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1.
Here, we report that Sau3AI, an unusually large type II restriction enzyme with sequence homology to the mismatch repair protein MutH, is a monomeric enzyme as shown by gel filtration and ultracentrifugation. Structural similarities in the N- and C-terminal halves of the protein suggest that Sau3AI is a pseudo-dimer, i.e. a polypeptide with two similar domains. Since Sau3AI displays a nonlinear dependence of cleavage activity on enzyme concentration and a strong preference for substrates with two recognition sites over those with only one, it is likely that the functionally active form of Sau3AI is a dimer of a pseudo-dimer. Indeed, electron microscopy studies demonstrate that two distant recognition sites are brought together through DNA looping induced by the simultaneous binding of two Sau3AI molecules to the DNA. We suggest that the dimeric form of Sau3AI supplies two DNA-binding sites, one that is associated with the catalytic center and one that serves as an effector site.  相似文献   

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3.
Sau3AI is a type II restriction enzyme that recognizes the 5'-GATC-3' sequence in double-strand DNA and cleaves at 5' to the G residue. The C-terminal domain of Sau3AI (Sau3AI-C), which contains amino acids from 233 to 489, was crystallized and its structure was solved by using the Multi-wavelength Anomalous Diffraction method. The Sau3AI-C structure at 1.9 A resolution is similar to the structure of MutH, a DNA mismatch repair protein that shares high sequence similarity with the N-terminal Sau3AI domain. The functional analysis shows that Sau3AI-C can bind DNA with one recognition sequence but has no cleavage activity. These results indicate that Sau3AI is a pseudo-dimer belonging to the type IIe restriction enzymes and the Sau3AI-C is the allosteric effector domain that assists DNA binding and cleavage.  相似文献   

4.
A Ono  M Sato  Y Ohtani    T Ueda 《Nucleic acids research》1984,12(23):8939-8949
Deoxydecanucleotides having a recognition sequence of Bgl II and Sau 3AI, and their 7-deazaadenine analogs were synthesized. The decanucleotides containing 7-deazaadenine in place of adenine were partially resistant to the hydrolysis by Sau 3AI and strongly resistant to that by Bgl II. A new hypothesis on the mode of recognition and cleavage of specific nucleotide sequences by Bgl II, recognizing one strand and cleaving the other strand, is presented.  相似文献   

5.
Most major food-related outbreaks of listeriosis have been traced to a cluster of genetically related strains of serovar 4b (epidemic clone). In spite of numerous searches, distinct bacteriologic or virulence-related features unique to these strains have eluded identification, although a restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) characteristic of the epidemic clone has previously been described (W. Zheng and S. Kathariou, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 61:4310-4314, 1995). We found that DNAs from 75 strains which were derived from three separate outbreaks and which had the epidemic clone-specific RFLP were also invariably resistant to digestion by Sau3AI and other restriction endonucleases sensitive to cytosine methylation at 5' GATC 3' sites. This modification of Sau3AI restriction was host mediated, as it did not persist when DNA was cloned and propagated in Escherichia coli, and was uncommon among other Listeria strains. Epidemic-associated strains with this modification were resistant to infection by phage propagated in a serotype 4b strain which was not known to be involved in an epidemic and which lacked the epidemic clone-specific RFLP. Screening for susceptibility to MboI digestion revealed that these epidemic strains lacked methylation of adenines at GATC sites. This type of modification was rare among Listeria strains and was found in only three (of eight screened) strains of serovar 1/2b, possibly representing one clonal lineage.  相似文献   

6.
Xu C  Song J  Ding Y  Yu F  Sun L  Tang L  Hu X  Zhang Z  He J 《Protein and peptide letters》2007,14(5):505-506
Sau3AI is a type II restriction endonuclease that recognizes the palindromic sequence 5'-GATC-3' and cleaves 5' to G residue on each strand. The E64A mutant full length protein was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. The purified (His) (6)-tagged protein has monomer and dimer fraction and was crystallized by the hanging-drop vapor-diffusion technique. The dimer protein crystals can diffract to 3.0A. resolution and the monomer protein crystals can diffract to better than 2.8A. resolution. One completed dataset has been collected and it shows that the monomer orthorhombic Sau3AI/E64A crystal is in space group C2221 with unit cell parameters (69.44, 197.60, 191.46, 90, 90, 90) and contains two molecules in one asymmetric unit.  相似文献   

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8.
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   

