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1.
Purified vaccinia virus DNA topoisomerase I forms a cleavable complex with duplex DNA at a conserved sequence element 5'(C/T)CCTTdecreases in the incised DNA strand. DNase I footprint studies show that vaccinia topoisomerase protects the region around the site of covalent adduct formation from nuclease digestion. On the cleaved DNA strand, the protected region extends from +13 to -13 (+1 being the site of cleavage). On the noncleaved strand, the protected region extends from +13 to -9. Similar nuclease protection is observed for a mutant topoisomerase (containing a Tyr ---- Phe substitution at the active site amino acid 274) that is catalytically inert and does not form the covalent intermediate. Thus, vaccinia topoisomerase is a specific DNA binding protein independent of its competence in transesterification. By studying the cleavage of a series of 12-mer DNA duplexes in which the position of the CCCTTdecreases motif within the substrate is systematically phased, the "minimal" substrate for cleavage has been defined; cleavage requires six nucleotides upstream of the cleavage site and two nucleotides downstream of the site. An analysis of the cleavage of oligomer substrates mutated singly in the CCCTT sequence reveals a hierarchy of mutational effects based on position within the pentamer motif and the nature of the sequence alteration.  相似文献   

2.
Vaccinia DNA topoisomerase binds duplex DNA and forms a covalent adduct at sites containing a conserved sequence element 5'(C/T)CCTT decreases in the scissile strand. Distinctive aspects of noncovalent versus covalent interaction emerge from analysis of the binding properties of Topo(Phe-274), a mutated protein which is unable to cleave DNA, but which binds DNA noncovalently. Whereas DNA cleavage by wild type enzyme is most efficient with 'suicide' substrates containing fewer than 10 base pairs distal to the scissile bond, optimal noncovalent binding by Topo(Phe-274) requires at least 10-bp of DNA 3' of the cleavage site. Thus, the region of DNA flanking the pentamer motif serves to stabilize the noncovalent topoisomerase-DNA complex. This result is consistent with the downstream dimensions of the DNA binding site deduced from nuclease footprinting. Topo(Phe-274) binds to duplex DNA lacking the consensus pentamer with 7-10-fold lower affinity than to CCCTT-containing DNA.  相似文献   

3.
Cheng C  Shuman S 《Biochemistry》1999,38(50):16599-16612
Vaccinia topoisomerase forms a covalent DNA-(3'-phosphotyrosyl)-enzyme intermediate at a pentapyrimidine target site 5'-CCCTTp downward arrow in duplex DNA. Here we present experiments that illuminate the contributions of specific nucleosides and phosphates to site affinity and transesterification. We find that the -1 phosphate and -2 nucleoside on the scissile strand (5'-CCCTTp / NpN) enhance the rate of transesterification by factors of 40 and 25, respectively, whereas the DNA segment downstream of the -2 nucleotide makes no significant kinetic contribution. Placement of a 5'-phosphate/3'-OH nick at position +2, +3, +4, or +5 within the CCCTT element results in a 5-10-fold reduction in the affinity of topoisomerase binding to DNA. A nick at the +2 phosphate also slows the rate of transesterification by approximately 500-fold. This finding, together with earlier studies of the effects of position-specific base and sugar modifications, points to the +2 Tp nucleotide as being the most critical element of the CCCTT target site other than the scissile phosphate itself. On the noncleaved strand, the segment downstream of the 3'-GGGAA element contributes minimally to the rate of transesterification provided that the substrate is otherwise fully base-paired within the 5'-CCCTT target site. By studying the effects of single nucleotide gaps and missing phosphate nicks within the 3'-GGGAA sequence, we find that the +1 and +2 adenosine nucleosides enhance the rate of transesterification by 20- and 1,000-fold respectively and that the +5 phosphate (3'-GpGGAA) is also important for cleavage. Cumulative functional analyses of the vaccinia topoisomerase-DNA interface are discussed in light of newly available structures for the vaccinia and human type IB enzymes.  相似文献   

