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1.
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   

2.
A Price 《FEBS letters》1992,300(1):101-104
The 5'----3' exonuclease activity of E. coli DNA polymerase I and a related enzyme activity in mammalian cell nuclei, DNase IV, are unable to catalyse the excision of free deoxyribose-phosphate from apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites incised by an AP endonuclease. Instead, the sugar phosphate residue is slowly released as part of a short oligonucleotide. These products have been characterised as dimers and trimers by comparison of their retention time on reverse-phase HPLC with reference compounds prepared by acid depurination of a dinucleotide, trinucleotide and tetranucleotide containing a 5'-terminal dAMP residue. The similar mode of action of these enzymes at 5'-incised AP sites provides an explanation for the minority of repair patches larger than one nucleotide observed when AP sites are repaired by E. coli and mammalian cell extracts in vitro and strengthens the functional analogy between the two activities.  相似文献   

3.
The E. coli single-stranded binding protein (SSB) has been demonstrated in vitro to be involved in a number of replicative, DNA renaturation, and protective functions. It was shown previously that SSB can interact with exonuclease I to stimulate the hydrolysis of single-stranded DNA. We demonstrate here that E. coli SSB can also enhance the DNA deoxyribophosphodiesterase (dRpase) activity of exonuclease I by stimulating the release of 2-deoxyribose-5-phosphate from a DNA substrate containing AP endonuclease-incised AP sites, and the release of 4-hydroxy-2-pentenal-5-phosphate from a DNA substrate containing AP lyase-incised AP sites. E. coli SSB and exonuclease I form a protein complex as demonstrated by Superose 12 gel filtration chromatography. These results suggest that SSB may have an important role in the DNA base excision repair pathway.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites arise in DNA through the spontaneous loss of bases or through the release of damaged bases from DNA by DNA glycosylases. AP sites in DNA can be catalyzed by AP endonucleases such as exonuclease III and endonuclease IV, generating a 3'-hydroxyl group and a 5'-terminal sugar phosphate. Here, we have identified and characterized a novel endonuclease IV from a hyperthermophilic bacterium Thermus thermophilus designated as TthNfo. TthNfo efficiently removed AP site from double-stranded oligonucleotide substrate. No significant difference was observed in the rate of reaction of four bases opposite AP site with TthNfo. In addition, TthNfo possesses a 3'-5' exonuclease activity similar to that of Escherichia coli exonuclease III. Surprisingly, we found that TthNfo also catalyzes the excision of uracil from DNA. In comparison with other endonuclease IV proteins, the removal of uracil residue was unique to TthNfo. Based on these observations and the absence of exonuclease III in T. thermophilus, we suggest that versatile enzyme activities of TthNfo play an important role in counteracting DNA base damage in vivo.  相似文献   

6.
Mitochondrial DNA polymerase gamma (pol gamma) is active in base excision repair of AP (apurinic/apyrimidinic) sites in DNA. Usually AP site repair involves cleavage on the 5' side of the deoxyribose phosphate by AP endonuclease. Previous experiments suggested that DNA pol gamma acts to catalyze the removal of a 5'-deoxyribose phosphate (dRP) group in addition to playing the conventional role of a DNA polymerase. We confirm that DNA pol gamma is an active dRP lyase and show that other members of the family A of DNA polymerases including Escherichia coli DNA pol I also possess this activity. The dRP lyase reaction proceeds by formation of a covalent enzyme-DNA intermediate that is converted to an enzyme-dRP intermediate following elimination of the DNA. Both intermediates can be cross-linked with NaBH(4). For both DNA pol gamma and the Klenow fragment of pol I, the enzyme-dRP intermediate is extremely stable. This limits the overall catalytic rate of the dRP lyase, so that family A DNA polymerases, unlike pol beta, may only be able to act as dRP lyases in repair of AP sites when they occur at low frequency in DNA.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
DNA deoxyribophosphodiesterase (dRpase) of E. coli catalyzes the release of deoxyribose-phosphate moieties following the cleavage of DNA at an apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) site by either an AP endonuclease or AP lyase. Exonuclease I is a single-strand specific DNA nuclease which affects the expression of recombination and repair pathways in E. coli. We show here that a major dRpase activity in E. coli is associated with the exonuclease I protein. Highly purified exonuclease I isolated from an over-producing stain contains high levels of dRpase activity; it catalyzes the release of deoxyribose-5-phosphate from an AP site incised with endonuclease IV of E. coli and the release of 4-hydroxy-2-pentenal-5-phosphate from an AP site incised by the AP lyase activity of endonuclease III of E. coli. A strain containing a deletion of the sbcB gene showed little dRpase activity; the activity could be restored by transformation of the strain with a plasmid containing the sbcB gene. The dRpase activity isolated from an overproducing stain was increased 70-fold as compared to a normal sbcB+ strain (AB3027). These results suggest that the dRpase activity may be important in pathways for both DNA repair and recombination.  相似文献   

