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1.
D B Olsen  G Kotzorek  F Eckstein 《Biochemistry》1990,29(41):9546-9551
The inhibitory effect of phosphorothioate residues, located within one strand of double-stranded DNA, on the hydrolytic activity of the restriction endonuclease EcoRV was investigated. Specific incorporation of a phosphorothioate group at the site of cleavage yielded the sequence 5'-GATsATC-3'. This modified sequence was cleaved at a relative rate of 0.1 compared to the unmodified substrate. Substrates 5'-GATsAsTC-3' and 5'-GsATsATC-3', both containing one additional phosphorothioate substitution, were linearized at a rate of 0.04 relative to unmodified DNA. However, under the same conditions, fully dAMPS-substituted DNA was found to be virtually resistant to the hydrolytic activity of EcoRV. Further experiments showed that double-stranded DNA fragments generated by PCR containing phosphorothioate groups within both strands are potent inhibitors of EcoRV catalysis. The inhibition was independent of whether the inhibitor fragment contained an EcoRV recognition site. We concluded that substitution of the phosphate group at the site of cleavage by a phosphorothioate residue decreases the rate of EcoRV-catalyzed hydrolysis most significantly. Substitution of other phosphate groups within the recognition sequence plays a limited role in enzyme inhibition. The presence of multiple dNMPS residues at regions of the DNA removed from the EcoRV recognition site may decrease the amount of enzyme available for catalysis by nonspecific binding to EcoRV.  相似文献   

2.
The crystal structure of the DNA polymerase encoded by gene 5 of bacteriophage T7, in a complex with its processivity factor, Escherichia coli thioredoxin, a primer-template, and an incoming deoxynucleoside triphosphate reveals a putative hydrogen bond between the C-terminal residue, histidine 704 of gene 5 protein, and an oxygen atom on the penultimate phosphate diester of the primer strand. Elimination of this electrostatic interaction by replacing His(704) with alanine renders the phage nonviable, and no DNA synthesis is observed in vivo. Polymerase activity of the genetically altered enzyme on primed M13 DNA is only 12% of the wild-type enzyme, and its processivity is drastically reduced. Kinetic parameters for binding a primer-template (K(D)(app)), nucleotide binding (K(m)), and k(off) for dissociation of the altered polymerase from a primer-template are not significantly different from that of wild-type T7 DNA polymerase. However, the decrease in polymerase activity is concomitant with increased hydrolytic activity, judging from the turnover of nucleoside triphosphate into the corresponding nucleoside monophosphate (percentage of turnover, 65%) during DNA synthesis. Biochemical data along with structural observations imply that the terminal amino acid residue of T7 DNA polymerase plays a critical role in partitioning DNA between the polymerase and exonuclease sites.  相似文献   

3.
The gene D5 product (gpD5) of bacteriophage T5 is a DNA-binding protein that binds preferentially to double-stranded DNA and is essential for T5 DNA replication, yet it inhibits DNA synthesis in vitro. Mechanisms of inhibition were studied by using nicked DNA and primed single-stranded DNA as a primer-template. Inhibition of T5 DNA polymerase activity by gpD5 occurred when double-stranded regions of DNA were saturated with gpD5. The 3' leads to 5' exonuclease associated with T5 DNA polymerase was not very active with nicked DNA, but inhibition of hydrolysis of substituents at 3'-hydroxyl termini by gpD5 could be observed. T5 DNA polymerase appears to be capable of binding to the 3' termini even when double-stranded regions are saturated with gpD5. The interaction of gpD5 with the polymerases at the primer terminus is apparently the primary cause of inhibition of polymerization.  相似文献   

