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1.
Two molecularly and kinetically distinct major species of the extracellular nuclease BAL 31 from Alteromonas espejiana, previously characterized as the "fast" (F) and "slow" (S) BAL 31 nucleases, have been evidenced to derive from proteolysis starting from a still larger (approximately 120 kDa) precursor nuclease. The expected protease activity in the culture fluid has been confirmed and is strongly dependent on the cell growth phase. The disappearance of the largest nuclease species with the concomitant sequential appearance of first the F and then the S species has been demonstrated for nuclease obtained from culture supernatants as a function of cell growth phase. Nuclease from periplasmic extracts displayed very little of the F and S nucleases. Treatment of purified F nuclease with Pronase or subtilisin readily converted it to species with only a few percent of the native exonuclease activity against duplex DNA but retaining much of the initial activity against single-stranded DNA. Electrophoresis in nuclease-detecting gels demonstrated a parallel conversion of the larger species to one indistinguishable in molecular weight from the S species. The observed loss of exonuclease activity could correspond to the conversion of the F to the S nuclease. However, treatment of S nuclease with subtilisin resulted in a drastic reduction of exonuclease activity of this enzyme on duplex DNA with retention of most of the activity against single-stranded and nicked circular duplex DNA substrates. Evidence of internal proteolysis of the S nuclease could be seen after electrophoresis in denaturing gels but only after the denaturation buffer was adjusted to 6 M in urea. The preferential removal of the exonuclease activity may enhance the usefulness of the BAL 31 nuclease in such applications as heteroduplex mapping.  相似文献   

2.
Gilroy KL  Austin CA 《PloS one》2011,6(2):e14693

Background

Type II DNA topoisomerases are essential, ubiquitous enzymes that act to relieve topological problems arising in DNA from normal cellular activity. Their mechanism of action involves the ATP-dependent transport of one DNA duplex through a transient break in a second DNA duplex; metal ions are essential for strand passage. Humans have two isoforms, topoisomerase IIα and topoisomerase IIβ, that have distinct roles in the cell. The C-terminal domain has been linked to isoform specific differences in activity and DNA interaction.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We have investigated the role of the C-terminal domain in the binding of human topoisomerase IIα and topoisomerase IIβ to DNA in fluorescence anisotropy assays using full length and C-terminally truncated enzymes. We find that the C-terminal domain of topoisomerase IIβ but not topoisomerase IIα affects the binding of the enzyme to the DNA. The presence of metal ions has no effect on DNA binding. Additionally, we have examined strand passage of the full length and truncated enzymes in the presence of a number of supporting metal ions and find that there is no difference in relative decatenation between isoforms. We find that calcium and manganese, in addition to magnesium, can support strand passage by the human topoisomerase II enzymes.

Conclusions/Significance

The C-terminal domain of topoisomerase IIβ, but not that of topoisomerase IIα, alters the enzyme''s KD for DNA binding. This is consistent with previous data and may be related to the differential modes of action of the two isoforms in vivo. We also show strand passage with different supporting metal ions for human topoisomerase IIα or topoisomerase IIβ, either full length or C-terminally truncated. They all show the same preferences, whereby Mg > Ca > Mn.  相似文献   

3.

Background

We have previously isolated a thermolabile nuclease specific for double-stranded DNA from industrial processing water of Northern shrimps (Pandalus borealis) and developed an application of the enzyme in removal of contaminating DNA in PCR-related technologies.

