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1.
HeLa BU cells infected with either the type 1 or the type 2 forms of herpes simplex virus show an increase in the activities of uracil-DNA glycosylase and dUTP nucleotidohydrolase. Under optimal conditions, uracil-DNA glycosylase activity increases approximately 40-fold in HSV type 2-infected cells. In herpes simplex virus (HSV) type 1-infected cells, uracil-DNA glycosylase activity increases only 6-fold. At a KCl concentration of 100 mM, uracil-DNA glycosylase derived from HSV type 2-infected cells is activated 2-fold, while the glycosylase extracted from mock infected HeLa BU cells is inhibited almost 90% at 100 mM KCl. dUTP nucleotidohydrolase activity increases 4-fold and 3-fold, respectively, in HSV type 1- and HSV type 2-infected HeLa BU cells. Nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of extracts derived from the type 1- and type 2-infected cells indicates distinct electrophoretic mobilities from the host cell enzyme. dUTP nucleotidohydrolase RF values for the mock infected cells, HSV type 1, and HSV type 2 are 0.5, 0.25, and 0.33, respectively. Serum from rabbits immunized against cells infected with herpes simplex virus type 1 or type 2 specifically neutralizes the dUTPase and uracil-DNA glycosylase activities extracted from herpes simplex virus-infected cells. This serum does not neutralize dUTPase or uracil-DNA glycosylase activity derived from mock infected cells.  相似文献   

2.
The structure of native and modified uracil DNA glycosylase from E. coli in solution was studied by synchrotron small-angle X-ray scattering. The modified enzyme (6His-uracyl DNA glycosylase) differs from the native one by the presence of an additional N-terminal 11-meric sequence amino acid residues including a block of six His residues. It was found that the conformations of these enzymes in solution at moderate ionic strength (60 mM NaCI) substantially differ in spite of minimal differences in the amino acid sequences and functional activity. The structure of native uracil DNA glycosylase in solution is close to that in crystal, showing a tendency for association. The interaction of this enzyme with nonhydrolyzable analogues of DNA ligands causes a partial dissociation of associates and a compactization of protein structure. At the same time, 6His-uracyl DNA glycosylase has a compact structure essentially different from the crystal one. A decrease in the ionic strength of solution results in a partial disruption of compact structure of the modified protein, without changes in its functional activity.  相似文献   

3.
The structure of native and modified uracil-DNA glycosylase from E. coli in solution was studied by synchrotron small-angle X-ray scattering. The modified enzyme (6His-uracil glycosylase) differs from the native one by the presence of an additional N-terminal 11-meric sequence of amino acid residues, including a block of six His residues. In contrast to minimal differences in the amino acid sequences and functional activity, conformations of native and 6His-uracil glycosylases in solution were found to differ substantially at moderate ionic strength (60 mM NaCl). The structure of uracil-DNA glycosylase in solution is close to that in crystal and shows a tendency toward association. The interaction of this enzyme with nonhydrolyzable analogues of DNA ligands causes partial dissociation of associates and compaction of protein structure. At the same time, 6His-uracil DNA glycosylase has a compact structure, intrinsically different from that in crystals. A decrease in the ionic strength of solution results in a partial destruction of the compact structure of the modified protein, keeping its functional activity unchanged.  相似文献   

4.
Uracil-DNA glycosylase has been purified approximately 130,000-fold from extracts of human placenta. Although all of the uracil-DNA glycosylase activity coeluted through six chromatographic steps, at least four distinct peaks of activity were resolved in the final purification on a Mono S column. Each of the peaks containing uracil-DNA glycosylase activity contained two peptides of Mr = 29,000 and Mr = 26,500, respectively, as analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Experimental evidence indicated that the Mr = 29,000 peptide was the uracil-DNA glycosylase enzyme. The amino-terminal sequence of each peptide was determined after blotting of the peptides from the gel onto Polybrene GF/C paper. The sequences were not related to each other, and neither was any significant homology to other proteins found. Uracil-DNA glycosylase had a molecular turnover number of approximately 600/min and apparent Km value of 2 microM. The enzyme is a basic protein and was stimulated about 10-fold by 60-70 mM NaCl whereas higher concentrations were inhibitory.  相似文献   