4.
Frameshift mutagenesis occurs through the misalignment of primer and template strands during DNA synthesis and involves DNA intermediates that contain one or more extrahelical bases in either strand of the DNA substrate. To investigate whether these DNA structures are recognized by the proofreading apparatus of DNA polymerases, time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy was used to examine the interaction between the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I and synthetic DNA primer-templates containing extrahelical bases at defined positions within the template strand. A dansyl probe attached to the DNA was used to measure the fractional occupancies of the polymerase and 3'-5' exonuclease sites of the enzyme for DNA substrates with and without the extrahelical bases. The presence of an extrahelical base at the first position from the primer 3' terminus increased the level of partitioning of the DNA substrates into the 3'-5' exonuclease site by 3-7-fold, relative to the perfectly base-paired primer-template, depending on the identity of the extrahelical base. The ability of different extrahelical bases to promote partitioning of DNA into the 3'-5' exonuclease site decreased in the following order: G > A approximately T > C. The results of partitioning measurements for DNA substrates containing a bulged adenine base at different positions within the template showed that an extrahelical base is recognized up to five bases from the primer 3' terminus. The largest effects were observed for the extrahelical base at the third or fourth positions from the primer terminus, which increased the level of partitioning of DNA into the 3'-5' exonuclease site by 8- and 18-fold, respectively, relative to that of the perfectly base-paired substrate. Steady-state fluorescence measurements of analogous primer-templates containing 2-aminopurine (AP) at the primer 3' terminus indicate that extrahelical bases increase the degree of terminus unwinding, especially when close to the terminus. In addition, steady-state kinetic measurements of removal of AP from the primer-templates indicate that the exonucleolytic cleavage activity of Klenow fragment is correlated with the increased level of partitioning of bulged DNA substrates to the 3'-5' exonuclease site relative to that of properly base-paired DNA. The results of this study indicate that misalignment of primer and template strands to generate an extrahelical base strongly promotes transfer of a DNA substrate to the 3'-5' exonuclease site, suggesting that the premutational intermediates in frameshift mutagenesis are subject to proofreading by the polymerase.  相似文献   

5.
6.
T5-induced DNA polymerase has an associated 3' to 5' exonuclease activity. Both single-stranded and duplex DNA are hydrolyzed by this enzyme in a quasi-processive manner. This is indicated by the results of polymer-challenge experiments utilizing product analysis techniques. Due to the quasi-processive mode of hydrolysis, the kinetics of label release from the 3'-terminally labeled oligonucleotide substrates, annealed to complementary homopolymers, show an initial high rate of hydrolysis. In the case of both single-stranded and duplex DNA substrates, hydrolysis seems to continue, at best, up to the point where the enzyme is five or six nucleotides away from the 5-end. The enzyme carries out mismatch repair, as evidenced by experiments with primer molecules containing improper base residues at the 3'-OH terminus. Control experiments with complementary base residues at the 3'-end indicate that extensive removal of terminal residue takes place in the presence of dNTP's only when such residues are "improper" in the Watson-Crick sense.  相似文献   

7.
When we placed an ENA residue into primers at the 3' end, or the n-1, n-2, or n-3 position, which included a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) site at the 3' end, only primers containing the ENA residue at the n-2 position were read by Taq DNA polymerase for amplification. The use of the ENA primers avoided the generation of undesired short products, which are thought to be derived from primer-dimers. A greater discrimination of the SNP site by these primers containing the ENA residue was observed compared with that of the corresponding unmodified DNA primers that are often used for allele-specific polymerase chain reaction (AS-PCR). This improvement is probably due to the difficulty of incorporating a nucleotide into the mismatched ENA primer by Taq DNA polymerase in the modified primer-template duplex. These results demonstrate that ENA primer-based AS-PCR would enable a rapid and reliable technique for SNP genotyping.  相似文献   

8.
The mechanism of ATP hydrolysis by the solubilized mitochondrial ATPase (MF1) has been studied under conditions where catalytic turnover occurs at one site, uni-site catalysis (obtained when enzyme is in excess of substrate), or at two sites, bi-site catalysis (obtained when substrate is in excess of enzyme). Pulse-chase experiments support the conclusion that the sites which participate in bi-site catalysis are the same as those which participate in uni-site catalysis. Upon addition of ATP in molar excess to MF1, label that was bound under uni-site conditions dissociates at a rate equal to the rate of bi-site catalysis. Similarly, when medium ATP is removed, label that was bound under bi-site conditions dissociates at a rate equal to the rate of uni-site catalysis. Evidence that a high affinity catalytic site equivalent to the one observed under uni-site conditions participates as an intermediate in bi-site catalysis includes the demonstration of full occupancy of a catalytically competent site during steady-state turnover at nanomolar concentrations of ATP. Improved measurements of the interaction of ADP at a high affinity catalytic site have lead to the revision of several of the rate constants that define uni-site catalysis. The rate constant for unpromoted dissociation of ADP is equal to that for Pi (4 X 10(-3) s-1). The rate of binding ADP at a high affinity chaseable site (Kd = 1 nM) is equal to the rate of binding ATP (4 X 10(6) M-1 s-1). The rate of catalysis obtained when substrate binding at one site promotes product release from an adjacent site (bi-site catalysis) is up to 100,000-fold faster than unpromoted product release (uni-site catalysis).  相似文献   