4.
The specificity of vaccinia topoisomerase for transesterification to DNA at the sequence 5′-CCCTT and its versatility in strand transfer have illuminated the recombinogenic properties of type IB topoisomerases and spawned topoisomerase-based strategies for DNA cloning. Here we characterize a pathway of topoisomerase-mediated DNA ligation in which enzyme bound covalently to a CCCTT end with an unpaired +1T nucleotide rapidly and efficiently joins the CCCTT strand to a duplex DNA containing a 3′ A overhang. The joining reaction occurs with high efficiency, albeit slowly, to duplex DNAs containing 3′ G, T or C overhangs. Strand transfer can be restricted to the correctly paired 3′ A overhang by including 0.5 M NaCl in the ligation reaction mixture. The effects of base mismatches and increased ionic strength on the rates of 3′ overhang ligation provide a quantitative picture of the relative contributions of +1 T:A base pairing and electrostatic interactions downstream of the scissile phosphate to the productive binding of an unlinked acceptor DNA to the active site. The results clarify the biochemistry underlying topoisomerase-cloning of PCR products with non-templated 3′ overhangs.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Antitumor drugs, such as anthracyclines, interfere with mammalian DNA topoisomerase II by forming a ternary complex, DNA-drug-enzyme, in which DNA strands are cleaved and covalently linked to the enzyme. In this work, a synthetic 36-bp DNA oligomer derived from SV40 and mutated variants were used to determine the effects of base mutations on DNA cleavage levels produced by murine topoisomerase II with and without idarubicin. Although site competition could affect cleavage levels, mutation effects were rather similar among several cleavage sites. The major sequence determinants of topoisomerase II DNA cleavage without drugs are up to five base pairs apart from the strand cut, suggesting that DNA protein contacts involving these bases are particularly critical for DNA site recognition. Cleavage sites with adenines at positions -1 were detected without idarubicin only under conditions favouring enzyme binding to DNA, showing that these sites are low affinity sites for topoisomerase II DNA cleavage and/or binding. Moreover, the results indicated that the sequence 5'-(A)TA/(A)-3' (the slash indicates the cleaved bond, parenthesis indicate conditioned preference) from -3 to +1 positions constitutes the complete base sequence preferred by anthracyclines. An important finding was that mutations that improve the fit to the above consensus on one strand can also increase cleavage on the opposite strand, suggesting that a drug molecule may effectively interact with one enzyme subunit only and trap the whole dimeric enzyme. These findings documented that DNA recognition by topoisomerase II may occur at one or the other strand, and not necessarily at both of them, and that the two subunits can act cooperatively to cleave a double helix.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
When ionizing radiation traverses a DNA molecule, a combination of two or more base damages, sites of base loss or single strand breaks can be produced within 1-4 nm on opposite DNA strands, forming a multiply damaged site (MDS). In this study, we reconstituted the base excision repair system to examine the processing of a simple MDS containing the base damage, 8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG), or an abasic (AP) site, situated in close opposition to a single strand break, and asked if a double strand break could be formed. The single strand break, a nucleotide gap containing 3' and 5' phosphate groups, was positioned one, three or six nucleotides 5' or 3' to the damage in the complementary DNA strand. Escherichia coli formamidopyrimidine DNA glycosylase (Fpg), which recognizes both 8-oxoG and AP sites, was able to cleave the 8-oxoG or AP site-containing strand when the strand break was positioned three or six nucleotides away 5' or 3' on the opposing strand. When the strand break was positioned one nucleotide away, the target lesion was a poor substrate for Fpg. Binding studies using a reduced AP (rAP) site in the strand opposite the gap, indicated that Fpg binding was greatly inhibited when the gap was one nucleotide 5' or 3' to the rAP site.To complete the repair of the MDS containing 8-oxoG opposite a single strand break, endonuclease IV DNA polymerase I and Escherichia coli DNA ligase are required to remove 3' phosphate termini, insert the "missing" nucleotide, and ligate the nicks, respectively. In the absence of Fpg, repair of the single strand break by endonuclease IV, DNA polymerase I and DNA ligase occurred and was not greatly affected by the 8-oxoG on the opposite strand. However, the DNA strand containing the single strand break was not ligated if Fpg was present and removed the opposing 8-oxoG. Examination of the complete repair reaction products from this reaction following electrophoresis through a non-denaturing gel, indicated that a double strand break was produced. Repair of the single strand break did occur in the presence of Fpg if the gap was one nucleotide away. Hence, in the in vitro reconstituted system, repair of the MDS did not occur prior to cleavage of the 8-oxoG by Fpg if the opposing single strand break was situated three or six nucleotides away, converting these otherwise repairable lesions into a potentially lethal double strand break.  相似文献   

