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1.
Bovine pancreatic deoxyribonuclease I (bpDNase I) contains four cysteine residues forming two disulfide bonds. Though there are no free sulfhydryl groups, incubation of bpDNase I with 2-nitro-5-thiosulfobenzoic acid (NTSB) in the presence of Ca(2+) or Mg(2+) at pH 7.5 results in inactivation of the enzyme. Amino acid analysis shows that NTSB-treated bpDNase I still contains all 4 half-cystine residues. The only amino acid residues having reduced values are threonine and serine, indicating that these may be the reaction sites for NTSB. Plasmid scission assay and circular dichroism analysis reveal the structural integrity of the inactivated enzyme. Treatment of bpDNase I with NTSB does not result in fragmentation, as demonstrated by SDS-PAGE analysis. NTSB binds bpDNase I through covalent modification, since dialysis and gel filtration can not reverse the inactivation reaction. However, after dilution into an acid buffer of pH 4.7, the inactivated enzyme regains about 40% of its initial activity, suggesting a reversible inactivation by acid treatment. NTSB does not inactivate DNase II, ribonuclease, chymotrypsin and lysozyme, while it effectively inactivates rat parotid DNase I. These results strongly suggest that NTSB can be considered as a novel inhibitor specific for DNase I.  相似文献   

2.
We have recently constructed hyperactive human deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) variants that digest double-stranded DNA more efficiently under physiological saline conditions by introducing positively charged amino acids at eight positions that can interact favorably with the negatively charged DNA phosphates. In this study, we present data from supercoiled DNA nicking, linear DNA digestion, and hyperchromicity assays that distinguish two classes of DNase I hyperactive variants based upon their activity dependence on Ca2+. Class A variants are highly dependent upon Ca2+, having up to 300-fold lower activity in the presence of Mg2+ alone compared to that in the presence of Mg2+ and Ca2+, and include Q9R, H44K, and T205K, in addition to wild-type DNase I. In contrast, the catalytic activity of Class B variants, which comprise the E13R, T14K, N74K, S75K, and N110R hyperactive variants, is relatively Ca2+ independent. A significant proportion of this difference in Ca2+-dependent activity can be attributed to one of the two structural calcium binding sites in DNase I. Compared to wild-type, the removal of Ca2+ binding site 2 by alanine replacements at Asp99, Asp107, and Glu112 decreased activity up to 26-fold in the presence of Mg2+ and Ca2+, but had no effect in the presence of Mg2+ alone. We propose that the rate-enhancing effect of Ca2+ binding at site 2 can be replaced by favorable electrostatic interactions created by proximal positively charged amino acid substitutions such as those found in the Class B variants, thus reducing the dependence on Ca2+.  相似文献   

3.
Previous structural studies based on the co-crystal of a complex between bovine pancreatic deoxyribonuclease I (bpDNase I) and a double-stranded DNA octamer d(GCGATCGC)(2) have suggested the presence of a putative secondary active site near Ser43. In our present study, several crucial amino acid residues postulated in this putative secondary active site, including Thr14, Ser43, and His44 were selected for site-directed mutagenesis. A series of single, double and triple mutants were thus constructed and tested for their DNase I activity by hyperchromicity assay. Substitution of each or both of Thr14 and Ser43 by alanine results in mutant enzymes retaining 30-70% of WT bpDNase I activity. However, when His44 was replaced by aspartic acid, either in the single, double, or triple mutant, the enzyme activities were drastically decreased to 0.5-5% that of WT bpDNase I. Interestingly, when cysteine was substituted for Thr14 or Ser43, the specific DNase activities of the mutant enzymes were substantially increased by 1.5-100-fold, comparing to their alanine substitution mutant counterparts. Two other more sensitive DNase activity assay method, plasmid scission and zymogram analyses further confirm these observations. These results suggested that His44 may play a critical role in substrate DNA binding in this putative secondary active site, and introduction of sulfhydryl groups at Thr14 and Ser43 may facilitate Mn(2+)-coordination and further contribute to the catalytic activity of bpDNase I.  相似文献   