Methodology/Principal Findings

A 43 kDa nuclease with a high specific activity of hydrolysing linear as well as circular forms of DNA was purified from hepatopancreas of Northern shrimp (Pandalus borealis). The enzyme displayed a substrate preference that was shifted from exclusively double-stranded DNA in the presence of magnesium to also encompass significant activity against single-stranded DNA when calcium was added. No activity against RNA was detected. Although originating from a cold-environment animal, the shrimp DNase has only minor low-temperature activity. Still, the enzyme was irreversibly inactivated by moderate heating with a half-life of 1 min at 65°C. The purified protein was partly sequenced and derived oligonucleotides were used to prime amplification of the encoding cDNA. This cDNA sequence revealed an open reading frame encoding a 404 amino acid protein containing a signal peptide. By sequence similarity the enzyme is predicted to belong to a family of DNA/RNA non-specific nucleases even though this shrimp DNase lacks RNase activity and is highly double-strand specific in some respects. These features are in agreement with those previously established for endonucleases classified as similar to the Kamchatka crab duplex-specific nuclease (Par_DSN). Sequence comparisons and phylogenetic analyses confirmed that the Northern shrimp nuclease resembles the Par_DSN-like nucleases and displays a more distant relationship to the Serratia family of nucleases.

Conclusions/Significance

The shrimp nuclease contains enzyme activity that may be controlled by temperature or buffer compositions. The double-stranded DNA specificity, as well as the thermolabile feature, strengthens its potential for in vitro applications.  相似文献   

4.

Background

Oxygen free radicals induce lipid peroxidation (LPO) that damages and breaks polyunsaturated fatty acids in cell membranes. LPO-derived aldehydes and hydroxyalkenals react with DNA leading to the formation of etheno(ε)-bases including 1,N 6-ethenoadenine (εA) and 3,N 4-ethenocytosine (εC). The εA and εC residues are highly mutagenic in mammalian cells and eliminated in the base excision repair (BER) pathway and/or by AlkB family proteins in the direct damage reversal process. BER initiated by DNA glycosylases is thought to be the major pathway for the removal of non-bulky endogenous base damage. Alternatively, in the nucleotide incision repair (NIR) pathway, the apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonucleases can directly incise DNA duplex 5′ to a damaged base in a DNA glycosylase-independent manner.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Here we have characterized the substrate specificity of human major AP endonuclease 1, APE1, towards εA, εC, thymine glycol (Tg) and 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8oxoG) residues when present in duplex DNA. APE1 cleaves oligonucleotide duplexes containing εA, εC and Tg, but not those containing 8oxoG. Activity depends strongly on sequence context. The apparent kinetic parameters of the reactions suggest that APE1 has a high affinity for DNA containing ε-bases but cleaves DNA duplexes at an extremely slow rate. Consistent with this observation, oligonucleotide duplexes containing an ε-base strongly inhibit AP site nicking activity of APE1 with IC50 values in the range of 5–10 nM. MALDI-TOF MS analysis of the reaction products demonstrated that APE1-catalyzed cleavage of εA•T and εC•G duplexes generates, as expected, DNA fragments containing 5′-terminal ε-base residue.

Conclusions/Significance

The fact that ε-bases and Tg in duplex DNA are recognized and cleaved by APE1 in vitro, suggests that NIR may act as a backup pathway to BER to remove a large variety of genotoxic base lesions in human cells.  相似文献   

5.

Background

Most strains of Neisseria gonorrhoeae carry a Gonococcal Genetic Island which encodes a type IV secretion system involved in the secretion of ssDNA. We characterize the GGI-encoded ssDNA binding protein, SsbB. Close homologs of SsbB are located within a conserved genetic cluster found in genetic islands of different proteobacteria. This cluster encodes DNA-processing enzymes such as the ParA and ParB partitioning proteins, the TopB topoisomerase, and four conserved hypothetical proteins. The SsbB homologs found in these clusters form a family separated from other ssDNA binding proteins.

Methodology/Principal Findings

In contrast to most other SSBs, SsbB did not complement the Escherichia coli ssb deletion mutant. Purified SsbB forms a stable tetramer. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays and fluorescence titration assays, as well as atomic force microscopy demonstrate that SsbB binds ssDNA specifically with high affinity. SsbB binds single-stranded DNA with minimal binding frames for one or two SsbB tetramers of 15 and 70 nucleotides. The binding mode was independent of increasing Mg2+ or NaCl concentrations. No role of SsbB in ssDNA secretion or DNA uptake could be identified, but SsbB strongly stimulated Topoisomerase I activity.