9.
The minimal DNA duplex requirements for topoisomerase I-mediated cleavage at a specific binding sequence were determined by analyzing the interaction of the enzyme with sets of DNA substrates varying successively by single nucleotides at the 5'- or 3' end of either strand. Topoisomerase I cleavage experiments showed a minimal region of nine nucleotides on the scissile strand and five nucleotides on the noncleaved strand. On the scissile strand, seven of the nine nucleotides were situated upstream to the cleavage site, while all five nucleotides required on the non-cleaved strand were located to this side. The results suggested that topoisomerase I bound tightly to this region, stabilizing the DNA duplex extensively. On minimal substrates which were partially single-stranded downstream to the cleavage site, cleavage was suicidal, that is, the enzyme was able to cleave the substrates, but unable to perform the final religation.  相似文献   

10.
Vaccinia DNA topoisomerase forms a covalent DNA-(3'-phosphotyrosyl)-enzyme intermediate at a specific target site 5'-C(+5)C(+4)C(+3)T(+2)T(+1)p downward arrow N(-1) in duplex DNA. Here we study the effects of abasic lesions at individual positions of the scissile and nonscissile strands on the rate of single-turnover DNA transesterification and the cleavage-religation equilibrium. The rate of DNA incision was reduced by factors of 350, 250, 60, and 10 when abasic sites replaced the -1N, +1T, +2T, and +4C bases of the scissile strand, but abasic lesions at +5C and +3C had little or no effect. Abasic lesions in the nonscissile strand in lieu of +4G, +3G, +2A, and +1A reduced the rate of cleavage by factors of 130, 150, 10, and 5, whereas abasic lesions at +5G and -1N had no effect. The striking positional asymmetry of abasic interference on the scissile and nonscissile strands highlights the importance of individual bases, not base pairs, in promoting DNA cleavage. The rate of single-turnover DNA religation by the covalent topoisomerase-DNA complex was insensitive to abasic sites within the CCCTT sequence of the scissile strand, but an abasic lesion at the 5'-OH nucleoside (-1N) of the attacking DNA strand slowed the rate of religation by a factor of 600. Nonscissile strand abasic lesions at +1A and -1N slowed the rate of religation by factors of approximately 140 and 20, respectively, and strongly skewed the cleavage-religation equilibrium toward the covalent complex. Thus, abasic lesions immediately flanking the cleavage site act as topoisomerase poisons.  相似文献   

11.
Specific DNA cleavage and binding by vaccinia virus DNA topoisomerase I   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Cleavage of a defined linear duplex DNA by vaccinia virus DNA topoisomerase I was found to occur nonrandomly and infrequently. Approximately 12 sites of strand scission were detected within the 5372 nucleotides of pUC19 DNA. These sites could be classified as having higher or lower affinity for topoisomerase based on the following criteria. Higher affinity sites were cleaved at low enzyme concentration, were less sensitive to competition, and were most refractory to religation promoted by salt, divalent cations, and elevated temperature. Cleavage at lower affinity sites required higher enzyme concentration and was more sensitive to competition and induced religation. Cleavage site selection correlated with a pentameric sequence motif (C/T)CCTT immediately preceding the site of strand scission. Noncovalent DNA binding by topoisomerase predominated over covalent adduct formation, as revealed by nitrocellulose filter-binding studies. The noncovalent binding affinity of vaccinia topoisomerase for particular subsegments of pUC19 DNA correlated with the strength and/or the number of DNA cleavage sites contained therein. Thus, cleavage site selection is likely to be dictated by specific noncovalent DNA-protein interactions. This was supported by the demonstration that a mutant vaccinia topoisomerase (containing a Tyr----Phe substitution at the active site) that was catalytically inert and did not form the covalent intermediate, nevertheless bound DNA with similar affinity and site selectivity as the wild-type enzyme. Noncovalent binding is therefore independent of competence in transesterification. It is construed that the vaccinia topoisomerase is considerably more stringent in its cleavage and binding specificity for duplex DNA than are the cellular type I enzymes.  相似文献   

