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1.
An examination of Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus DNA revealed the presence of five interspersed regions, rich in EcoRI restriction sites, which shared homologous sequences. These homologous regions (hr), designated hr1 to hr5, occur at or near the following EcoRI fragment junctions: hr1EcoRI-B—EcoRI-I (0.0 map units); hr2, EcoRI-A—EcoRI-J (19.8 map units); hr3, EcoRI-C—EcoRI-G (52.9 map units); hr4, EcoRI-Q—EcoRI-L (69.8 map units); and hr5, EcoRI-S—EcoRI-X (88.0 map units). Four of these regions were identified, by cross-blot hybridization of HindIII-restricted A. californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus DNA, to be within the HindIII-A/B, -F, -L, and -Q fragments. The location of these regions and the identification of a fifth homologous region were confirmed, and their characterization was facilitated, by using two plasmids with HindIII-L or -Q fragment insertions, which contained the homologous regions hr2 and hr5, respectively. The sizes of the homologous regions were about 800 base pairs for hr2, 500 base pairs for hr5, and less than 500 base pairs for hr1, hr3, and hr4. A set of small EcoRI fragments (EcoRI minifragments) which ranged in size from 225 to 73 base pairs were detected in A. californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus DNA and HindIII-L and -Q fragments by polyacrylamide gel analysis. Some of the minifragments in viral DNA were present in extramolar amounts and corresponded in size to some of the minifragments present in HindIII-L and -Q. Clones of some of the EcoRI minifragments were used as probes in hybridizations to digests of viral DNA and of HindIII-L and -Q. The hybridization data, obtained under various levels of stringency, suggested that there was a degree of mismatching between the sequences which were responsible for the homology.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Chloroplast DNA variation in pearl millet and related species   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Clegg MT  Rawson JR  Thomas K 《Genetics》1984,106(3):449-461
The evolution of specific regions of the chloroplast genome was studied in five grass species in the genus Pennisetum, including pearl millet, and one species from a related genus (Cenchrus). Three different regions of the chloroplast DNA were investigated. The first region included a 12-kilobase pair (kbp) EcoRI fragment containing the 23S, 16S and 5S ribosomal RNA genes, which is part of a larger duplicated region of reverse orientation. The second region was contained in a 21-kbp Sa/I fragment, which spans the short single-copy sequence separating the two reverse repeat structures and which overlaps the duplicated copies of the 12-kbp Eco RI fragment. The third region was a 6-kbp EcoRI fragment located in the large single-copy region of the chloroplast genome. Together these regions account for slightly less than 25% of the chloroplast genome. Each of these DNA fragments was cloned and used as hybridization probes to determine the distribution of homologous DNA fragments generated by various restriction endonuclease digests.—A survey of 12 geographically diverse collections of pearl millet showed no indication of chloroplast DNA sequence polymorphism, despite moderate levels of nuclear-encoded enzyme polymorphism. Interspecific and intergeneric differences were found for restriction endonuclease sites in both the small and the large single-copy regions of the chloroplast genome. The reverse repeat structure showed identical restriction site distributions in all materials surveyed. These results suggest that the reverse repeat region is differentially conserved during the evolution of the chloroplast genome.  相似文献   

4.
We have investigated the ATPase activity of the type IC restriction-modification (R – M) systemEcoR124II. As with all type I R – M systemsEcoR 124II requires ATP hydrolysis to cut DNA. We determined theKMfor ATP to be 10−5to 10−4M. By measuring ATP hydrolysis under different conditions and by simultaneously monitoring DNA restriction, methylation and ATP hydrolysis we propose that the order of events during restriction is: (1) binding ofEcoR124II to a non-methylated recognition sequence, (2) start of DNA-dependent ATP hydrolysis which continues even after restriction is complete, (3) restriction of DNA, (4) methylation of the product. Non-cleavable DNA substrates, such as recognition site containing oligonucleotides, also support ATP hydrolysis. Methylation can also occur prior to ATP hydrolysis and prevent DNA degradation.  相似文献   