5.
Five peaks of DNA glycosylase activity showing a preference for MNNG alkylated DNA have been identified from extracts of adapted M. luteus. They are numerically designated as GI to GV in order of their decreasing molecular weights. The first two of these peaks have been highly purified. GI, is a constitutive heat labile protein, 35% stimulated by the presence of 50 mM NaCl, acts exclusively on 3 MeA residues in alkylated DNA, 60-70% inhibited by the presence of 2 mM free 3MeA and has been designated as 3MeA DNA glycosylase enzyme. GII, which is an inducible protein, is heat stable, 28% inhibited by the presence of 50 mM NaCl, removes 3MeA, 3MeG, 7MeA & 7MeG with different efficiency, and has been designated as 3,7 methylpurine DNA glycosylase enzyme. The rate of release of 3 methylpurines is 30 times that of 7MeG. There is no activity of either enzyme on O2-MeC, O2-MeT, O4-MeT or O6-MeG. The apparent molecular weights of GI and GII proteins are 28 Kd and 22 Kd respectively.  相似文献   

6.
5-Hydroxymethyluracil (HmUra) residues formed by the oxidation of thymine are removed from DNA through the action of a DNA glycosylase activity. This activity was purified over 1870-fold from calf thymus and found to be distinct from uracil (Ura)-DNA glycosylase. The HmUra-DNA glycosylase has a molecular weight of 38,000, a pH optimum of 6.7-6.8 and an apparent Km of 0.73 +/- 0.04 microM. These values are similar to those reported for other mammalian DNA glycosylases. The enzyme removed HmUra residues from single- and double-stranded DNA with almost equal efficiency. HmUra-DNA glycosylase activity was not product inhibited by free HmUra. The DNA glycosylase activity was inhibited by Mg2+, but the purest enzyme fractions contained a Mg2+-dependent apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease activity. HmUra-DNA glycosylase and the recently described 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (HmCyt)-DNA glycosylase (Cannon, S. V., Cummings, A. C., and Teebor, G. W. (1988) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 151, 1173-1179) are unique among known DNA glycosylases in being present in mammalian cells and absent from bacteria. These DNA glycosylase activities were shown here to reside on different proteins. We suggest that the major function of HmUra-DNA glycosylase, together with HmCyt-DNA glycosylase, is the maintenance of methylated cytosine residues in the DNA of higher organisms.  相似文献   

7.
5-Hydroxymethyluracil (HmUra) is formed in DNA as a product of oxidative attack on the methyl group of thymine. It is also the product of the deamination of 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (HmCyt) which may be formed via oxidation of 5-methylcytosine (MeCyt). HmUra is removed from DNA by a DNA glycosylase which, together with HmCyt-DNA glycosylase, is unique among DNA repair enzymes in being present in mammalian cells but absent from bacteria and yeast. We found HmUra-DNA glycosylase activity in a wide variety of vertebrate and invertebrate animals (except Drosophila) and in protozoans. In most vertebrate organisms the highest specific activity was in nervous and immune system tissue. The phylogenetic distribution of HmUra-DNA glycosylase correlates with the presence of 5-methylcytosine (MeCyt) as a regulator of gene expression. This distribution of activity supports the contention that HmUra-DNA glycosylase aids in the maintenance of methylated sites in DNA.  相似文献   

8.
The DNA repair enzyme uracil-DNA glycosylase from Mycoplasma lactucae (831-C4) was purified 1,657-fold by using affinity chromatography and chromatofocusing techniques. The only substrate for the enzyme was DNA that contained uracil residues, and the Km of the enzyme was 1.05 +/- 0.12 microM for dUMP containing DNA. The product of the reaction was uracil, and it acted as a noncompetitive inhibitor of the uracil-DNA glycosylase with a Ki of 5.2 mM. The activity of the enzyme was insensitive to Mg2+, Mn2+, Zn2+, Ca2+, and Co2+ over the concentration range tested, and the activity was not inhibited by EDTA. The enzyme activity exhibited a biphasic response to monovalent cations and to polyamines. The enzyme had a pI of 6.4 and existed as a nonspherical monomeric protein with a molecular weight of 28,500 +/- 1,200. The uracil-DNA glycosylase from M. lactucae was inhibited by the uracil-DNA glycosylase inhibitor from bacteriophage PBS-2, but the amount of inhibitor required for 50% inhibition of the mycoplasmal enzyme was 2.2 and 8 times greater than that required to cause 50% inhibition of the uracil-DNA glycosylases from Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis, respectively. Previous studies have reported that some mollicutes lack uracil-DNA glycosylase activity, and the results of this study demonstrate that the uracil-DNA glycosylase from M. lactucae has a higher Km for uracil-containing DNA than those of the glycosylases of other procaryotic organisms. Thus, the low G + C content of the DNA from some mollicutes and the A.T-biased mutation pressure observed in these organisms may be related to their decreased capacity to remove uracil residues from DNA.  相似文献   