9.
Clustered DNA damage, where two or more lesions are located proximal to each other on the same or opposite DNA strands, is frequently produced as a result of exposure to ionising radiation. It has been suggested that such complex damaged sites pose problems for repair pathways. In this study, we addressed the question of how two 8-oxoguanine lesions, located two nucleotides apart on the same DNA strand, are repaired. We find that in human cell extracts repair of either of the 8-oxoguanine lesions within a tandem damaged site is initiated randomly and that the majority of the initiated repair proceeds to completion. However, a fraction of the initiated repair is delayed at the stage of an incised AP site and the rate of further processing of this incised AP site is dependent on the position of the remaining 8-oxoguanine. If the remaining 8-oxoguanine residue is located near the 5' terminus of the incised abasic site, repair continues as efficiently as repair of a single 8-oxoguanine residue. However, repair is delayed after the incision step when the remaining 8-oxoguanine residue is located near the 3' terminus. Although the presence of the 8-oxoguanine residue near the 3' terminus did not affect either DNA polymerase beta activity or poly(ADP)ribose polymerase-1 affinity and turnover on an incised AP site, we find that 8-oxoguanine-DNA glycosylase has reduced ability to remove an 8-oxoguanine residue located near the 3' terminus of the incised AP site. We find that binding of the 8-oxoguanine-DNA glycosylase to this 8-oxoguanine residue inhibits DNA repair synthesis by DNA polymerase beta, thus delaying repair. We propose that interference between a DNA glycosylase and DNA polymerase during the repair of tandem lesions may lead to accumulation of the intermediate products that contain persisting DNA strand breaks.  相似文献   

10.
Fluorescence resonance energy transfer was used to show that ATP hydrolysis induces a change in the properties of two nucleotide-binding sites in isolated chloroplast coupling factor 1 (CF1). The fluorescence donor was Lucifer Yellow vinyl sulfone (4-amino-N-[3-(vinylsulfonyl)phenyl]naphthalimide- 3,6-disulfonate), covalently bound to a unique site on the alpha subunit between nucleotide-binding sites 2 and 3. The fluorescence acceptor was the ATP analog 2'(3')-trinitrophenyladenosine 5'-triphosphate (TNP-ATP), incorporated specifically into nucleotide-binding site 1. Energy transfer from Lucifer Yellow to TNP-ATP in site 1 was greater if catalysis occurred before TNP-ATP was incorporated than if no catalysis occurred, indicating that one of the nucleotide-binding sites near the Lucifer Yellow had changed its properties to those of site 1 as a result of catalysis. The amount of energy transfer increased with the degree of substrate excess during catalysis, as expected if catalysis were required for the new site 1 location. ADP, which binds to CF1, but is not a substrate for hydrolysis, caused little energy transfer. Titration of site 3 with TNP-ATP showed greater energy transfer from Lucifer Yellow when catalysis had not occurred, indicating that sites 1 and 3 switched properties as a result of catalysis. The amount of energy transfer declined exponentially with time between removal of substrate and addition of TNP-ATP to site 1, with a half-time of 1.5-2 h at room temperature. This result suggests that the change that results in switching of nucleotide-binding sites 1 and 3 relaxes in the absence of substrate. Our results show that the asymmetry of the nucleotide-binding sites of CF1 is not a permanent feature of the molecule.  相似文献   