9.
Homogeneous Fpg protein of Escherichia coli has DNA glycosylase activity which excises some purine bases with damaged imidazole rings, and an activity excising deoxyribose (dR) from DNA at abasic (AP) sites leaving a gap bordered by 5'- and 3'-phosphoryl groups. In addition to these two reported activities, we show that the Fpg protein also catalyzes the excision of 5'-terminal deoxyribose phosphate (dRp) from DNA, which is the principal product formed by the incision of AP endonucleases at abasic sites. Moreover, the rate of the Fpg protein catalysis for the 2,6-diamino-4-hydroxy-5-formamidopyrimidine-DNA glycosylase activity is slower than the activities excising dR from abasic sites and dRp from abasic sites preincised by endonucleases. The product released by the Fpg protein in the excision of 5'-terminal dRp from an abasic site preincised by an AP endonuclease is a single base-free unsaturated dRp, suggesting that the excision results from beta-elimination. The release of 5'-terminal dRp by crude extracts of E. coli from wild type and fpg-mutant strains shows that the Fpg protein is one of the major EDTA-resistant activities catalyzing this reaction.  相似文献   

10.
The aromatic amine 9-amino-ellipticine is a synthetic DNA intercalating compound derived from the antitumor agent ellipticine, which cleaves at very low doses DNA containing apurinic sites by beta-elimination through formation of a Schiff base. This compound has been shown to potentiate the cytotoxic effect of alkylating drugs, such as dimethyl sulfate, in E. coli through a mechanism involving apurinic sites. We have studied the ability of 9-amino-ellipticine to inhibit an enzymatic repair system mimicking base-excision repair, in which E. coli exonuclease III only presents an endonuclease for apurinic/apyrimidinic site activity. 10 microM of 9-amino-ellipticine inhibits 70% of apurinic site repair. Other intercalating agents with similar affinities for DNA do not induce any inhibition. In another system designed for the direct assay of the exonuclease III-induced incisions 5' to AP sites 10 microM of 9-amino-ellipticine inhibits 65% of the endonuclease for apurinic/apyrimidinic site activity of E. coli exonuclease III. The 9-amino-ellipticine-induced formation of a 2',3'-unsaturated deoxyribose and cleavage at the 3' side of the apurinic site, and possible creation of an adduct, as suggested by Bertrand and coworkers (1989), on the 3' position of the deoxyribose seem to strongly inhibit the endonuclease for apurinic/apyrimidinic site activity. 9-Amino-ellipticine appears therefore to be the first small ligand which can inhibit, by an irreversible modification of the substrate, the repair of apurinic sites through the base excision-repair pathway at a pharmacological concentration.  相似文献   

11.
Human apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonuclease 1 (APE1) is multifunctional enzyme. APEI is involved in the DNA base excision repair process (BER). APE1 participates in BER by cleaving the DNA adjacent to the 5' side of an AP site to produce a hydroxyl group at the 3' terminus of an unmodified nucleotide upstream of the nick and a 5' deoxyribose phosphate moiety downstream. In addition to its AP-endonucleolytic function, APE1 possesses 3' phosphodiesterase, 3'-5' exonuclease and 3' phosphatase activities. Independently of being characterized as DNA repair protein, APE1 was identified as redox-factor (Ref-1). Our own and literature data on the role of APE1 additional functions in cell metabolism and on interactions of APE1 with DNA and other proteins that participate in BER are analyzed in this review.  相似文献   

