimal and other conditions. These reactions were unaffected by the tertiary structure of the DNA.  相似文献   

2.
The EcoRI restriction endonuclease was found by the filter binding technique to form stable complexes, in the absence of Mg2+, with the DNA from derivatives of bacteriophage lambda that either contain or lack EcoRI recognition sites. The amount of complex formed at different enzyme concentrations followed a hyperbolic equilibrium-binding curve with DNA molecules containing EcoRI recognition sites, but a sigmoidal equilibrium-binding curve was obtained with a DNA molecule lacking EcoRI recognition sites. The EcoRI enzyme displayed the same affinity for individual recognition sites on lambda DNA, even under conditions where it cleaves these sites at different rates. The binding of the enzyme to a DNA molecule lacking EcoRI sites was decreased by Mg2+. These observations indicate that (a) the EcoRI restriction enzyme binds preferentially to its recognition site on DNA, and that different reaction rates at different recognition sites are due to the rate of breakdown of this complex; (b) the enzyme also binds to other DNA sequences, but that two molecules of enzyme, in a different protein conformation, are involved in the formation of the complex at non-specific consequences; (c) the different affinities of the enzyme for the recognition site and for other sequences on DNA, coupled with the different protein conformations, account for the specificity of this enzyme for the cleavage of DNA at this recognition site; (d) the decrease in the affinity of the enzyme for DNA, caused by Mg2+, liberates binding energy from the DNA-protein complex that can be used in the catalytic reaction.  相似文献   

3.
EcoRII is a homodimer with two domains consisting of a DNA-binding N terminus and a catalytic C terminus and recognizes two specific sequences on DNA. It shows a relatively complicated cleavage reaction in bulk solution. After binding to either recognition site, EcoRII cleaves the other recognition site of the same DNA (cis-binding) strand and/or the recognition site of the other DNA (trans-binding) strand. Although it is difficult to separate these two reactions in bulk solution, we could simply obtain the binding and cleavage kinetics of only the cis-binding by following the frequency (mass) changes of a DNA-immobilized quartz-crystal microbalance (QCM) responding to the addition of EcoRII in aqueous solution. We obtained the maximum binding amounts (Deltam(max)), the dissociation constants (K(d)), the binding and dissociation rate constants (k(on) and k(off)), and the catalytic cleavage reaction rate constants (k(cat)) for wild-type EcoRII, the N-terminal-truncated form (EcoRII N-domain), and the mutant derivatives in its C-terminal domain (K263A and R330A). It was determined from the kinetic analyses that the N-domain, which covers the catalytic C-domain in the absence of DNA, preferentially binds to the one DNA recognition site while transforming EcoRII into an active form allosterically, and then the secondary C-domain binds to and cleaves the other recognition site of the DNA strand.  相似文献   

4.
The EcoRV restriction endonuclease cleaves DNA not only at its recognition sequence but also at most other sequences that differ from the recognition site by one base pair. Compared to the reaction at the recognition site, the reactions at noncognate sites are slow but 1 out of the 12 noncognate sites on the plasmid pAT153 is cleaved more than 50 times faster than any other. The increase in the reaction rate at the preferred noncognate site, relative to other sites, was caused by the DNA sequences in the 4 base pairs from either side of the site. For enhanced activity by EcoRV, particular bases were needed immediately adjacent to the site, inside the DNA-protein complex. At these loci, the protein interacts with the phosphate groups in the DNA and the flanking sequence may control the activity of the enzyme by determining the conformation of the DNA, thus aligning the phosphate contacts. But the preferential cleavage also depended on sequences further away from the site, at loci outside the complex. At external positions, beyond the reach of the protein, the EcoRV enzyme required flanking sequences that give rise to flexibility in DNA conformation. These may facilitate the distortion of the DNA required for catalysis by EcoRV.  相似文献   