4.
The two amino acid residues, Asp 99 and Asp 201, involved in the coordination of the two calcium atoms in the X-ray structure of bovine pancreatic (bp) DNase, were individually changed by site-directed mutagenesis. The two altered proteins, brDNase(D99A) and brDNase(D201A) were expressed in Escherichia coli and purified by anion exchange chromatography. Equilibrium dialysis showed that mutation destroyed one Ca(2+)-binding site each in brDNase(D99A) and brDNase(D201A). Compared with bpDNase, the Vmax value for brDNase(D99A) remained unchanged and that for brDNase(D201A) was decreased, whereas the K(m) values for the two variants were increased two- to threefold when the DNA hydrolytic hyperchromicity assay was used. Like bpDNase, brDNase(D99A) was able to make double scission on duplex DNA with Mg(2+) plus Ca(2+) and was effectively protected by Ca(2+) from the trypsin inactivation. But under the same conditions, brDNase(D201A) lost the double-scission ability and was not protected by Ca(2+). Nevertheless, the two variant proteins retained the characteristics of the Ca(2+)-induced conformational changes and the Ca(2+) protection against the beta-mercaptoethanol disruption of the essential disulfide bond, suggesting that other weaker Ca(2+)-binding sites not found in the X-ray structure were responsible for these properties. Therefore, the two structural calcium atoms are not for maintaining the overall conformation of the active DNase, as it has been indicated in the X-ray analysis, but rather play the role in the fine-tuning of the DNase activity.  相似文献   

5.
DNase requires Ca2+ for activity against DNA with Mg2+. The Ca2+ selective chelating agent, ethylene glycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N, N'-tetraacetic acid, (EGTA) inhibits DNase completely at pH 7 or 8, and subsequent addition of excess Ca2+ reverses inhibition in less than one second. DNase action can be stopped at any point by the addition of excess EGTA over Ca2+. Ca2+ is required for DNase to bind substrate. Gel filtration experiments fail to show DNase binding to 0.2 mg per ml of DNA at 5 mm Mg2+ and 10-4 M EGTA. The concentration of Ca2+ needed for half of maximum DNase activity decreases with increases DNA concentration, from 1.2 times 10-5 M Ca2+ at 2.3 times 10-5 M DNA-P to about 4 times 10-7 M Ca2+ at 2.3 DNA-P. Kinetic analysis by the titrametic assay of protons releases shows that V max is independent of Ca2+ concentration while Km increases from 7.7 times 10-5 M DNA-P at 5 times 10-4 M Ca2+ to 3.4 times 10-4 M DNA-P at 5 times 10-6 M Ca2+. Both of these results are predicted by a rate equation which is derived from the assumption that DNase must bind Ca2+ before it can bind DNA. The essential Ca2+ atom probably binds to the one of two high affinity Ca2+ binding sites on DNase which cannont bind Mg2+ or Mn2+. The only other divalent metal ions which can bind to this site, Sr2+ and Ba2+, are also the only metal ions which can substitute for Ca2+ in DNase action against DNA with Mg2+. Some DNase activity is obtained in the absence of added Ca2+ with Mg2+ at pH 6 or below and with Mn2+ or Co2+ at pH 8. These assay solutions are contaminated by 1 to 3 muM Ca2+, which may be sufficient to account for the observed activity.  相似文献   

6.
Aqualysin I has at least two Ca2+-binding sites that have different affinities for Ca2+. The binding of various metal ions to aqualysin I was studied using 23Na- and 139La-NMR spectrometry. Evidence is presented that Ca2+, La3+, and Na+ bind to the low-affinity Ca2+-binding site of aqualysin I, but Mg2+ does not. Our results confirm that binding of metals at the low-affinity Ca2+-binding site is essential for thermostabilization, since the addition of Mg2+ did not result in thermostabilization. La3+ was found to bind to both the low-affinity Ca2+-binding site and an additional metal ion-binding site that can also be involved in the thermostabilization of aqualysin I.  相似文献   