11.
DNA polymerase I has been purified to greater than 90% homogeneity from a strain of Escherichia coli K12 that bears the temperature-sensitive DNA polymerase I mutatation, polA12. The mutant enzyme has a reduced electrophoretic mobility and sedimentation rate. It is abnormally thermolabile and is rapidly inactivated at low salt concentrations. Its polymerase and 5' leads to 3' exonuclease activities are not grossly defective at 30 degrees, yet its capacity to promote the concerted 5' leads to 3' polymerization and the 5' leads to 3' exonucleolytic hydrolysis of nucleotides at a nick ("nick translation") is decreased 10-fold. These effects are probably the result of a significant alteration in the tertiary structure of the enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
Thermus aquaticus DNA polymerase was shown to contain an associated 5' to 3' exonuclease activity. Both polymerase and exonuclease activities cosedimented with a molecular weight of 72,000 during sucrose gradient centrifugation. Using a novel in situ activity gel procedure to simultaneously detect these two activities, we observed both DNA polymerase and exonuclease in a single band following either nondenaturing or denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis: therefore, DNA polymerase and exonuclease activities reside in the same polypeptide. As determined by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis this enzyme has an apparent molecular weight of 92,000. The exonuclease requires a divalent cation (MgCl2 or MnCl2), has a pH optimum of 9.0 and excises primarily deoxyribonucleoside 5'-monophosphate from double-stranded DNA. Neither heat denatured DNA nor the free oligonucleotide (24-mer) were efficient substrates for exonuclease activity. The rate of hydrolysis of a 5'-phosphorylated oligonucleotide (24-mer) annealed to M13mp2 DNA was about twofold faster than the same substrate containing a 5'-hydroxylated residue. Hydrolysis of a 5'-terminal residue from a nick was preferred threefold over the same 5'-end of duplex DNA. The 5' to 3' exonuclease activity appeared to function coordinately with the DNA polymerase to facilitate a nick translational DNA synthesis reaction.  相似文献   

13.
Treatment with native DNA polymerase I of Escherichia coli with the acylating agent N-carboxymethylisatoic acid anhydride (NCMIA) results under specific conditions in a rapid loss of polymerase activity, an increase in 5' leads to 3'-exonuclease activity and in unchanged 3' leads to 5'-exonuclease activity. When a nucleoside triphosphate and Mg2+ was present the polymerase activity was completely protected against the effect of NCMIA. Treatment with higher concentration of the acylating agent under these conditions led to a loss of 3' leads to 5'-exonuclease activity without any appreciable loss of polymerase activity. Treatment with NCMIA of the two catalytically active fragments of the enzyme led to very similar results. In this case both the polymerase activity and the 3' leads to 5'-exonuclease activity deteriorated more rapidly on treatment with the acylating reagent. The increase in 5' leads to 3'-exonuclease activity as a result of modification of the native enzyme appeared to be due to a change in the optimum conditions with regard to concentration of the assay buffer used. These changes are very similar to those seen when the polymerase is cleaved by limited proteolysis. From the results obtained it is concluded that NCMIA reacts primarily with a site at or near the triphosphate-Mg2+ complex binding site, leading to an almost complete loss of polymerase activity. The acylating reagent reacts also with another group on the native enzyme resulting in a modification of the 5' leads to 3'-exonuclease activity, and at high concentrations with a group leading to a slow loss of 3' leads to 5'-exonuclease activity.  相似文献   

14.
The DNA polymerase holoenzyme of bacteriophage T4 contains, besides the DNA polymerase itself (the gene 43 protein), a complex of the protein products of T4 genes 44 and 62 (a DNA-dependent ATPase) and of gene 45. Together, the 44/62 and 45 proteins form an ATP-dependent "sliding clamp" that holds a moving DNA polymerase molecule at the 3' terminus of a growing DNA chain. We have used a unique DNA fragment that forms a short hairpin helix with a single-stranded 5' tail (a "primer-template junction") to map the binding sites for these polymerase accessory proteins by DNA footprinting techniques. In the absence of the DNA polymerase, the accessory proteins protect from DNase I cleavage 19-20 nucleotides just behind the 3' end of the primer strand and 27-28 nucleotides on the complementary portion of the template strand. Detection of this DNA-protein complex requires the 44/62 and 45 proteins plus the nonhydrolyzable ATP analogue adenosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate). The complex is not detected in the presence of ATP. We suggest that ATP hydrolysis by the 44/62 protein normally activates the accessory proteins at a primer-template junction, permitting the DNA polymerase to bind and thus form the complete holoenzyme. However, when the polymerase is missing, as in these experiments, ATP hydrolysis is instead followed by a release (or loosening) of the accessory protein complex.  相似文献   