Conclusions/Significance

We propose that these novel SsbBs play an unknown role in the maintenance of genetic islands.  相似文献   

6.
The culture medium of Pseudomonas BAL 31 contains endonuclease activities which are highly specific for single-stranged DNA and for the single-stranded or weakly hydrogen-bonded regions in supercoiled closed circular DNA. Exposure of nicked DNA to the culture medium results in cleavage of the strang opposite the sites of preexisting single-strand scissions. At least some of the linear duplex molecules derived by cleavage of supercoiled closed circular molecules contain short single-stranded ends. Single-strand scissions are not introduced into intact, linear duplex DNA or unsupercoiled covalently closed circular DNA. Under these same reaction conditions, 0X174 phage DNA is extensively degraded and PM2 form I DNA is quantitatively converted to PM2 form III linear duplexes. Prolonged exposure of this linear duplex DNA to the concentrated culture medium reveals the presence of a double-strand exonuclease activity that progressively reduces the average length of the linear duplex. These nuclease activities persist at ionic strengths up to 4 M and are not eliminated in the presence of 5% sodium dodecyl sulfate. Calcium and magnesium ion are both required for optimal activity. Although the absence of magnesium ion reduces the activities, the absence of calcium ion irreversibly eliminates all the activities.  相似文献   

7.
The BAL 31 nuclease, an extracellular nuclease from A. espejiana, specifically recognizes and cleaves the salt induced conformational junction between B and Z-DNA. Short segments of (dC-dG) left-handed Z-helix, comprising approximately 1% of the total DNA, are specifically detected within two different recombinant plasmids. The BAL 31 enzyme is highly resistant to inactivation by the presence of high concentrations of a variety of electrolytes that stabilize left-handed helices, is active at physiological pH, and can be used to probe both linear and circular DNAs. Additionally, the nuclease cleaves left-handed (dC-dG)n only very poorly, if at all. Thus, the BAL 31 nuclease can be utilized as a probe for helical junctions and consequently for segments of left-handed DNA that might exist within predominantly right-handed naturally occurring genomes.  相似文献   

8.
The extracellular nuclease from Alteromonas espejiana BAL 31 is a highly sensitive endonucleolytic probe for lesions that distort the helical structure of duplex DNA. The nuclease can be isolated as two distinct molecular species, the 'fast' (F) and 'slow' (S) species, which have different kinetic properties. When nonsupercoiled, covalently closed circular phage PM2 DNA containing apurinic sites introduced by heating at acid pH was incubated with individual fractions from a chromatographic column which separated the two nuclease species, cleavage of the DNA was observed which was greatly in excess of control levels using nonmodified DNA. The initial rates of such cleavage clearly paralleled the peaks of both absorbance and nuclease activity against single-stranded and linear duplex substrates. When samples of apurinic DNA were incubated with pooled fractions from the same column representing pure F and S nucleases, respectively, the rate and extent of the cleavage observed was dependent upon the average number of apurinic sites per molecule. Cleavage was readily detectable in samples containing an average of 1.1 apurinic sites per molecule with both species of the enzyme. These results indicate that either species of the BAL 31 nuclease can recognize and cleave in response to a single apurinic site in duplex DNA. The F nuclease appears to be approx. 2.5-times as efficient in cleaving DNA containing apurinic lesions as the S enzyme in extended incubations.  相似文献   