7.
The activation of endonucleases resulting in the degradation of genomic DNA is one of the most characteristic changes in apoptosis. Here, we report the characterization of a novel endonuclease, termed DNase X due to its X-chromosomal localization. The active nuclease is a 35 kDa protein with 39% identity to DNase I. When incubated with isolated nuclei, recombinant DNase X was capable of triggering DNA degradation at internucleosomal sites. Similarly to DNase I, the nuclease activity of DNase X was dependent on Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) and inhibited by Zn(2+) ions or chelators of bivalent cations. Overexpression of DNase X caused internucleosomal DNA degradation and induction of cell death associated with increased caspase activation. Despite the presence of two potential caspase cleavage sites, DNase X was processed neither in vitro nor in vivo by different caspases. Interestingly, after initiation of apoptosis DNase X was translocated from the cytoplasm to the nuclear compartment and aggregated as a detergent-insoluble complex. Abundant expression of DNase X mRNA was detected in heart and skeletal muscle cells, suggesting that DNase X may be involved in apoptotic or other biological events in muscle tissues.  相似文献   

8.
Ca2+ plus Mg2+-dependent endodeoxyribonuclease was extracted from calf thymus chromatin and purified to a state free from contamination by other DNases. This DNase required both Ca2+ and Mg2+, or Mn2+ alone for its activity and the optimum pH for activity was at 6.5-7.5. No specificity for the 5'-base was observed. The molecular weight of the DNase was estimated to be about 25,000-30,000 by glycerol gradient centrifugation. Actin and antibody for pancreatic DNase (DNase I) did not inhibit the enzyme, whereas both strongly inhibited DNase I, suggesting that these two DNases are different enzymes.  相似文献   

9.
Pancreatic DNase requires both Ca2+ and Mg2+ for its activity as measured by formation of an activated DNA template for in vitro DNA polymerase alpha assay and by the hyperchromic shift. Mn2+ can partially satisfy the Mg2+ requirement of the DNase for activation of DNA but the resulting template is only 50% as active in the DNA polymerase assay. When precautions are taken to avoid divalent ion contamination, pancreatic DNase is not active in the presence of Ca2+ or Mg2+ alone. analysis of the DNA by sucrose gradient centrifugation shows that only in the presence of Ca2+ plus Mg2+ or Mn2+ does pancreatic DNase produce extensive strand breaks in the DNA. The activated DNA template that yields maximal DNA polymerase activity is low molecular weight material of 30,000 to 50,000 daltons.  相似文献   

10.
We have investigated an electrostatic screening hypothesis of cationic inhibition of quantal release at the neuromuscular junction of the frog (Rana pipiens). According to this hypothesis, increasing the extracellular concentration of an inhibitory cation reduces the quantal content (m) of the end-plate potential by reducing the ability of negative surface charge to attract Ca2+ to the external surface of the presynaptic membrane. The inhibitory power of various cations should depend only on their net ionic charge and should increase strongly with increasing charge. We have demonstrated, in Ringer's solutions containing modified concentrations of Na+, Ca+, and Mg2+, that at fixed concentrations of Ca2+ and Na+ (a) the dependence of m on [Mg2+]0 is satisfactorily accounted for by electrostatic theory and (b) the dependence of m on the univalent cation concentration of the modified Ringer's solution is satisfactorily predicted from the Mg2+ inhibition of m. (Glucosamine or arginine was used to replace a fraction of the Na+ content of Ringer's solution in the latter experiments.) These results are consistent with electrostatic screening actions of Mg2+ and univalent cations in the inhibition of m. We have also re-examined the inhibition of m caused by the addition to Ringer's solution of two trace concentration divalent cations, Mn2+ and Sr2+. Our data suggest that the inhibition of m by Sr2+ at high quantal contents may also be due to surface charge screening, while the potent inhibitory actions of Mn2+ may be due to its ability to bind negative surface charge.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Lens cells demonstrate a terminal differentiation process with loss of their organelles including nuclei. Chromatin disappearance is characterised by the same changes as most apoptotic cells, i.e. condensation of chromatin and cleavage into high molecular weight fragments and oligonucleosomes. The endo-deoxyribonucleases (bicationic (Ca2+, Mg2+), mono-cationic (Ca2+ or Mg2+) and acidic non-cationic dependent nucleases) are present in lens fibre cells. Our results suggest that the acidic non-cationic nuclease (DNase II) plays a major role in chromatin cleavage. This nuclease, known to be lysosomal, is found in lens fibre nuclei and only an antibody directed against DNase II inhibits the acidic DNA cleavage of lens fibre nuclei. In addition, there must be another DNase implicated in the process which is not DNase I but appears to be a Ca2+, Mg2+ dependent molecule. Regulation of these DNase activities may be accomplished by the effect of post-translational modifications, acidic pH, mitochondrial release molecules, growth factors or oncogenes. Finally, fibre cells lose organelles without cytoplasmic elimination. The survival of these differentiated cells might be due to the action of survival factors such as FGF 1.  相似文献   