12.
Sensitive sites for covalent trapping of eukaryotic topoisomerase I at DNA structural anomalies were mapped by a new method using purified enzyme and defined DNA substrates. To insure that the obtained topoisomerase I trapping patterns were not influenced by DNA sequence variations, a single DNA imperfection was placed centrally within a homonucleotide track. Mapping of topoisomerase I-mediated irreversible cleavage sites on homopolymeric DNA substrates containing mismatches showed trapping of the enzyme in several positions in close vicinity of the DNA imperfection, with a strong preference for the 5' junction between the duplex DNA and the base-pairing anomaly. On homopolymeric DNA substrates containing a nick, sites of topoisomerase I-mediated cleavage on the intact strand were located just opposite to the nick and from one to ten nucleotides 5' to the nick. Sites of enzyme-mediated cleavage next to a nick and an immobile single-stranded branch were located 5' to the strand interruption in distances of two to six nucleotides and two to ten nucleotides, respectively. Taken together these findings suggest that covalent trapping of topoisomerase I proceeds at positions adjacent to mismatches, nicks and single-stranded branches, where the cleavage reaction is allowed and the ensuing ligation reaction prevented. In principle, the developed interference method might be of general utility to define topoisomerase-DNA interactions relative to different types of structural anomalies.  相似文献   

13.
A DNA consensus sequence for topoisomerase II cleavage sites was derived previously based on a statistical analysis of the nucleotide sequences around 16 sites that can be efficiently cleaved by Drosophila topoisomerase II (Sander, M., and Hsieh, T. (1985) Nucleic Acids Res. 13, 1057-1072). A synthetic 21-mer DNA sequence containing this cleavage consensus sequence was cloned into a plasmid vector, and DNA topoisomerase II can cleave this sequence at the position predicted by the cleavage consensus sequence. DNase I footprint analysis showed that topoisomerase II can protect a region of approximately 25 nucleotides in both strands of the duplex DNA, with the cleavage site located near the center of the protected region. Similar correlation between the DNase I footprints and strong topoisomerase II cleavage sites has been observed in the intergenic region of the divergent HSP70 genes. This analysis therefore suggests that the strong DNA cleavage sites of Drosophila topoisomerase II likely correspond to specific DNA-binding sites of this enzyme. Furthermore, the extent of DNA contacts made by this enzyme suggests that eucaryotic topoisomerase II, in contrast to bacterial DNA bacterial DNA gyrase, cannot form a complex with extensive DNA wrapping around the enzyme. The absence of DNA wrapping is probably the mechanistic basis for the lack of DNA supercoiling action for eucaryotic topoisomerase II.  相似文献   

14.
O Hino  K Ohtake    C E Rogler 《Journal of virology》1989,63(6):2638-2643
Two integrated hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA molecules were cloned from two primary hepatocellular carcinomas each containing only a single integration. One integration (C3) contained a single linear segment of HBV DNA, and the other integration (C4) contained a large inverted duplication of viral DNA at the site of a chromosome translocation (O. Hino, T.B. Shows, and C.E. Rogler, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 83:8338-8342, 1986). Sequence analysis of the virus-cell junctions of C3 placed the left virus-cell junction at nucleotide 1824, which is at the 5' end of the directly repeated DR1 sequence and is 6 base pairs from the 3' end of the long (L) negative strand. The right virus-cell junction was at nucleotide 1762 in a region of viral DNA (within the cohesive overlap) which shared 5-base-pair homology with cellular DNA. Sequence analysis of the normal cellular DNA across the integration site showed that 11 base pairs of cellular DNA were deleted at the site of integration. On the basis of this analysis, we suggest a mechanism for integration of the viral DNA molecule which involves strand invasion of the 3' end of the L negative strand of an open circular or linear HBV DNA molecule (at the DR1 sequence) and base pairing of the opposite end of the molecule with cellular DNA, accompanied by the deletion of 11 base pairs of cellular DNA during the double recombination event. Sequencing across the inverted duplication of HBV DNA in clone C4 located one side of the inversion at nucleotide 1820, which is 2 base pairs from the 3' end of the L negative strand. Both this sequence and the left virus-cell junction of C3 are within the 9-nucleotide terminally redundant region of the HBV L negative strand DNA. We suggest that the terminal redundancy is a preferred topoisomerase I nicking region because of both its base sequence and forked structure. Such nicking would lead to integration and rearrangement of HBV molecules within the terminal redundancy, as we have observed in both our clones.  相似文献   