5.
The EcoRV restriction endonuclease cleaves DNA at its recognition sequence at least a million times faster than at any other DNA sequence. The only cofactor it requires for activity is Mg2+: but in binding to DNA in the absence of Mg2+, the EcoRV enzyme shows no specificity for its recognition site. Instead, the reason why EcoRV cuts one DNA sequence faster than any other is that the rate of cleavage is controlled by the binding of Mg2+ to EcoRV-DNA complexes: the complex at the recognition site has a high affinity for Mg2+, while the complexes at other DNA sequences have low affinities for Mg2+. The structures of the EcoRV endonuclease, and of its complexes with either 8pecific or non-specific DNA, have been solved by X-ray crystallography. In the specific complex, the protein interacts with the bases in the recognition sequence and the DNA takes up a highly distorted structure. In the non-specific complex with an unrelated DNA sequence, there are virtually no interactions with the bases and the DNA retains a B-like structure. Since the free energy changes for the formation of specific and non-specific complexes are the same, the energy from the specific interactions balances that required for the distortion of the DNA. The distortion inserts the phosphate at the scissile bond into the active site of the enzyme, where it forms part of the binding site for Mg2+. Without this distortion, the EcoRV–DNA complex would be unable to bind Mg2+ and thus unable to cleave DNA. The specificity of the EcoRV restriction enzyme is therefore governed, not by DNA binding as such, but by its ability to organize the structure of the DNA to which it is bound.  相似文献   

6.
Hydrolytic deamination of 5-methyl cytosine in double stranded DNA results in formation of a T/G mismatch that—if left unrepaired—leads to a C→T transition mutation in half of the progeny. In addition to several mismatch-specific glycosylases that have been found in both pro- and eukaryotes to channel this lesion into base excision repair by removing the T from the mismatch, Vsr endonuclease from Escherichia coli has been described which initiates repair by an endonucleolytic strand incision 5′ to the mismatched T. We have isolated a gene coding for a homolog of E.coli Vsr endonuclease from the thermophilic bacterium Bacillus stearothermophilus H3 (Vsr.Bst) using a method that allows PCR amplification with degenerated primers of gene segments which code for only one highly conserved amino acid region. Vsr.Bst was produced heterologously in E.coli and purified to apparent homogeneity. Vsr.Bst specifically incises heteroduplex DNA with a preference for T/G mismatches. The selectivity of Vsr.Bst for the sequence context of the T/G mismatch appears less pronounced than for Vsr.Eco.  相似文献   

7.
The EcoRV DNA-(adenine-N6)-methyltransferase (M.EcoRV) specifically modifies the first adenine residue within GATATC sequences. During catalysis, the enzyme flips its target base out of the DNA helix and binds it into a target base binding pocket which is formed in part by Lys16 and Tyr196. A cytosine residue is accepted by wild-type M.EcoRV as a substrate at a 31-fold reduced efficiency with respect to the kcat/KM values if it is located in a CT mismatch substrate (GCTATC/GATATC). Cytosine residues positioned in a CG base pair (GCTATC/GATAGC) are modified at much more reduced rates, because flipping out the target base is much more difficult in this case. We intended to change the target base specificity of M.EcoRV from adenine-N6 to cytosine-N4. To this end we generated, purified and characterized 15 variants of the enzyme, containing single, double and triple amino acid exchanges following different design approaches. One concept was to reduce the size of the target base binding pocket by site-directed mutagenesis. The K16R variant showed an altered specificity, with a 22-fold preference for cytosine as the target base in a mismatch substrate. This corresponds to a 680-fold change in specificity, which was accompanied by only a small loss in catalytic activity with the cytosine substrate. The K16R/Y196W variant no longer methylated adenine residues at all and its activity towards cytosine was reduced only 17-fold. Therefore, we have changed the target base specificity of M.EcoRV from adenine to cytosine by rational protein design. Because there are no natural paragons for the variants described here, a change of the target base specificity of a DNA interacting enzyme was possible by rational de novo design of its active site.  相似文献   

8.
Highly repeated DNA satellite α sequences from man and chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) have been compared, using restriction endonucleases. The two species share a 340 base pairs tandemly represented DNA, that is cut once by EcoRt. Pan troglodytes differ from man by loss of the two MboI and EcoRI star sites and by the gain of an Hae III site in the repeated sequence.  相似文献   