13.
The regulatory complex of vertebrate skeletal muscle integrates information about cross-bridge binding, divalent cations and other intracellular ionic conditions to control activation of muscle contraction. Relatively little is known about the role of the troponin C (TnC) C-domain in the absence of Ca2+. Here, we use a standardized condition for measuring isometric tension in rabbit psoas skinned fibers to track TnC attachment and detachment in the absence of Ca2+ under different conditions of ionic strength, pH and MgATP. In the presence of MgATP and Mg2+, TnC detaches more readily and has a 1.5- to 2-fold lower affinity for the intact thin filament at pH 8 and 250 mM K+ than at pH 6 or in 30 mM K+; changes in affinity are fully reversible. The response to ionic strength is lost when Mg2+ and MgATP are absent, whereas the response to pH persists, suggesting that weaker electrostatic TnC-TnI-TnT interactions can be overridden by strongly bound cross-bridges. In solution, titration of a fluorescent C-domain mutant (F154W TnC) with Mg2+ reveals no significant changes in Mg2+ affinity with pH or ionic strength, suggesting that these parameters influence TnC binding by acting directly on electrostatic forces between TnC and TnI rather than by changing Mg2+ binding to C-domain sites III and IV.  相似文献   

14.
The analysis of the 23Na-NMR signal shape variations in the presence of vesicles of light sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) shows the existence of sodium sites on the membranes with Kd values of about 10 mM. Other monovalent cations displace Na+ from SR fragments in a competitive manner according to the row K+ greater than Rb+ greater than Cs+ greater than Li+. Calcium ions also reduce Na+ binding, the Na+ desorption curve being of a two-stage nature, which, as suggested, indicates the existence of two types of Ca(2+)-sensitive Na+ binding sites (I and II). Sites of type I and II are modified by Ca2+ in submicromolar and millimolar concentrations, respectively. Analysis of sodium (calcium) desorption produced by calcium (sodium) allowed us to postulate the competition of these two cations for sites I and identity of these sites to high-affinity Ca(2+)-binding ones on the Ca(2+)-ATPase. Sites I weakly interact with Mg2+ (KappMg approximately 30 mM). Reciprocal effects of sodium and calcium on binding of each other to sites II cannot be described by a simple competition model, which indicates nonhomogeneity of these sites. A portion of sites I (approximately 70%) interacts with Mg2+ (KappMg = 3-4 mM). The pKa value of sites II is nearly 6.0. The number of sites II is three times greater than that of sites I. In addition, sites with intermediate affinity for Ca2+ were found with Kd values of 2-5 microM. These sites were revealed due to the reducing of the sites II affinity for Na+ upon Ca2+ binding to SR membranes. It can thus be concluded that in nonenergized SR there are binding sites for monovalent cations of at least three types: (1) sites I (which also bind Ca2+ at low concentrations), (2) magnesium-sensitive sites II and (3) magnesium-insensitive sites II.  相似文献   