9.
Ko R  Bennett SE 《DNA Repair》2005,4(12):239-1431
Uracil residues arise in DNA by the misincorporation of dUMP in place of dTMP during DNA replication or by the deamination of cytosine in DNA. Uracil-DNA glycosylase initiates DNA base excision repair of uracil residues by catalyzing the hydrolysis of the N-glycosylic bond linking the uracil base to deoxyribose. In human cells, the nuclear form of uracil-DNA glycosylase (UNG2) contains a conserved PCNA-binding motif located at the N-terminus that has been implicated experimentally in binding PCNA. Here we use purified preparations of UNG2 and PCNA to demonstrate that UNG2 physically associates with PCNA. UNG2 co-eluted with PCNA during size exclusion chromatography and bound to a PCNA affinity column. Association of UNG2 with PCNA was abolished by the addition of 100 mM NaCl, and significantly decreased in the presence of 10 mM MgCl(2). The functional significance of the UNG2.PCNA association was demonstrated by UNG2 activity assays. Addition of PCNA (30-810 pmol) to standard uracil-DNA glycosylase reactions containing linear [uracil-(3)H]DNA stimulated UNG2 catalytic activity up to 2.6-fold. UNG2 activity was also stimulated by 7.5 mM MgCl(2). The stimulatory effect of PCNA was increased by the addition of MgCl(2); however, the dependence on PCNA concentration was the same, indicating that the effects of MgCl(2) and PCNA on UNG2 activity occurred by independent mechanisms. Loading of PCNA onto the DNA substrate was required for stimulation, as the activity of UNG2 on circular DNA substrates was not affected by the addition of PCNA. Addition of replication factor C and ATP to reactions containing 90 pmol of PCNA resulted in two-fold stimulation of UNG2 activity on circular DNA.  相似文献   

10.
We have purified 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase I from Escherichia coli to apparent physical homogeneity. The enzyme preparation produced a single band of Mr 22,500 upon sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in good agreement with the molecular weight deduced from the nucleotide sequence of the tag gene (Steinum, A.-L. and Seeberg, E. (1986) Nucl. Acids Res. 14, 3763-3772). HPLC confirmed that the only detectable alkylation product released from (3H)dimethyl sulphate treated DNA was 3-methyladenine. The DNA glycosylase activity showed a broad pH optimum between 6 and 8.5, and no activity below pH 5 and above pH 10. MgSO4, CaCl2 and MnCl2 stimulated enzyme activity, whereas ZnSO4 and FeCl3 inhibited the enzyme at 2 mM concentration. The enzyme was stimulated by caffeine, adenine and 3-methylguanine, and inhibited by p-hydroxymercuribenzoate, N-ethylmaleimide and 3-methyladenine. The enzyme showed no detectable endonuclease activity on native, depurinated or alkylated plasmid DNA. However, apurinic sites were introduced in alkylated DNA as judged from the strand breaks formed by mixtures of the tag enzyme and the bacteriophage T4 denV enzyme which has apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease activity. It was calculated that wild-type E. coli contains approximately 200 molecules per cell of 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase I.  相似文献   

11.
An endonuclease specific for apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites was identified and purified from extracts of Deinococcus radiodurans. The enzyme is 34.5 kD, has no activity towards normal, alkylated, uracil-containing, or UV-irradiated DNA, and is active in the presence of EDTA. The addition of up to 10 mM Mg2+ or Mn2+ did not affect activity, but higher concentrations were inhibitory. There is no associated exonuclease activity, either in the presence or absence of divalent cation. Optimal reaction conditions were 150 mM NaCl and pH 7.5. A uracil DNA glycosylase was also detected, active in the presence of EDTA, selectively removing uracil from DNA without generating other byproducts. The optimal reaction conditions were 50 mM NaCl and pH 7.5. Implications for base excision repair in D. radiodurans are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Pea (Pisum sativum) chloroplastic glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.13) was tested for uracil DNA glycosylase activity. It was found that both the chloroplast and the recombinant subunit B dehydrogenases remove uracil from poly(dA[3H]dU). The glycosylase activity of the recombinant subunit B enzyme and that of a truncated form corresponding in length to subunit A were associated with the dehydrogenase activity in gel-filtration experiments. Both activities of the chloroplast enzyme were inhibited by antisera raised against recombinant subunit B, and both activities of the recombinant subunit B enzyme were inhibited by antisera raised against pea chloroplast glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase. Antisera raised against Escherichia coli uracil glycosylase did not affect the glycosylase activity of the recombinant subunit B enzyme. The glycosylase pH activity profile of the chloroplast dehydrogenase was unique. It is distinct from the dehydrogenase pH activity profile and from the pH activity profiles of other plant glycosylases. The glycosylase activity, but not the dehydrogenase activity, of the recombinant subunit B enzyme was inhibited by uracil. Pyridine nucleotides stimulated the glycosylase activity. To our knowledge this is the first example of a nonhuman glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase, and of an NADP-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-P dehydrogenase, that exhibits uracil glycosylase activity.  相似文献   