9.
A procedure for investigating the possibility of small amounts of partial DNA sequence homology between two defined DNA molecules has been developed and used to test for sequence homology between simian virus 40 and polyoma DNAs. This procedure, which does not necessitate the use of separated viral DNA strands, involves the construction of hybrid DNA molecules containing a simian virus 40 DNA molecule covalently joined to a polyoma DNA molecule, using the sequential action of EcoRI restriction endonuclease and Escherichia coli DNA ligase. Denaturation of such hybrid DNA molecules then makes it possible to examine intramolecularly rather than intermolecularly renatured molecules. Visualization of these intramolecularly renatured “snapback” molecules with duplex regions of homology by electron microscopy reveals a 15% region of weak sequence homology. This region is denatured at about 35 °C below the melting temperature of simian virus 40 DNA and therefore corresponds to about 75% homology. This region was mapped on both the simian virus 40 and polyoma genomes by the use of Hemophilus parainfluenzae II restriction endonuclease cleavage of the simian virus 40 DNA prior to EcoRI cleavage and construction of the hybrid molecule. The 15% region of weak homology maps immediately to the left of the EcoRI restriction endonuclease cleavage site in the simian virus 40 genome and halfway around from the EcoRI restriction endonuclease cleavage site in the polyoma genome.  相似文献   

10.
Tamulaitis G  Mucke M  Siksnys V 《FEBS letters》2006,580(6):1665-1671
The archetypal Type IIE restriction endonuclease EcoRII is a dimer that has a modular structure. DNA binding studies indicate that the isolated C-terminal domain dimer has an interface that binds a single cognate DNA molecule whereas the N-terminal domain is a monomer that also binds a single copy of cognate DNA. Hence, the full-length EcoRII contains three putative DNA binding interfaces: one at the C-terminal domain dimer and two at each of the N-terminal domains. Mutational analysis indicates that the C-terminal domain shares conserved active site architecture and DNA binding elements with the tetrameric restriction enzyme NgoMIV. Data provided here suggest possible evolutionary relationships between different subfamilies of restriction enzymes.  相似文献   

11.
Borck KS  Walbot V 《Genetics》1982,102(1):109-128
High resolution gel electrophoresis has allowed the assignment of fragment number and molecular weight to EcoRI, SalI and PstI restriction fragments of mitochondrial DNA from B37 normal (N) and B37 T, C and S male sterile cytoplasmic types of maize. A minimum complexity of 450-475 kb has been established. Hybridization of cloned EcoRI fragments to restriction digests of total mitochondrial DNA suggests that at least 80% of the genome is composed of unique sequences. Restriction fragments of identical size in N, T, C and S contain similar sequence information as evidenced by their hybridization behavior.—The total SalI digest and the larger PstI fragments representing 80% of the total complexity were used to calculate the fraction of shared fragments of each pairwise combination of cytoplasmic types. The C type mtDNA is most closely allied with the other mtDNAs and shares 67% of fragments with S, 65% with N, and 60% with T. The S type mtDNA is quite divergent from N (53% shared fragments) and T (56% shared fragments). N and T share 59% of the fragments. These results are discussed in terms of the origin of mtDNA diversity in maize.  相似文献   

12.
A one-step protocol is presented to determine the activity of EcoRV as a model of restriction enzymes. The protocol involved a molecular beacon as DNA substrate, with the target sequence recognized by EcoRV in the stem. EcoRV cleaved the stem forming two fragments, one of which contained the fluorophore and quencher, initially bound by 3 bp. This shorter fragment rapidly dissociated at 37 °C, causing an increase of fluorescence intensity that was used to gauge the reaction kinetics. The reaction can be described using the Michaelis–Menten mechanism, and the kinetic parameters obtained were compared with literature values involving other protocols.  相似文献   