9.
The extracellular nuclease activities of Alteromonas espejiana sp. BAL 31 are mediated by at least two distinct protein species that differ in molecular weights and catalytic properties. The two species that have been purified to homogeneity and characterized, the "fast" (F) and "slow" (S) enzymes, both possess an exonuclease activity that shortens both strands of duplex DNA, with the F nuclease displaying a much greater (approximately 19-fold) turnover number for this degradation than the S species. In the present article, it is shown that the F species also mediates the terminally directed hydrolysis of a linear duplex RNA, gradually shortening molecules of this substrate through a mechanism that results in the removal of nucleotides from both the 3' and the 5' ends. This degradation proceeds with very infrequent introduction of scissions away from the termini as demonstrated by gel electrophoretic examination of the products of partial degradation, both in duplex form and after denaturation by reaction with CH3HgOH, and by electron microscopic characterization of duplex partially degraded molecules. The apparent Michaelis constant and turnover number have been determined. At equimolar enzyme concentrations in the limit of high substrate concentration, the F nuclease will degrade duplex RNA at a rate 0.021 +/- 0.010 (S.D.) times that for a duplex DNA of comparable guanine + cytosine content. The S species, by contrast, shows very little activity against the duplex RNA substrate relative to that of the F enzyme.  相似文献   

10.
The extracellular nuclease from Alteromonas espejiana sp. BAL 31 can be isolated as two distinct proteins, the "fast" (F) and "slow" (S) species, both of which have been purified to homogeneity. The F and S species of the nuclease have molecular weights, respectively, of 109 X 10(3) and 85 X 10(3), and both are single polypeptide chains with an isoelectric pH near 4.2. Both species catalyze the degradation of single-stranded and linear duplex DNAs to 5'-mononucleotides. The degradation of linear duplex DNA occurs through a terminally directed hydrolysis mechanism that results in the removal of nucleotides from both the 3' and 5' ends. Apparent Michaelis constants (Km) have been obtained for the exonuclease activities of both species and for the activity against single-stranded DNA of the S species. The Km for the hydrolysis of single-stranded DNA catalyzed by the F species has not been obtained because the reaction velocity was maximal even at the lowest substrate concentrations accessible in the photometric assay. The ratio of the turnover numbers for the exonuclease activities of the two species indicates that the F species will shorten linear duplex DNA at a rate 27 +/- 5 (S.D.) times faster than an equimolar concentration of the S species in the limit of high substrate concentration, while the corresponding ratio for the activities against single-stranded DNA (1.2 +/- 0.1) shows that the two species are similar with respect to hydrolysis of this substrate. In the limit of high substrate concentrations, the F and S species break phosphodiester bonds in single-stranded DNA at rates 1.3 +/- 0.3 and 33 +/- 2 times those for the exonucleolytic degradation of linear duplex DNA, respectively. It has not been established whether the two species are physically related.  相似文献   

11.
Biochemical analysis of human Dna2   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Yeast Dna2 helicase/nuclease is essential for DNA replication and assists FEN1 nuclease in processing a subset of Okazaki fragments that have long single-stranded 5′ flaps. It is also involved in the maintenance of telomeres. DNA2 is a gene conserved in eukaryotes, and a putative human ortholog of yeast DNA2 (ScDNA2) has been identified. Little is known about the role of human DNA2 (hDNA2), although complementation experiments have shown that it can function in yeast to replace ScDNA2. We have now characterized the biochemical properties of hDna2. Recombinant hDna2 has single-stranded DNA-dependent ATPase and DNA helicase activity. It also has 5′–3′ nuclease activity with preference for single-stranded 5′ flaps adjacent to a duplex DNA region. The nuclease activity is stimulated by RPA and suppressed by steric hindrance at the 5′ end. Moreover, hDna2 shows strong 3′–5′ nuclease activity. This activity cleaves single-stranded DNA in a fork structure and, like the 5′–3′ activity, is suppressed by steric hindrance at the 3′-end, suggesting that the 3′–5′ nuclease requires a 3′ single-stranded end for activation. These biochemical specificities are very similar to those of the ScDna2 protein, but suggest that the 3′–5′ nuclease activity may be more important than previously thought.  相似文献   

12.