14.
A thermostable 8-oxoguanine (oxoG) DNA glycosylase from Methanococcus jannaschii has been expressed in Escherichia coli, purified, and characterized. The enzyme, which has been named mjOgg, belongs to the same diverse DNA glycosylase superfamily as the 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylases from yeast (yOgg1) and human (hOgg1) but is substantially different in sequence. In addition, unlike its eukaryotic counterparts, which have a strong preference for oxoG.C base pairs, mjOgg has little specificity for the base opposite oxoG. mjOgg has both DNA glycosylase and DNA lyase (beta-elimination) activity, and the combined glycosylase/lyase activity occurs at a rate comparable with the glycosylase activity alone. Mutation of Lys-129, analogous to Lys-241 of yOgg1, abolishes glycosylase activity.  相似文献   

15.
An activity which releases free uracil from bacteriophage PBS1 DNA has been purified over 10,000 fold from extracts of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The enzyme is active on both native and denatured PBS1 DNA and is active in the absence of divalent cation, and in the presence of 1 mM EDTA. The enzyme has a negative molecular weight of 27,800 as estimated by glycerol gradient centrifugation and gel filtration. Enzyme activity has been recovered after denaturation in SDS and electrophoresis in an SDS polyacrylamide gel. This analysis suggests that the enzyme consists of a single polypeptide chain of about 27,000 daltons. Normal levels of uracil-DNA glycosylase activity were found in partially purified extracts of the nitrous-acid sensitive rad18-2 mutant of yeast.  相似文献   

16.
Werner's syndrome (WS) is an autosomal recessive disease marked by early symptoms of accelerated aging. There is evidence indicating accumulation of oxidized DNA bases to be a major factor in cellular aging. The first step of excision repair of such bases in human cells is their removal from DNA by glycosylases. 5-Hydroxymethyluracil (HMU)-DNA glycosylase excises HMU from DNA; another glycosylase removes many non-aromatic pyrimidine derivatives. Levels of glycosylases that excise oxidized pyrimidines from DNA were compared between confluent and proliferating populations of WS cells, age-matched controls, and young control cells. They were assayed by measurements of direct release of free bases from their respective DNA substrates. Specific activities of the glycosylase that releases various modified pyrimidines and of uracil-DNA glycosylase (which removes uracil from DNA) were essentially the same in all cell lines. Cell cycle variations of these enzymes also did not differ between WS and control cells. HMU-DNA glycosylase specific activity was reduced in WS cells. Reduction of HMU-DNA glycosylase has been described in senescent human WI-38 cells. Therefore, while neither WS nor senescent cells have overall deficiencies of DNA glycosylase activities, they both might have reduced excision of HMU from DNA. This indicates a possible role of HMU accumulation in the aging process.  相似文献   

17.
Recently published results (Nucleic Acids Res. 26, 5573-5580, 1998) suggest that the ribonuclease sensitivity of the DNA demethylation reaction may be an experimental artifact due to the possible tight binding of the nucleases to the methylated DNA substrate. Using an improved protocol we show for two different systems that demethylation of hemimethylated DNA is indeed sensitive to micrococcal nuclease, requires RNA and is not an experimental artifact. The purified 5-MeC-DNA glycosylase from chicken embryos and G8 mouse myoblasts was first incubated for 5 min at 37 degrees C with micrococcal nuclease in the presence of Ca2+ in the absence of the DNA substrate. Upon blocking the nuclease activity by the addition of 25 mM EGTA, the DNA demethylation reaction was initiated by adding the labeled hemimethylated DNA substrate to the reaction mixture. Under these conditions the DNA demethylation reaction was abolished. In parallel controls, where the purified 5-MeC-DNA glycosylase was pre-incubated at 37 degrees C with the nuclease, Ca2+ and EGTA or with the nuclease and EGTA, RNA was not degraded and no inhibition of the demethylation reaction was obtained. As has already been shown for chicken embryos, the loss of 5-MeC-DNA glycosylase activity from G8 myoblasts following nuclease treatment can also be restored by the addition of synthetic RNA complementary to the methylated strand of the substrate DNA. No reactivation of 5-MeC-DNA glycosylase is obtained by complementation with a random RNA sequence, the RNA sequence complementary to the non-methylated strand or DNA, thus ruling out a non-specific competition of the RNA for the binding of the nuclease to the labeled DNA substrate.  相似文献   