15.
Homogeneous gene 5 protein of bacteriophage T7, a subunit of T7 DNA polymerase, catalyzes the stepwise hydrolysis of single-stranded DNA in a 3' leads to 5' direction to yield nucleoside 5'-monophosphates. The gene 5 protein itself does not hydrolyze duplex DNA. However, in the presence of Escherichia coli thioredoxin, the host-specified subunit of T7 DNA polymerase, duplex DNA is hydrolyzed in a 3' leads to 5' direction to yield nucleoside 5'-monophosphates. The apparent Km for thioredoxin in the reaction is 4.8 x 10(-8) M, a value similar to that for the apparent Km of thioredoxin in the complementation assay with gene 5 protein to restore T7 DNA polymerase activity. Both exonuclease activities require Mg2+ and a sulfhydryl reagent for optimal activity, and both activities are sensitive to salt concentration. Deoxyribonucleoside 5'-triphosphates inhibit hydrolysis by both exonuclease activities; hydrolysis of single-stranded DNA by the gene 5 protein is inhibited even in the absence of thioredoxin where there is less than 2% active T7 DNA polymerase. E. coli DNA binding protein (helix destabilizing protein) stimulates the hydrolysis of duplex DNA up to 9-fold under conditions where the hydrolysis of the single-stranded DNA is inhibited 4-fold.  相似文献   

16.
To achieve accurate DNA synthesis, DNA polymerases must rapidly sample and discriminate against incorrect nucleotides. Here we report the crystal structure of a high fidelity DNA polymerase I bound to DNA primer-template caught in the act of binding a mismatched (dG:dTTP) nucleoside triphosphate. The polymerase adopts a conformation in between the previously established "open" and "closed" states. In this "ajar" conformation, the template base has moved into the insertion site but misaligns an incorrect nucleotide relative to the primer terminus. The displacement of a conserved active site tyrosine in the insertion site by the template base is accommodated by a distinctive kink in the polymerase O helix, resulting in a partially open ternary complex. We suggest that the ajar conformation allows the template to probe incoming nucleotides for complementarity before closure of the enzyme around the substrate. Based on solution fluorescence, kinetics, and crystallographic analyses of wild-type and mutant polymerases reported here, we present a three-state reaction pathway in which nucleotides either pass through this intermediate conformation to the closed conformation and catalysis or are misaligned within the intermediate, leading to destabilization of the closed conformation.  相似文献   

17.
We have used DNA footprinting techniques to analyze the interactions of five DNA replication proteins at a primer-template junction: the bacteriophage T4 DNA polymerase (the gene 43 protein), its three accessory proteins (the gene 44/62 and 45 proteins), and the gene 32 protein, which is the T4 helix-destabilizing (or single-stranded DNA-binding) protein. The 177-nucleotide-long DNA substrate consisted of a perfect 52-base pair hairpin helix with a protruding single-stranded 5' tail. As expected, the DNA polymerase binds near the 3' end of this molecule (at the primer-template junction) and protects the adjacent double-stranded region from cleavage. When the gene 32 protein binds to the single-stranded tail, it reduces the concentration of the DNA polymerase required to observe the polymerase footprint by 10-30-fold. Periodic ATP hydrolysis by the 44/62 protein is required to maintain the activity of the DNA polymerase holoenzyme (a complex of the 43, 44/62, and 45 proteins). Footprinting experiments demonstrate the formation of a weak complex between the DNA polymerase and the gene 45 protein, but there is no effect of the 44/62 protein or ATP on this enlarged footprint. We propose a model for holoenzyme function in which the complex of the three accessory proteins uses ATP hydrolysis to keep a moving polymerase tightly bound to the growing 3' end, providing a "clock" to measure polymerase stalling.  相似文献   