Background

Bacteria show a bias in their genomic oligonucleotide composition far beyond that dictated by G+C content. Patterns of over- and underrepresented oligonucleotides carry a phylogenetic signal and are thus diagnostic for individual species. Patterns of short oligomers have been investigated by multiple groups in large numbers of bacteria genomes. However, global distributions of the most highly overrepresented mid-sized oligomers have not been assessed across all prokaryotes to date. We surveyed overrepresented mid-length oligomers across all prokaryotes and normalised for base composition and embedded oligomers using zero and second order Markov models.

Principal Findings

Here we report a presumably ancient set of oligomers conserved and overrepresented in nearly all branches of prokaryotic life, including Archaea. These oligomers are either adenine rich homopurines with one to three guanine nucleosides, or homopyridimines with one to four cytosine nucleosides. They do not show a consistent preference for coding or non-coding regions or aggregate in any coding frame, implying a role in DNA structure and as polypeptide binding sites. Structural parameters indicate these oligonucleotides to be an extreme and rigid form of B-DNA prone to forming triple stranded helices under common physiological conditions. Moreover, the narrow minor grooves of these structures are recognised by DNA binding and nucleoid associated proteins such as HU.

Conclusion

Homopurine and homopyrimidine oligomers exhibit distinct and unusual structural features and are present at high copy number in nearly all prokaryotic lineages. This fact suggests a non-neutral role of these oligonucleotides for bacterial genome organization that has been maintained throughout evolution.  相似文献   

13.
[目的]克隆表达嗜热古菌Archaeoglobus fulgidus(A.fulgidus)来源的RecJ核酸酶基因(ORF编号AF_0699,NCBI数据库基因登陆号为AF_RS03550),对该重组蛋白的核酸酶活性及酶学特征进行鉴定和分析.[方法]将A.fulgidus RecJ(AfuRecJ)核酸酶在大肠杆菌中...  相似文献   

14.
15.
Mechanism of exonuclease action of BAL 31 nuclease   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Two kinetically and molecularly distinct forms ('fast' (F) and 'slow' (S] of nuclease BAL 31 from Alteromonas espejiana effect the length reduction of linear duplex DNAs through a 3'----5'-directed exonuclease activity in conjunction with an endonuclease activity against the 5'-terminated single-stranded tails generated by the exonuclease activity. No evidence for a 5'----3' mode of exonuclease action was seen. Single-stranded DNA is degraded predominantly by the 3'----5' exonuclease action. There is a pronounced decrease, to roughly constant values, of the average lengths of the tails in partially digested duplexes at a constant extent of digestion with increasing nuclease concentration. This decrease correlates with an increasing extent of ligatability, in the absence of repair, under conditions favoring the joining of fully base-paired ends. The exonuclease action, at least against duplex substrates, is quasi-processive and removes approx. 18 and 28 nucleotides per productive enzyme-substrate encounter for the S and F species, respectively. The dependence on Ca2+ and Mg2+ concentrations of the activities has been determined.  相似文献   

16.
We have identified a novel structure-specific nuclease in highly fractionated extracts of the thermophilic archaeon Methanothermobacter thermautotrophicus (Mth). The 71 kDa protein product of open reading frame mth1090 is a nuclease with ATPase activity, which we call Nar71 (Nuclease-ATPase in Repair, 71 kDa). The nar71 gene is located in a gene neighbourhood proposed by genomics to encode a novel DNA repair system conserved in thermophiles. The biochemical characterization of Nar71 presented here is the first analysis from within this neighbourhood, and it supports the insight from genomics. Nuclease activity of Nar71 is specific for 3′ flaps and flayed duplexes, targeting single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) regions. This activity requires Mg2+ or Mn2+ and is greatly reduced in ATP. In ATP, Nar71 displaces ssDNA, also with high specificity for 3′ flap and flayed duplex DNA. Strand displacement is weak compared with nuclease activity, but in ATPγS it is abolished, suggesting that Nar71 couples ATP hydrolysis to DNA strand separation. ATPase assays confirmed that Nar71 is stimulated by ssDNA, though not double-stranded DNA. Mutation of Lys-117 in Nar71 abolished ATPase and nuclease activity, and we describe a separation-of-function mutant (K68A) that has lost ATPase activity but retains nuclease activity. A model of possible Nar71 function in DNA repair is presented.  相似文献   

17.