12.
The early steps of excision repair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers are investigated. It is demonstrated that the apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease associated with the Micrococcus luteus uv-specific endonuclease cleaves the phosphodiester bond on the 3' side of the deoxyribose leaving a 3' hydroxy terminus and a 5' phosphoryl terminus. This nick is not a substrate for T4 polynucleotide ligase. The 3' base-free deoxyribose terminus is not a substrate for either the polymerase or the 3' to 5' exonuclease activities of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I. However, the 3' terminus of the nick is converted to a substrate for DNA polymerization by the action of a 5' apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease. A three-step model for the incision step of excision repair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers is presented.  相似文献   

13.
The genetic requirements for the excision repair of thymine glycols, urea residues, and apurinic (AP) sites were examined by measuring the survival in Escherichia coli mutants of phi X174 replicative form (RF) I transfecting DNA containing selectively introduced lesions. phi X RF I DNA containing thymine glycols was inactivated at a greater rate in mutants deficient in endonuclease III (nth) than in wild-type hosts, suggesting that endonuclease III is involved in the repair of thymine glycols in vivo. phi X RF I DNA containing thymine glycols was also inactivated at a greater rate in mutants that were deficient in both exonuclease III and endonuclease IV (xth nfo) than in wild-type hosts, suggesting that a class II AP endonuclease is required for the in vivo processing of thymine glycols. phi X duplex-transfecting DNA containing urea residues or AP sites was inactivated at a greater rate in xth nfo double mutants than in wild-type, but not single-mutant, hosts, suggesting that exonuclease III or endonuclease IV is required for the repair of these damages and that either activity can substitute for the other. These data are in agreement with the known in vitro substrate specificities of endonuclease III, exonuclease III, and endonuclease IV.  相似文献   

14.
An endonuclease purified from Hemophilus influenzae made single strand breaks in DNA containing apurinic or apyrimidinic sites but had no detectable endonuclease activity on untreated native DNA. The new 5'-termini created at the cleavage sites were base-free deoxyribose 5-phosphate residues. The enzyme preparation also catalyzed the exonucleolytic release of 5'-mononucleotides from bihelical DNA and the hydrolysis of DNA 3'-terminal phosphomonoesters. The phosphatase-exonuclease activity was indistinguishable from that reported by Gunther and Goodgal (J. Biol. Chem. (1970) 245, 5341-5349) and resembled that of exonuclease III of Escherichia coli. The endonucleolytic and exonucleolytic activities could not be separated by electrophoresis, sedimentation, or gel filtration, and they were also affected simultaneously by mutation. The enzymatic activities appear to be functions of a single monomeric protein (M(r) = 30,000).  相似文献   

15.
Yeast Rad27 is a 5'-->3' exonuclease and a flap endo-nuclease. Apn1 is the major apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonuclease in yeast. The rad27 deletion mutants are highly sensitive to methylmethane sulfonate (MMS). By examining the role of Rad27 in different modes of DNA excision repair, we wish to understand why the cytotoxic effect of MMS is dramatically enhanced in the absence of Rad27. Base excision repair (BER) of uracil-containing DNA was deficient in rad27 mutant extracts in that (i) the Apn1 activity was reduced, and (ii) after DNA incision by Apn1, hydrolysis of 1-5 nucleotides 3' to the baseless sugar phosphate was deficient. Thus, some AP sites may lead to unprocessed DNA strand breaks in rad27 mutant cells. The severe MMS sensitivity of rad27 mutants is not caused by a reduction of the Apn1 activity. Surprisingly, we found that Apn1 endonuclease sensitizes rad27 mutant cells to MMS. Deleting the APN1 gene largely restored the resistance of rad27 mutants to MMS. These results suggest that unprocessed DNA strand breaks at AP sites are mainly responsible for the MMS sensitivity of rad27 mutants. In contrast, nucleotide excision repair and BER of oxidative damage were not affected in rad27 mutant extracts, indicating that Rad27 is specifically required for BER of AP sites in DNA.  相似文献   