18.
In Escherichia coli, MutM (8-oxoG DNA glycosylase/lyase or Fpg protein), MutY (adenine DNA glycosylase) and MutT (8-oxodGTPase) function cooperatively to prevent mutation due to 7, 8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG), a highly mutagenic oxidative DNA adduct. MutM activity has been demonstrated to be induced by oxidative stress. Its regulation is under the negative control of the global regulatory genes, fur, fnr and arcA. However, interestingly the presence of MutY increases the mutation frequency in mutT- background because of MutY removes adenine (A) from 8-oxoG:A which arises from the misincorporation of 8-oxoG against A during DNA replication. Accordingly we hypothesized that the response of MutY to oxidative stress is opposite to that of MutM and compared the regulation of MutY activity with MutM under various oxidative stimuli. Unlike MutM, MutY activity was reduced by oxidative stress. Its activity was reduced to 30% of that of the control when E. coli was treated with paraquat (0.5 mM) or H
2
O
2
(0.1 mM) and induced under anaerobic conditions to more than twice that observed under aerobic conditions. The reduced mRNA level of MutY coincided with its reduced activity by paraquat treatment. Also, the increased activity of MutY in anaerobic conditions was reduced further in E. coli strains with mutations in fur, fnr and arcA and the maximum reduction in activity was when all mutations were present in combination, indicating that MutY is under the positive control of these regulatory genes. Therefore, the down-regulation of MutY suggests that there has been complementary mechanism for its mutagenic activity under special conditions. Moreover, the efficacy of anti-mutagenic action should be enhanced by the reciprocal co-regulation of MutM.  相似文献   

19.
Apurinic acid endonuclease activity from mouse epidermal cells.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
An endonuclease activity making single-strand breaks into depurinated and alkylated DNA has been purified 500-fold from carcinogen-transformed mouse epidermal cells. The enzyme was active only at apurinic/apyrimidinic sites, regardless of whether they were produced by heating at an acidic pH or by alkylation with the ultimate carcinogen MeSO2OMe. The enzyme did not act on native DNA nor on ultraviolet-induced pyrimidine-dimers nor on steric distortions caused by modification of DNA with the carcinogen (Ac)2ONFln. The enzyme was active in the presence of 1 mM EDTA; however, at pH 7.4 optimal conditions were: 6mM MgCl2 and 40--120 mM KCl or 10--40 mM potassium phosphate. The enzyme eluted from hydroxyapatite, phosphocellulose and heparin-cellulose between 100--250 mM potassium phosphate but did not bind to DEAE-cellulose. Using four chromatographic steps the endonuclease was obtained free of exonuclease, demethylase and DNA glycosylase activity specific for DNA bases methylated with MeSO2OMe or MeNOUr. The molecular weight was 31 000 +/- 3000 as calculated from the diffusion coefficient (8.2 x 10-7 cm2/s) and the sedimentation value (2.7 S).  相似文献   

20.
A DNA glycosylase that excises, 2,6-diamino-4-hydroxy-5N-methylformamidopyrimidine (Fapy) from double stranded DNA has been purified 28,570-fold from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Gel filtration chromatography shows that yeast Fapy DNA glycosylase has a molecular weight of about 40 kDa. The Fapy DNA glycosylase is active in the presence of EDTA, but is completely inhibited by 0.2 M KCl. Yeast Fapy DNA glycosylase does not excise N7-methylguanine, N3-methyladenine or uracil. A repair enzyme for 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-OxoG) co-purifies with the Fapy DNA glycosylase. This repair activity causes strand cleavage at the site of 8-OxoG in DNA duplexes. The highest rate of incision of the 8-OxoG-containing strand was observed for duplexes where 8-OxoG was opposite guanine. The mode of incision at 8-OxoG was not established yet. The results however suggest that the Fapy- and 8-OxoG-repair activities are associated with a single protein.  相似文献   

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