18.
The 3' --> 5' exonuclease activity of proofreading DNA polymerases requires two divalent metal ions, metal ions A and B. Mutational studies of the 3' --> 5' exonuclease active center of the bacteriophage T4 DNA polymerase indicate that residue Asp-324, which binds metal ion A, is the single most important residue for the hydrolysis reaction. In the absence of a nonenzymatic source of hydroxide ions, an alanine substitution for residue Asp-324 reduced exonuclease activity 10-100-fold more than alanine substitutions for the other metal-binding residues, Asp-112 and Asp-219. Thus, exonuclease activity is reduced 10(5)-fold for the D324A-DNA polymerase compared with the wild-type enzyme, while decreases of 10(3)- to 10(4)-fold are detected for the D219A- and D112A/E114A-DNA polymerases, respectively. Our results are consistent with the proposal that a water molecule, coordinated by metal ion A, forms a metal-hydroxide ion that is oriented to attack the phosphodiester bond at the site of cleavage. Residues Glu-114 and Lys-299 may assist the reaction by lowering the pK(a) of the metal ion-A coordinated water molecule, whereas residue Tyr-320 may help to reorient the DNA from the binding conformation to the catalytically active conformation.  相似文献   

19.
We report a multifaceted study of the active site region of human pancreatic alpha-amylase. Through a series of novel kinetic analyses using malto-oligosaccharides and malto-oligosaccharyl fluorides, an overall cleavage action pattern for this enzyme has been developed. The preferred binding/cleavage mode occurs when a maltose residue serves as the leaving group (aglycone sites +1 and +2) and there are three sugars in the glycon (-1, -2, -3) sites. Overall it appears that five binding subsites span the active site, although an additional glycon subsite appears to be a significant factor in the binding of longer substrates. Kinetic parameters for the cleavage of substrates modified at the 2 and 4' ' positions also highlight the importance of these hydroxyl groups for catalysis and identify the rate-determining step. Further kinetic and structural studies pinpoint Asp197 as being the likely nucleophile in catalysis, with substitution of this residue leading to an approximately 10(6)-fold drop in catalytic activity. Structural studies show that the original pseudo-tetrasaccharide structure of acarbose is modified upon binding, presumably through a series of hydrolysis and transglycosylation reactions. The end result is a pseudo-pentasaccharide moiety that spans the active site region with its N-linked "glycosidic" bond positioned at the normal site of cleavage. Interestingly, the side chains of Glu233 and Asp300, along with a water molecule, are aligned about the inhibitor N-linked glycosidic bond in a manner suggesting that these might act individually or collectively in the role of acid/base catalyst in the reaction mechanism. Indeed, kinetic analyses show that substitution of the side chains of either Glu233 or Asp300 leads to as much as a approximately 10(3)-fold decrease in catalytic activity. Structural analyses of the Asp300Asn variant of human pancreatic alpha-amylase and its complex with acarbose clearly demonstrate the importance of Asp300 to the mode of inhibitor binding.  相似文献   

20.
Yeast cells from a wild type or protease-deficient strain were lysed in the absence or presence of protease inhibitors and the extracts analyzed by analytical high pressure liquid chromatography on diethylaminoethyl silica gel. Conditions that inhibited protease action caused elution of a novel DNA polymerase activity at a position in the gradient distinct from the elution positions of both DNA polymerase I and II. In large scale purifications, this DNA polymerase, called DNA polymerase III, copurified with a single-stranded DNA dependent 3'-5' exonuclease activity, exonuclease III, to near homogeneity. Glycerol gradient centrifugation partially dissociated the complex to yield two peaks of exonuclease III activity, one at 7.7 S together with the DNA polymerase, and one at 4.0 S without polymerase activity. Gel filtration indicated that the complex has a molecular mass greater than 400 kDa. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate indicated that the complex consists of several subunits: 140, 62, 55, and 53 kilodaltons, some of which may be proteolysis products. The exonuclease component of the complex can excise single nucleotide mismatches providing a base-paired primer-template which can be elongated by the DNA polymerase. Under replication conditions, the complex exhibits a measurable turnover rate of dTTP to dTMP and it contains no primase activity. The enzymatic activities of the 3'-5' exonuclease are consistent with a proofreading function during in vivo DNA replication. A second exonuclease activity, exonuclease IV, separated from the complex late in the purification scheme. It degrades both single-stranded and double-stranded DNA in the 5'----3' direction.  相似文献   

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