13.
cgDNA is a package for the prediction of sequence-dependent configuration-space free energies for B-form DNA at the coarse-grain level of rigid bases. For a fragment of any given length and sequence, cgDNA calculates the configuration of the associated free energy minimizer, i.e. the relative positions and orientations of each base, along with a stiffness matrix, which together govern differences in free energies. The model predicts non-local (i.e. beyond base-pair step) sequence dependence of the free energy minimizer. Configurations can be input or output in either the Curves+ definition of the usual helical DNA structural variables, or as a PDB file of coordinates of base atoms. We illustrate the cgDNA package by comparing predictions of free energy minimizers from (a) the cgDNA model, (b) time-averaged atomistic molecular dynamics (or MD) simulations, and (c) NMR or X-ray experimental observation, for (i) the Dickerson–Drew dodecamer and (ii) three oligomers containing A-tracts. The cgDNA predictions are rather close to those of the MD simulations, but many orders of magnitude faster to compute. Both the cgDNA and MD predictions are in reasonable agreement with the available experimental data. Our conclusion is that cgDNA can serve as a highly efficient tool for studying structural variations in B-form DNA over a wide range of sequences.  相似文献   

14.
The ocr protein, the product of gene 0.3 of bacteriophage T7, is a structural mimic of the phosphate backbone of B-form DNA. In total it mimics 22 phosphate groups over ~24 bp of DNA. This mimicry allows it to block DNA binding by type I DNA restriction enzymes and to inhibit these enzymes. We have determined that multiple ocr dimers can bind stoichiometrically to the archetypal type I enzyme, EcoKI. One dimer binds to the core methyltransferase and two to the complete bifunctional restriction and modification enzyme. Ocr can also bind to the component subunits of EcoKI. Binding affinity to the methyltransferase core is extremely strong with a large favourable enthalpy change and an unfavourable entropy change. This strong interaction prevents the dissociation of the methyltransferase which occurs upon dilution of the enzyme. This stabilisation arises because the interaction appears to involve virtually the entire surface area of ocr and leads to the enzyme completely wrapping around ocr.  相似文献   

15.
A 203 base-pair fragment containing the lac operator/promoter region of Escherichia coli was inserted into the EcoRI site of the plasmid vector pKC7. Rates of restriction endonuclease cleavage of the flanking EcoRI sites and of several other restriction sites on the DNA molecule were then compared in the presence and absence of bound RNA polymerase or lac repressor. The rates were identical whether or not protein had been bound, even for sites as close as 40 base-pairs from a protein binding site. No difference was detected using supercoiled, nicked circular, or linear DNA substrates. No apparent change in the rates of methylation of EcoRI sites by EcoRI methylase was produced by binding the regulatory proteins.  相似文献   

16.
Octamer sequencing technology (OST) is a primer-directed sequencing strategy in which an individual octamer primer is selected from a pre-synthesized octamer primer library and used to sequence a DNA fragment. However, selecting candidate primers from such a library is time consuming and can be a bottleneck in the sequencing process. To accelerate the sequencing process and to obtain high quality sequencing data, a computer program, electronic OST or eOST, was developed to automatically identify candidate primers from an octamer primer library. eOST integrates the base calling software PHRED to provide a quality assessment for target sequences and identifies potential primer binding sites located within a high quality target region. To increase the sequencing success rate, eOST includes a simple dynamic folding algorithm to automatically calculate the free energy and predict the secondary structure within the template in the vicinity of the octamer-binding site. Several parameters were found to be important, including base quality threshold, the window size of the template sequence segment, and the threshold ΔG value. OST, coupled with the eOST software, can be used to sequence short DNA fragments or in the finishing assembly stage of large-scale sequencing of genomic DNA.  相似文献   