5.
According to the current paradigm type IIE restriction endonucleases are homodimeric proteins that simultaneously bind to two recognition sites but cleave DNA at only one site per turnover: the other site acts as an allosteric locus, activating the enzyme to cleave DNA at the first. Structural and biochemical analysis of the archetypal type IIE restriction enzyme EcoRII suggests that it has three possible DNA binding interfaces enabling simultaneous binding of three recognition sites. To test if putative synapsis of three binding sites has any functional significance, we have studied EcoRII cleavage of plasmids containing a single, two and three recognition sites under both single turnover and steady state conditions. EcoRII displays distinct reaction patterns on different substrates: (i) it shows virtually no activity on a single site plasmid; (ii) it yields open-circular DNA form nicked at one strand as an obligatory intermediate acting on a two-site plasmid; (iii) it cleaves concertedly both DNA strands at a single site during a single turnover on a three site plasmid to yield linear DNA. Cognate oligonucleotide added in trans increases the reaction velocity and changes the reaction pattern for the EcoRII cleavage of one and two-site plasmids but has little effect on the three-site plasmid. Taken together the data indicate that EcoRII requires simultaneous binding of three rather than two recognition sites in cis to achieve concerted DNA cleavage at a single site. We show that the orthodox type IIP enzyme PspGI which is an isoschisomer of EcoRII, cleaves different plasmid substrates with equal rates. Data provided here indicate that type IIE restriction enzymes EcoRII and NaeI follow different mechanisms. We propose that other type IIE restriction enzymes may employ the mechanism suggested here for EcoRII.  相似文献   

6.
Concatemer DNA duplexes which contain at the EcoRII restriction endonuclease cleavage sites (formula; see text) phosphodiester, phosphoamide or pyrophosphate internucleotide bonds have been synthesized. It has been shown that this enzyme did not cleave the substrate at phosphoamide bond. EcoRII endonuclease catalyzes single-strand cleavages both in dA- and dT-containing strands of the recognition site if the cleavage of the other strand has been blocked by modification of scissile bond or if the other strand has been cleaved. This enzyme interacts with both strands of the DNA recognition site, each of them being cleaved independently on the cleavage of another one. Nucleotide sequences flanking the EcoRII site on both sides are necessary for effective cleavage of the substrate.  相似文献   

7.
As shown by a nitrocellulose filter binding assay, in the absence of Mg2+ EcoRII restriction endonuclease binds specifically to a set of synthetic concatemer DNA duplexes of varying chain length, containing natural and modified recognition sites of this enzyme. The binding of the substrates with the central AT, TT or AA-pair in the recognition site decreases at AT greater than TT much greater than AA. Substitution of the pyrophosphate bond at the cleavage site for the phosphodiester or phosphoramide bond produces little influence on the stability of the complexes. The affinity of the enzyme for nonspecific sites is two orders of magnitude less than that for the specific EcoRII sequences. Equilibrium association constant for a substrate with one recognition site is 3.9 X 10(8) M-1. Addition of Mg2+ leads to the destabilization of the EcoRII endonuclease complex with DNA duplex, containing pyrophosphate bonds. The dissociation rate constants and the lifetime of the EcoRII endonuclease--synthetic substrates complexes have been determined.  相似文献   

8.
The kinetics of the reactions of the EcoRI restriction endonuclease at individual recognition sites on the DNA from bacteriophage lambda were found to differ markedly from site to site. Under certain conditions of pH and ionic strength, the rates for the cleavage of the DNA were the same at each recognition site. But under altered experimental conditions, different reaction rates were observed at each recognition site. These results are consistent with a mechanism in which the kinetic stability of the complex between the enzyme and the recognition site on the DNA differs among the sites, due to the effect of interactions between the enzyme and DNA sequences surrounding each recognition site upon the transition state of the reaction. Reactions at individual sites on a DNA molecule containing more than one recognition site were found to be independent of each other, thus excluding the possibility of a processive mechanism for the EcoRI enzyme. The consequences of these observations are discussed with regard to both DNA-protein interactions and to the application of restriction enzymes in the study of the structure of DNA molecules.  相似文献   

9.
Simon H  Kittler L  Baird E  Dervan P  Zimmer C 《FEBS letters》2000,471(2-3):173-176
The influence of an eight-ring hairpin DNA minor groove binder on the gyrase mediated DNA supercoiling and cleavage reaction step of the enzyme was investigated. The results demonstrate that supercoiling is affected by the hairpin polyamide in the millimolar concentration range while the enzyme catalyzed cleavage of a 162 bp fragment of pBR322 containing a single strong gyrase site is effectively inhibited at nanomolar concentration. As demonstrated by footprint analysis the latter effect is caused by a specific binding of the hairpin forming polyamide to the enzyme recognition site (GGCC), which indicates that the gyrase activity to produce a double strand break is blocked at this site. The pyrrole-imidazole hairpin polyamide is the most potent inhibitor of the gyrase mediated cleavage reaction compared to other known anti-gyrase active DNA binding agents.  相似文献   