16.
The ability of HeLa DNA polymerases to carry out DNA synthesis from incisions made by various endodeoxyribonucleases which recognize or form baseless sites in DNA was examined. DNA polymerase beta carried out limited strand displacement synthesis from 3'-hydroxyl nucleotide termini made by HeLa apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonuclease II at the 5'-side of apurinic sites. Escherichia coli endonuclease III incises at the 3'-side of apurinic sites to produce nicks with 3'-deoxyribose termini which did not efficiently support DNA synthesis with beta-polymerase. However, these nicks could be activated to support limited DNA synthesis by HeLa AP endonuclease II, an enzyme which removes the baseless sugar phosphate from the 3'-termini, thus creating a one-nucleotide gap. With dGTP as the only nucleoside triphosphate present, the beta-polymerase catalyzed one-nucleotide DNA repair synthesis from those gaps which lacked dGMP. In contrast, HeLa DNA polymerase alpha was unreactive with all of the above incised DNA substrates. Larger patches of DNA synthesis were produced by nick translation from one-nucleotide gaps with HeLa DNA polymerase beta and HeLa DNase V. Moreover, incisions made by E. coli endonuclease III were activated to support DNA synthesis by the DNase V which removed the 3'-deoxyribose termini. HeLa DNase V also stimulated both the rate and extent of DNA synthesis by DNA polymerase beta from AP endonuclease II incisions. In this case the baseless sugar phosphate was removed from the 5'-termini, and nick translational synthesis occurred. Complete DNA excision repair of pyrimidine dimers was achieved with the beta-polymerase, DNase V, and DNA ligase from incisions made in UV-irradiated DNA by T4 UV endonuclease and HeLa AP endonuclease II. Such incisions produce a one-nucleotide gap containing 3'-hydroxyl nucleotide and 5'-thymine: thymidylate cyclobutane dimer termini. DNase V removes pyrimidine dimers primarily as a dinucleotide and then promotes nick translational DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
The main endonuclease for apurinic sites of Escherichia coli (endonuclease VI) has no action on normal strands, either in double-stranded or single-stranded DNA, or on alkylated sites. The enzyme has an optimum pH at 8.5, is inhibited by EDTA and needs Mg2+ for its activity; it has a half-life of 7 min at 40 degrees C. A purified preparation of endonuclease VI, free of endonuclease II activity, contained exonuclease III; the two activities (endonuclease VI and exonuclease III) copurified and were inactivated with the same half-lives at 40 degrees C. Endonuclease VI cuts the DNA strands on the 5' side of the apurinic sites giving a 3'-OH and a 5'-phosphate, and exonuclease III, working afterwards, leaves the apurinic site in the DNA molecule; this apurinic site can subsequently be removed by DNA polymerase I. The details of the excision of apurinic sites in vitro from DNA by endonuclease VI/exonuclease III, DNA polymerase I and ligase, are described; it is suggested that exonuclease III works as an antiligase to facilitate the DNA repair.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Simple base damages are repaired through a short-patch base excision pathway where a single damaged nucleotide is removed and replaced. DNA polymerase beta (Pol beta) is responsible for the repair synthesis in this pathway and also removes a 5'-sugar phosphate residue by catalyzing a beta-elimination reaction. How ever, some DNA lesions that render deoxyribose resistant to beta-elimination are removed through a long-patch repair pathway that involves strand displacement synthesis and removal of the generated flap by specific endonuclease. Three human DNA polymerases (Pol beta, Pol delta and Pol epsilon) have been proposed to play a role in this pathway, however the identity of the polymerase involved and the polymerase selection mechanism are not clear. In repair reactions catalyzed by cell extracts we have used a substrate containing a reduced apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) site resistant to beta-elimination and inhibitors that selectively affect different DNA polymerases. Using this approach we find that in human cell extracts Pol beta is the major DNA polymerase incorporating the first nucleotide during repair of reduced AP sites, thus initiating long-patch base excision repair synthesis.  相似文献   

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