15.
16.
M Milos  J J Schaer  M Comte  J A Cox 《Biochemistry》1986,25(20):6279-6287
Microcalorimetry, pH potentiometry, and direct binding studies by equilibrium dialysis or gel filtration were performed to determine the thermodynamic functions delta Ho, delta Go, and delta So guiding the interactions of Ca2+, Mg2+, and H+ with bovine brain calmodulin. At pH 7.5, Ca2+ and Mg2+ binding are both endothermic with enthalpy changes of 19.5 and 72.8 kJ X (mol of calmodulin)-1, respectively. These enthalpy changes are identical for each of the four ion-binding domains. The affinity constants also are identical with intrinsic values of 10(5) M-1 for Ca2+ and 140 M-1 for Mg2+. Ca2+ and Mg2+ do not compete for the same binding sites: at high concentrations of both ions, a calmodulin-Ca4-Mg4 species is formed with an enthalpy value of 24.4 kJ X mol-1 with respect to calmodulin-Ca4 and -28.8 kJ X mol-1 with respect to calmodulin-Mg4. Moreover, in the presence of high concentrations of Ca2+, the affinity of each of the four ion-binding domains in calmodulin for Mg2+ is decreased by a factor of 4 and vice versa, indicative of negative free-energy coupling between Ca2+ and Mg2+ binding. Protons antagonize Ca2+ and Mg2+ binding in a different manner. Ca2+-H+ antagonism is identical in each of the four Ca2+-binding domains in the pH range 7.5-5.2. Our analyses suggest that three chemical geometries, probably carboxyl-carboxylate interactions, are responsible for this antagonism with ionization constants of 10(6.2) M-1 in the metal-free protein. Mg2+-H+ antagonism also is identical for each of the Mg2+-binding sites but is qualitatively different from Ca2+-H+ antagonism.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
We characterized the biochemical functions of the small nonessential (C101-C104) and the large essential (C173-C209) disulfides in bovine pancreatic (bp) DNase using alanine mutants [brDNase(C101A)] and [brDNase(C173A) and brDNase(C209A)], respectively. We also characterized the effects of an additional third disulfide [brDNase(F192C/A217C)]. Without the Ca(2+) protection, bpDNase and brDNase(C101A) were readily inactivated by trypsin, whereas brDNase(F192C/A217C) remained active. With Ca(2+), all forms of DNase, except for brDNase(C101A), were protected against trypsin. All forms of DNase, after being dissolved in 6 M guanidine-HCl, were fully reactivated by diluting into a Ca(2+)-containing buffer. However, when diluted into a Ca(2+)-free buffer, bpDNase and brDNase(C101A) remained inactive, but 60% of the bpDNase activity was restored with brDNase(F192C/A217C). When heated, bpDNase was inactivated at a transition temperature of 65 degrees C, brDNase(C101A) at 60 degrees C, and brDNase(F192C/A217C) at 73 degrees C, indicating that the small disulfide, albeit not essential for activity, is important for the structural integrity, and that the introduction of a third disulfide can further stabilize the enzyme. When pellets of brDNase(C173A) and brDNase(C209A) in inclusion bodies were dissolved in 6 M guanidine-HCl and then diluted into a Ca(2+)-containing buffer, 10%-18% of the bpDNase activity was restored, suggesting that the "essential" disulfide is not absolutely crucial for enzymatic catalysis. Owing to the structure-based sequence alignment revealing homology between the "nonessential" disulfide of bpDNase and the active-site motif of thioredoxin, we measured 39% of the thioredoxin-like activity for bpDNase based on the rate of insulin precipitation (DeltaA650nm/min). Thus, the disulfides in bpDNase not only play the role of stabilizing the protein molecule but also may engage in biological functions such as the disulfide/dithiol exchange reaction.  相似文献   