15.
The interaction between eukaryotic DNA topoisomerase I and a high affinity binding sequence was investigated. Quantitative footprint analysis demonstrated that the substrate preference results from strong specific binding of topoisomerase I to the sequence. The specificity was conferred by a tight noncovalent association between the enzyme and its target DNA, whereas the transient formation of a covalently bound enzyme.nicked DNA intermediate contributed insignificantly to the overall affinity. Topoisomerase I protected both strands over a 20-base pair region in which the cleavage site was centrally located. DNA modification interference analysis revealed a 16-base pair interference region on the scissile strand. Essential bases were confined to the 5' side of the cleavage site. The 6-base pair interference region observed on the complementary strand did not contain essential bases.  相似文献   

16.
Liao S  Mao C  Birktoft JJ  Shuman S  Seeman NC 《Biochemistry》2004,43(6):1520-1531
Holliday junctions are intermediates in genetic recombination. They consist of four strands of DNA that flank a branch point. In natural systems, their sequences have 2-fold (homologous) sequence symmetry. This symmetry enables the molecules to undergo an isomerization, known as branch migration, that relocates the site of the branch point. Branch migration leads to polydispersity, which makes it difficult to characterize the physical properties of the junction and the effects of the sequence context flanking the branch point. Previous studies have reported two symmetric junctions that do not branch migrate: one that is immobilized by coupling to an asymmetric junction in a double crossover context, and a second that is based on molecules containing 5',5' and 3',3' linkages. Both are flawed by distorting the structure of the symmetric junction from its natural conformation. Here, we report an undistorted symmetric immobile junction based on the use of DNA parallelogram structures. We have used a series of these junctions to characterize the junction resolution reaction catalyzed by vaccinia virus DNA topoisomerase. The resolution reaction entails cleavage and rejoining at CCCTT/N recognition sites arrayed on opposing sides of the four-arm junction. We find that resolution is optimal when the scissile phosphodiester (Tp/N) is located two nucleotides 5' to the branch point on the helical strand. Covalent topoisomerase-DNA adducts are precursors to recombinant strands in all reactions, as expected. Kinetic analysis suggests a rate limiting step after the first-strand cleavage.  相似文献   

17.
Vaccinia topoisomerase forms a covalent DNA-(3'-phosphotyrosyl)-enzyme intermediate at a pentapyrimidine target site 5'-CCCTTp downward arrow in duplex DNA. By introducing single 2'-5' phosphodiesters in lieu of a standard 3'-5' phosphodiester linkage, we illuminate the contributions of phosphodiester connectivity to DNA transesterification. We find that the DNA cleavage reaction was slowed by more than six orders of magnitude when a 2'-5' linkage was present at the scissile phosphodiester (CCCTT(2')p downward arrow(5')A). Thus, vaccinia topoisomerase is unable to form a DNA-(2'-phosphotyrosyl)-enzyme intermediate. We hypothesize that the altered geometry of the 2'-5' phosphodiester limits the ability of the tyrosine nucleophile to attain a requisite, presumably apical orientation with respect to the 5'-OH leaving group. A 2'-5' phosphodiester located to the 3' side of the cleavage site (CCCTTp downward arrowN(2')p(5')N) reduced the rate of transesterification by a factor of 500. In contrast, 2'-5' phosphodiesters at four other sites in the scissile strand (TpCGCCCTpT downward arrowATpTpC) and five positions in the nonscissile strand (3'-GGGpApApTpApA) had no effect on transesterification rate. The DNAs containing 2'-5' phosphodiesters were protected from digestion by exonuclease III. We found that exonuclease III was consistently arrested at positions 1 and 2 nucleotides prior to the encounter of its active site with the modified 2'-5' phosphodiester and that the 2'-5' linkage itself was poorly hydrolyzed by exonuclease III.  相似文献   