17.
The periodicities of the restriction enzyme cleavage sites in highly repetitive DNAs of six mammalian species (monkey, mouse, sheep, human, calf and rat) appear related to the length of DNA contained in the nucleosome subunit of chromatin. We suggest that the nucleosome structure is an essential element in the generation and evolution of repeated DNA sequences in mammals (Brown et al., 1978; Maio et al., 1977). The possibility of a phase relation between DNA repeat sequences and associated nucleosome proteins is consistent with this hypothesis and has been tested by restriction enzyme and micrococcal nuclease digestions of repetitive DNA sequences in isolated, intact nuclei.Sites for four different restriction enzyme activities, EcoRI, EcoRI1, HindIII and HaeIII have been mapped within the repeat unit of component α DNA, a highly repetitive DNA fraction of the African green monkey. The periodicity of cleavage sites for each of the enzymes (176 ± 4 nucleotide base-pairs) corresponds closely to the periodicity (about 185 nucleotide base-pairs) of the sites attacked in the initial stages of micrococcal nuclease digestion of nuclear chromatin. In intact monkey nuclei, EcoRI-RI1 sites are accessible to restriction enzyme cleavage; the HindIII and HaeIII sites are not. The results suggest (1) that, in component α chromatin, the EcoRI-RI1 sites are found at the interstices of adjacent nucleosomes and (2) the HindIII and HaeIII sites are protected from cleavage by their location on the protein core of the nucleosome. This interpretation was confirmed by experiments in which DNA segments of mononucleosomes and nucleosome cores released from CV-1 nuclei by micrococcal nuclease were subsequently treated with EcoRI, EcoRI1 and HindIII. A major secondary segment of component α, about 140 nucleotide base-pairs in length, was released only by treatment with HindIII, in keeping with the location of the HindIII sites in the restriction map and their resistance to cleavage in intact nuclei.EcoRI reduces calf satellite I DNA to a segment of about 1408 nucleotide basepairs. In contrast, restriction of calf satellite I DNA with EcoRI1 produces six prominent segments ranging in size from 176 to 1408 nucleotide base-pairs. Treatment of isolated calf nuclei with either EcoRI or EcoRI1 did not produce segments shorter than 1408 base-pairs, indicating that while canonical EcoRI sites are accessible to attack, the irregularly spaced EcoRI1 sites are specifically blocked. The results are consistent with a phase relation between the repeat sequence of calf satellite I DNA and an octameric array of nucleosomes.  相似文献   

18.
Many types of restriction enzymes cleave DNA away from their recognition site. Using the type III restriction enzyme, EcoP15I, which cleaves DNA 25–27 bp away from its recognition site, we provide evidence to show that an intact recognition site on the cleaved DNA sequesters the restriction enzyme and decreases the effective concentration of the enzyme. EcoP15I restriction enzyme is shown here to perform only a single round of DNA cleavage. Significantly, we show that an exonuclease activity is essential for EcoP15I restriction enzyme to perform multiple rounds of DNA cleavage. This observation may hold true for all restriction enzymes cleaving DNA sufficiently far away from their recognition site. Our results highlight the importance of functional cooperation in the modulation of enzyme activity. Based on results presented here and other data on well-characterised restriction enzymes, a functional evolutionary hierarchy of restriction enzymes is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The EcoO109I restriction-modification system, which recognizes 5′-(A/G)GGNCC(C/T)-3′, has been cloned, and contains convergently transcribed endonuclease and methylase. The role and action mechanism of the gene product, C.EcoO109I, of a small open reading frame located upstream of ecoO109IR were investigated in vivo and in vitro. The results of deletion analysis suggested that C.EcoO109I acts as a positive regulator of ecoO109IR expression but has little effect on ecoO109IM expression. Assaying of promoter activity showed that the expression of ecoO109IC was regulated by its own gene product, C.EcoO109I. C.EcoO109I was overproduced as a His-tag fusion protein in recombinant Escherichia coli HB101 and purified to homogeneity. C.EcoO109I exists as a homodimer, and recognizes and binds to the DNA sequence 5′-CTAAG(N)5CTTAG-3′ upstream of the ecoO109IC translational start site. It was also shown that C.EcoO109I bent the target DNA by 54 ± 4°.  相似文献   

20.
The temperate bacteriophage BK5-T was isolated from Streptococcus cremoris BK5 by induction with mitomycin C. Electron microscopy revealed that BK5-T DNA consists of linear molecules, ranging in size from 39.7 to 46 kilobase pairs. Restriction analysis of self-ligated BK5-T DNA showed that the ends of the DNA were not cohesive. The EcoRI restriction fragments of the phage genome were cloned into pACYC184. Restriction enzyme analysis of both the phage DNA and the cloned EcoRI fragments with EcoRI, BstEII, PstI, ClaI, and XbaI yielded a 37.6-kilobase-pair-long circular restriction map for the phage genome. It was concluded that the BK5-T DNA molecules in the population differ in their sequence by a circular permutation and that individual DNA molecules are terminally redundant. The map location of the sites at which packaging of BK5-T DNA into phage heads is initiated (pac) and at which the phage integrates into the bacterial chromosome (att) were established.  相似文献   

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