10.
We have identified strong topoisomerase sites (STS) for Mycobacteruim smegmatis topoisomerase I in double-stranded DNA context using electrophoretic mobility shift assay of enzyme-DNA covalent complexes. Mg2+, an essential component for DNA relaxation activity of the enzyme, is not required for binding to DNA. The enzyme makes single-stranded nicks, with transient covalent interaction at the 5'-end of the broken DNA strand, a characteristic akin to prokaryotic topoisomerases. More importantly, the enzyme binds to duplex DNA having a preferred site with high affinity, a property similar to the eukaryotic type I topoisomerases. The preferred cleavage site is mapped on a 65 bp duplex DNA and found to be CG/TCTT. Thus, the enzyme resembles other prokaryotic type I topoisomerases in mechanistics of the reaction, but is similar to eukaryotic enzymes in DNA recognition properties.  相似文献   

11.
We have designed and synthesized a series of novel DNA photocleaving agents which break DNA with high sequence specificity. These compounds contain the non-diffusible photoactive p-nitrobenzoyl group covalently linked via a dimethylene (or tetramethylene) spacer to thiazole analogues of the DNA binding portion of the antibiotic bleomycin A2. By using a variety of 5' or 3' 32P-end labeled restriction fragments from plasmid pBR322 as substrate, we have shown that photoactive bithiazole compounds bind DNA at the consensus sequence 5'-AAAT-3' and induce DNA cleavage 3' of the site. Analysis of cleavage sites on the complementary DNA strand and inhibition of DNA breakage by distamycin A indicates these bithiazole derivatives bind and attack the minor groove of DNA. A photoactive unithiazole compound was less specific inducing DNA breakage at the degenerate site 5'-(A/T)(AA/TT)TPu(A/T)-3'. DNA sequence recognition of these derivatives appears to be determined by the thiazole moiety rather than the p-nitrobenzoyl group: use of a tetramethylene group in place of a dimethylene spacer shifted the position of DNA breakage by one base pair. Moreover, much less specific DNA photocleavage was observed for a compound in which p-nitrobenzoyl was linked to the intercalator acridine via a sequence-neutral hexamethylene spacer. The 5'-AAAT-3' specificity of photoactive bithiazole derivatives contrasts with that of bleomycin A2 which cleaves DNA most frequently at 5'-GPy-3' sequences. These results suggest that the cleavage specificity exhibited by bleomycin is not simply determined by its bithiazole/sulphonium terminus, and the contributions from other features, e.g. its metal-chelating domain, must be considered. The novel thiazole-based DNA cleavage agents described here should prove useful as reagents for probing DNA structure and for elucidating the molecular basis of DNA recognition by bleomycin and other ligands.  相似文献   

12.
Electron microscopic examination of DNA intermediates formed by the restriction endonuclease of Escherichia coli B revealed supercoiled loops that are presumably formed during an ATP-dependent DNA translocation process in which the enzyme remains bound to the recognition site while tracking along the DNA helix to a cleavage site. The rate of DNA translocation during this process is at least 5000 base pairs/min at 37 degrees C. Even after all cleavages have been completed, complexes are seen that contain terminal loops or loop plus tail structures. During this later phase of the reaction, ATP is hydrolyzed at a rate which is dependent upon the size of the largest possible loop (or loop plus tail); this ATP hydrolysis can be terminated by one double-strand cleavage within the loop region between the recognition site and the terminus. To explain these results, it is hypothesized that after cleavage the enzyme cycles between a tracking (and possibly back-tracking) mode which is fueled by ATP hydrolysis and a relatively long static period in which ATP hydrolysis does not occur. While tracking, the enzyme would be bound both to the recognition site and to a distal site but, while static, the enzyme would be bound only at the recognition site of nonlooped molecules. This post-nuclease phase of the reaction is hypothesized to reflect a reaction whereby the enzyme initially scans DNA molecules before making a strand cleavage.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Eukaryotic DNA topoisomerase I introduces transient single-stranded breaks on double-stranded DNA and spontaneously breaks down single-stranded DNA. The cleavage sites on both single and double-stranded SV40 DNA have been determined by DNA sequencing. Consistent with other reports, the eukaryotic enzymes, in contrast to prokaryotic type I topoisomerases, links to the 3'-end of the cleaved DNA and generates a free 5'-hydroxyl end on the other half of the broken DNA strand. Both human and calf enzymes cleave SV40 DNA at the identical and specific sites. From 827 nucleotides sequenced, 68 cleavage sites were mapped. The majority of the cleavage sites were present on both double and single-stranded DNA at exactly the same nucleotide positions, suggesting that the DNA sequence is essential for enzyme recognition. By analyzing all the cleavage sequences, certain nucleotides are found to be less favored at the cleavage sites. There is a high probability to exclude G from positions -4, -2, -1 and +1, T from position -3, and A from position -1. These five positions (-4 to +1 oriented in the 5' to 3' direction) around the cleavage sites must interact intimately with topo I and thus are essential for enzyme recognition. One topo I cleavage site which shows atypical cleavage sequence maps in the middle of a palindromic sequence near the origin of SV40 DNA replication. It occurs only on single-stranded SV40 DNA, suggesting that the DNA hairpin can alter the cleavage specificity. The strongest cleavage site maps near the origin of SV40 DNA replication at nucleotide 31-32 and has a pentanucleotide sequence of 5'-TGACT-3'.  相似文献   