18.
Measurements of binding equilibria of EcoRV endonuclease to DNA, for a series of base-analogue substrates, demonstrate that expression of sequence selectivity is strongly enhanced by the presence of Ca2+ ions. Binding constants were determined for short duplex oligodeoxynucleotides containing the cognate DNA site, three cleavable noncognate sites, and a fully nonspecific site. At pH 7.5 and 100 mM NaCl, the full range of specificity from the specific (tightest binding) to nonspecific (weakest binding) sites is 0.9 kcal/mol in the absence of metal ions and 5.8 kcal/mol in the presence of Ca2+. Precise determination of binding affinities in the presence of the active Mg2+ cofactor was found to be possible for substrates retaining up to 1.6% of wild-type activity, as determined by the rate of phosphoryl transfer. These measurements show that Ca2+ is a near-perfect analogue for Mg2+ in binding reactions of the wild-type enzyme with DNA base-analogue substrates, as it provides identical DeltaDeltaG degrees bind values among the cleavable noncognate sites. Equilibrium dissociation constants of wild-type and base-analogue sites were also measured for the weakly active EcoRV mutant K38A, in the presence of either Mg2+ or Ca2+. In this case, Ca2+ allows expression of a greater degree of specificity than does Mg2+. DeltaDeltaG degrees bind values of K38A toward specific versus nonspecific sites are 6.1 kcal/mol with Ca2+ and 3.9 kcal/mol with Mg2+, perhaps reflecting metal-specific conformational changes in the ground-state ternary complexes. The enhancement of binding specificity provided by divalent metal ions is likely to be general to many restriction endonucleases and other metal-dependent nucleic acid-modifying enzymes. These results strongly suggest that measurements of DNA binding affinities for EcoRV, and likely for many other restriction endonucleases, should be performed in the presence of divalent metal ions.  相似文献   

19.
Mammalian interphase and mitotic cells were analyzed for their cation composition using a three-dimensional high resolution scanning ion microprobe. This instrument maps the distribution of bound and unbound cations by secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS). SIMS analysis of cryofractured interphase and mitotic cells revealed a cell cycle dynamics of Ca2+, Mg2+, Na+, and K+. Direct analytical images showed that all four, but no other cations, were detected on mitotic chromosomes. SIMS measurements of the total cation content for diploid chromosomes imply that one Ca2+ binds to every 12.5-20 nucleotides and one Mg2+ to every 20-30 nucleotides. Only Ca2+ was enriched at the chromosomal DNA axis and colocalized with topoisomerase IIalpha (Topo II) and scaffold protein II (ScII). Cells depleted of Ca2+ and Mg2+ showed partially decondensed chromosomes and a loss of Topo II and ScII, but not hCAP-C and histones. The Ca2+-induced inhibition of Topo II catalytic activity and direct binding of Ca2+ to Topo II by a fluorescent filter-binding assay supports a regulatory role of Ca2+ during mitosis in promoting solely the structural function of Topo II. Our study directly implicates Ca2+, Mg2+, Na+, and K+ in higher order chromosome structure through electrostatic neutralization and a functional interaction with nonhistone proteins.  相似文献   

20.
A novel DNase from the digestive tract of the spruce budworm (Choristoneura fumiferana) has been isolated and characterized. This DNase has two features that distinguish it from other known DNases: (1) it has a pH optimum of 10.5 to 11; (2) it plays an important role in the conversion of the insecticidal crystal protein from Bacillus thuringiensis to the active DNA-free toxin in the larval gut. Only one digestive DNase with an apparent molecular mass of 23 kDa was found and no associated carbohydrate was detected. It has some similarities to pancreatic DNase I in that divalent alkaline metal ion is required for activity and it is inhibited by monovalent cations. In particular, Mg(2+) and Ca(2+) were the most effective activators. Transition metal ions also activated the enzyme but were less effective. The enzyme is an endonuclease that hydrolyzes single and double stranded DNA but shows a higher specificity for single stranded DNA. The purified enzyme acted synergistically with proteases on crystals from Bacillus thuringiensis to yield the DNA-free toxin. To our knowledge, this is the first characterization of DNase activity in insect larvae and provides strong evidence that a DNase is an integral component of the larval digestive system.  相似文献   

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