Background

Mutations within the leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) gene are a common cause of familial and sporadic Parkinson''s disease. The multidomain protein LRRK2 exhibits overall low GTPase and kinase activity in vitro.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Here, we show that the rho guanine nucleotide exchange factor ARHGEF7 and the small GTPase CDC42 are interacting with LRRK2 in vitro and in vivo. GTPase activity of full-length LRRK2 increases in the presence of recombinant ARHGEF7. Interestingly, LRRK2 phosphorylates ARHGEF7 in vitro at previously unknown phosphorylation sites. We provide evidence that ARHGEF7 might act as a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for LRRK2 and that R1441C mutant LRRK2 with reduced GTP hydrolysis activity also shows reduced binding to ARHGEF7.

Conclusions/Significance

Downstream effects of phosphorylation of ARHGEF7 through LRRK2 could be (i) a feedback control mechanism for LRRK2 activity as well as (ii) an impact of LRRK2 on actin cytoskeleton regulation. A newly identified familial mutation N1437S, localized within the GTPase domain of LRRK2, further underlines the importance of the GTPase domain of LRRK2 in Parkinson''s disease pathogenesis.  相似文献   

18.
Spinach leaves contain a highly active nuclease called SP. The purified enzyme incises single-stranded DNA, RNA, and double-stranded DNA that has been destabilized by A-T-rich regions and DNA lesions [Strickland et al. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 9749-9756]. This broad range of activity has suggested that SP may be similar to a family of nucleases represented by S1, P1, and the mung bean nuclease. However, unlike these single-stranded nucleases that require acidic pH and low ionic strength conditions, SP has a neutral pH optimum and is active over a wide range of salt concentrations. We have extended these findings and showed that an outstanding substrate for SP is a mismatched DNA duplex. For base-substitution mismatches, SP incises at all mismatches except those containing a guanine residue. SP also cuts at insertion/deletions of one or more nucleotides. Where the extrahelical DNA loop contains one nucleotide, the preference of extrahelical nucleotide is A > T approximately C but undetectable at G. The inability of SP to cut at guanine residues and the favoring of A-T-rich regions distinguish SP from the CEL I family of neutral pH mismatch endonucleases recently discovered in celery and other plants [Oleykowski et al. (1998) Nucleic Acids Res. 26, 4597-4602]. SP, like CEL I, does not turn over after incision at a mismatched site in vitro. Similar to CEL I, the presence of a DNA polymerase or a DNA ligase allows SP to turn over and stimulate its activity in vitro by about 20-fold. The possibility that the SP nuclease may be a natural variant of the CEL I family of mismatch endonucleases is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Specificity of the S1 nuclease from Aspergillus oryzae.   总被引:19,自引:0,他引:19  
Conditions are described for digesting single-stranded DNA by S1 nuclease without introducing breaks in double-stranded DNA. The enzyme is inhibited by low concentrations of various compounds of phosphate. Under certain conditions S1 nuclease cleaves the strand opposite a nick in bacteriophage T5 DNA; under other conditions, the enzyme cleaves a loop in one strand of heteroduplex lambdaDNA while leaving the opposite strand intact. S1 nuclease makes many single strand breaks in ultraviolet-irradiated duplex lambdaDNA. Superhelical DNA of phiX174 (Form I) is converted first to a relaxed circular molecule (Form II), and then to a linear molecule (Form III) by cleavage at one site per molecule. Since the cleavage occurs at many sites in the population of molecules, the partially single-stranded regions in phiX174 superhelical DNA are not determined by specific nucleotide sequences.  相似文献   

20.
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