15.
We present here the first detailed biochemical analysis of an archaeal restriction enzyme. PspGI shows sequence similarity to SsoII, EcoRII, NgoMIV and Cfr10I, which recognize related DNA sequences. We demonstrate here that PspGI, like SsoII and unlike EcoRII or NgoMIV and Cfr10I, interacts with and cleaves DNA as a homodimer and is not stimulated by simultaneous binding to two recognition sites. PspGI and SsoII differ in their basic biochemical properties, viz. stability against chemical denaturation and proteolytic digestion, DNA binding and the pH, MgCl(2) and salt-dependence of their DNA cleavage activity. In contrast, the results of mutational analyses and cross-link experiments show that PspGI and SsoII have a very similar DNA binding site and catalytic center as NgoMIV and Cfr10I (whose crystal structures are known), and presumably also as EcoRII, in spite of the fact that these enzymes, which all recognize variants of the sequence -/CC-GG- (/ denotes the site of cleavage), are representatives of different subgroups of type II restriction endonucleases. A sequence comparison of all known restriction endonuclease sequences, furthermore, suggests that several enzymes recognizing other DNA sequences also share amino acid sequence similarities with PspGI, SsoII and EcoRII in the region of the presumptive active site. These results are discussed in an evolutionary context.  相似文献   

16.
The thermodynamic parameters of the interaction of the two anthracyclines 13-dihydrodaunomycin and marcellomycin with calf thymus DNA were examined by equilibrium binding studies. Enthalpy and entropy changes of the binding of both drugs show salt dependence profiles that cannot be rationalized by the polyelectrolyte theory. This feature is common to other anthracycline compounds. The nucleotide sequence binding preferences of daunomycin, adriamycin, 13-dihydrodaunomycin and marcellomycin have been studied by monitoring the degree of protection from cleavage by restriction endonucleases of linearized pBR322. Differential protection of pBR322 DNA against the cleavage of Bgl I and Ava II suggests that these drugs recognize changes in the sequences near the enzyme recognition site. Alterations of the electrophoretic restriction pattern of pBR322 in the presence of anthracyclines are dependent on time and on concentration. These results are discussed in relation to the existence of nucleotide sequences with different affinity for these drugs.  相似文献   

17.
The EcoRV restriction endonuclease cleaves DNA at its recognition sequence at least a million times faster than at any other DNA sequence. The only cofactor it requires for activity is Mg2+: but in binding to DNA in the absence of Mg2+, the EcoRV enzyme shows no specificity for its recognition site. Instead, the reason why EcoRV cuts one DNA sequence faster than any other is that the rate of cleavage is controlled by the binding of Mg2+ to EcoRV-DNA complexes: the complex at the recognition site has a high affinity for Mg2+, while the complexes at other DNA sequences have low affinities for Mg2+. The structures of the EcoRV endonuclease, and of its complexes with either 8pecific or non-specific DNA, have been solved by X-ray crystallography. In the specific complex, the protein interacts with the bases in the recognition sequence and the DNA takes up a highly distorted structure. In the non-specific complex with an unrelated DNA sequence, there are virtually no interactions with the bases and the DNA retains a B-like structure. Since the free energy changes for the formation of specific and non-specific complexes are the same, the energy from the specific interactions balances that required for the distortion of the DNA. The distortion inserts the phosphate at the scissile bond into the active site of the enzyme, where it forms part of the binding site for Mg2+. Without this distortion, the EcoRV–DNA complex would be unable to bind Mg2+ and thus unable to cleave DNA. The specificity of the EcoRV restriction enzyme is therefore governed, not by DNA binding as such, but by its ability to organize the structure of the DNA to which it is bound.  相似文献   