18.
Vaccinia topoisomerase forms a covalent protein-DNA intermediate at sites containing the sequence 5'-CCCTT. The T nucleotide is linked via a 3'-phosphodiester bond to Tyr-274 of the enzyme. Here, we report that the enzyme catalyzes hydrolysis of the covalent intermediate, resulting in formation of a 3'-phosphate-terminated DNA cleavage product. The hydrolysis reaction is pH-dependent (optimum pH = 9.5) and is slower, by a factor of 10(-5), than the rate of topoisomerase-catalyzed strand transfer to a 5'-OH terminated DNA acceptor strand. Mutants of vaccinia topoisomerase containing serine or threonine in lieu of the active site Tyr-274 form no detectable covalent intermediate and catalyze no detectable DNA hydrolysis. This suggests that hydrolysis occurs subsequent to formation of the covalent protein-DNA adduct and not via direct attack by water on DNA. Vaccinia topoisomerase also catalyzes glycerololysis of the covalent intermediate. The rate of glycerololysis is proportional to glycerol concentration and is optimal at pH 9.5.  相似文献   

19.
M Katzman  R A Katz  A M Skalka    J Leis 《Journal of virology》1989,63(12):5319-5327
The purified integration protein (IN) of avian myeloblastosis virus is shown to nick double-stranded oligodeoxynucleotide substrates that mimic the ends of the linear form of viral DNA. In the presence of Mg2+, nicks are created 2 nucleotides from the 3' OH ends of both the U5 plus strand and the U3 minus strand. Similar cleavage is observed in the presence of Mn2+ but only when the extent of the reaction is limited. Neither the complementary strands nor sequences representing the termini of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 DNA were cleaved at analogous positions. Analysis of a series of substrates containing U5 base substitutions has defined the sequence requirements for site-selective nicking; nucleotides near the cleavage site are most critical for activity. The minimum substrate size required to demonstrate significant activity corresponds to the nearly perfect 15-base terminal inverted repeat. This in vitro activity of IN thus produces viral DNA ends that are joined to host DNA in vivo and corresponds to an expected early step in the integrative recombination reaction. These results provide the first enzymatic support using purified retroviral proteins for a linear DNA precursor to the integrated provirus.  相似文献   

20.
Previously, we have demonstrated that in Tetrahymena DNA topoisomerase I has a strong preference in situ for a hexadecameric sequence motif AAGACTTAGAAGAAAAAATTT present in the non-transcribed spacers of r-chromatin. Here we characterize more extensively the interaction of purified topoisomerase I with specific hexadecameric sequences in cloned DNA. Treatment of topoisomerase I-DNA complexes with strong protein denaturants results in single strand breaks and covalent linkage of DNA to the 3' end of the broken strand. By mapping the position of the resulting nicks, we have analysed the sequence-specific interaction of topoisomerase I with the DNA. The experiments demonstrate that: the enzyme cleaves specifically between the sixth and seventh bases in the hexadecameric sequence; a single base substitution in the recognition sequence may reduce the cleavage extent by 95%; the sequence specific cleavage is stimulated 8-fold by divalent cations; 30% of the DNA molecules are cleaved at the hexadecameric sequence while no other cleavages can be detected in the 1.6-kb fragment investigated; the sequence specific cleavage is increased 2- to 3-fold in the presence of the antitumor drug camptothecin; at high concentrations of topoisomerase I, the cleavage pattern is altered by camptothecin; the equilibrium dissociation constant for interaction of topoisomerase I and the hexadecameric sequence can be estimated as approximately 10(-10) M.  相似文献   

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