18.
We have characterized features of the site recognized by a double-stranded DNA endonuclease, I-SceII, encoded by intron 4 alpha of the yeast mitochondrial COX1 gene. We determined the effects of 36 point mutations on the cleavage efficiency of natural and synthetic substrates containing the Saccharomyces capensis I-SceII site. Most mutations of the 18-bp I-SceII recognition site are tolerated by the enzyme, and those mutant sites are cleaved between 42 and 100% as well as the wild-type substrate is. Nine mutants blocked cleavage to less than or equal to 33% of the wild-type, whereas only three point mutations, G-4----C, G-12----T, and G-15----C, block cleavage completely. Competition experiments indicate that these three substrates are not cleaved, at least in part because of a marked reduction in the affinity of the enzyme for those mutant DNAs. About 90% of the DNAs derived from randomization of the nucleotide sequence of the 4-bp staggered I-SceII cleavage site are not cleaved by the enzyme. I-SceII cleaves cloned DNA derived from human chromosome 3 about once every 110 kbp. The I-SceII recognition sites in four randomly chosen human DNA clones have 56 to 78% identity with the 18-bp site in yeast mitochondrial DNA; they are cleaved at least 50% as well as the wild-type mitochondrial substrate despite the presence of some substitutions that individually compromise cleavage of the mitochondrial substrate. Analysis of these data suggests that the effect of a given base substitution in I-SceII cleavage may depend on the sequence at other positions.  相似文献   

19.
KpnI REase recognizes palindromic sequence, GGTAC↓C, and forms complex in the absence of divalent metal ions, but requires the ions for DNA cleavage. Unlike most other REases, R.KpnI shows promiscuous DNA cleavage in the presence of Mg2+. Surprisingly, Ca2+ suppresses the Mg2+-mediated promiscuous activity and induces high fidelity cleavage. To further analyze these unique features of the enzyme, we have carried out DNA binding and kinetic analysis. The metal ions which exhibit disparate pattern of DNA cleavage have no role in DNA recognition. The enzyme binds to both canonical and non-canonical DNA with comparable affinity irrespective of the metal ions used. Further, Ca2+-imparted exquisite specificity of the enzyme is at the level of DNA cleavage and not at the binding step. With the canonical oligonucleotides, the cleavage rate of the enzyme was comparable for both Mg2+- and Mn2+-mediated reactions and was about three times slower with Ca2+. The enzyme discriminates non-canonical sequences poorly from the canonical sequence in Mg2+-mediated reactions unlike any other Type II REases, accounting for the promiscuous behavior. R.KpnI, thus displays properties akin to that of typical Type II REases and also endonucleases with degenerate specificity in its DNA recognition and cleavage properties.  相似文献   

20.
We have investigated interaction of Mycobacterium smegmatis topoisomerase I at its specific recognition sequence. DNase I footprinting demonstrates a large region of protection on both the scissile and non-scissile strands of DNA. Methylation protection and interference analyses reveal base-specific contacts within the recognition sequence. Missing contact analyses reveal additional interactions with the residues in both single and double-stranded DNA, and hence underline the role for the functional groups associated with those bases. These interactions are supplemented by phosphate contacts in the scissile strand. Conformation specific probes reveal protein-induced structural distortion of the DNA helix at the T-A-T-A sequence 11 bp upstream to the recognition sequence. Based on these footprinting analyses that define parameters of topoisomerase I-DNA interactions, a model of topoisomerase I binding to its substrate is presented. Within the large protected region of 30 bp, the enzyme makes direct contact at two locations in the scissile strand, one around the cleavage site and the other 8-12 bases upstream. Thus the enzyme makes asymmetric recognition of DNA and could carry out DNA relaxation by either of the two proposed mechanisms: enzyme bridged and restricted rotation.  相似文献   

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