9.
Looping and cleavage of single DNA molecules by the two-site restriction endonuclease Sau3AI were measured with optical tweezers. A DNA template containing many recognition sites was used, permitting loop sizes from approximately 10 to 10,000 basepairs. At high enzyme concentration, cleavage events were detected within 5 s and nearly all molecules were cleaved within 5 min. Activity decreased approximately 10-fold as the DNA tension was increased from 0.03 to 0.7 pN. Substituting Ca(2+) for Mg(2+) blocked cleavage, permitting measurement of stable loops. At low tension, the initial rates of cleavage and looping were similar (approximately 0.025 s(-1) at 0.1 pN), suggesting that looping is rate limiting. Short loops formed more rapidly than long loops. The optimum size decreased from approximately 250 to 45 basepairs and the average number of loops (in 1 min) from 4.2 to 0.75 as tension was increased from 0.03 to 0.7 pN. No looping was detected at 5 pN. These findings are in qualitative agreement with recent theoretical predictions considering only DNA mechanics, but we observed weaker suppression with tension and smaller loop sizes. Our results suggest that the span and elasticity of the protein complex, nesting of loops, and protein-induced DNA bending and wrapping play an important role.  相似文献   

10.
K Jo  M D Topal 《Nucleic acids research》1996,24(21):4171-4175
Substituting lysine for leucine at position 43 (L43K) transforms NaeI from restriction endonuclease to topoisomerase and makes NaeI hypersensitive to intercalative anticancer drugs. Here we investigated DNA recognition by Nael-L43K. Using DNA competition and gel retardation assays, NaeI-L43K showed reduced affinity for DNA substrate and the ability to bind both single- and double-stranded DNA with a definite preference for the former. Sedimentation studies showed that under native conditions NaeI-L43K, like NaeI, is a dimer. Introduction of mismatched bases into double-stranded DNA significantly increased that DNA's ability to inhibit NaeI-L43K. Wild-type NaeI showed no detectable binding of either single-stranded DNA or mismatched DNA over the concentration range studied. These results demonstrate that the L43K substitution caused a significant change in recognition specificity by NaeI and imply that NaeI-L43K's topoisomerase activity is related to its ability to bind single-stranded and distorted regions in DNA. A mechanism is proposed for the evolution of the NaeI restriction-modification system from a topoisomerase/ligase by a mutation that abolished religation activity and provided a needed change in DNA recognition.  相似文献   

11.
Synthetic oligodeoxyribonucleotides, containing one or two ribonucleotides in the recognition sequence, and RNA--DNA hybrids were tested for their activity in cleavage with BamH1 and Sau3A endonucleases. The replacement of dG with G in the first position of BamH1-site (GGATCC) of one of the chains does not affect the rate of the BamH1 hydrolysis. The similar heteroduplex, containing G residue in the second position, displays a decreased rate of the BamH1 hydrolysis of the modified strand and, to a lesser extent, of the unmodified complementary strand. Oligodeoxyribonucleotides in complex with oligoribonucleotides can be cleaved with the excess of BamH1 and Sau3A, oligoribonucleotides remaining intact.  相似文献   

12.
A single polypeptide chain containing two dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) sequences from Escherichia coli was constructed to determine if a repeat sequence fusion protein could be expressed in an active form. The possibility that intersequence interactions could play a significant role for this enzyme is suggested by the results of Hall and Frieden (1989, Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 86, 3060-3064) who observed a substantial decrease in the yield of active enzyme when folded in the presence of a large C-terminal fragment. The fusion protein [DHFR(Cys152Glu)--Ile--DHFR (Met1Gln)] was efficiently expressed in E. coli cells and has an activity which is twice that of the wild-type enzyme in the standard assay. The Michaelis constants of the fusion protein for the substrate, dihydrofolate and the cofactor, NADPH, are essentially unchanged from those of the wild-type protein. The urea-induced in vitro unfolding reaction of the fusion protein at low concentrations was found to be fully reversible and follow a three state model, suggesting that the two domains unfold independently. At higher protein concentrations the unfolding transition broadened and shifted to a higher urea concentration. Size-exclusion chromatography results are consistent with the formation of aggregates at the higher protein concentration, even in the absence of denaturant.  相似文献   

13.
Type II restriction endonuclease Mva1269I recognizes an asymmetric DNA sequence 5'-GAATGCN / -3'/5'-NG / CATTC-3' and cuts top and bottom DNA strands at positions, indicated by the "/" symbol. Most restriction endonucleases require dimerization to cleave both strands of DNA. We found that Mva1269I is a monomer both in solution and upon binding of cognate DNA. Protein fold-recognition analysis revealed that Mva1269I comprises two "PD-(D/E)XK" domains. The N-terminal domain is related to the 5'-GAATTC-3'-specific restriction endonuclease EcoRI, whereas the C-terminal one resembles the nonspecific nuclease domain of restriction endonuclease FokI. Inactivation of the C-terminal catalytic site transformed Mva1269I into a very active bottom strand-nicking enzyme, whereas mutants in the N-terminal domain nicked the top strand, but only at elevated enzyme concentrations. We found that the cleavage of the bottom strand is a prerequisite for the cleavage of the top strand. We suggest that Mva1269I evolved the ability to recognize and to cleave its asymmetrical target by a fusion of an EcoRI-like domain, which incises the bottom strand within the target, and a FokI-like domain that completes the cleavage within the nonspecific region outside the target sequence. Our results have implications for the molecular evolution of restriction endonucleases, as well as for perspectives of engineering new restriction and nicking enzymes with asymmetric target sites.  相似文献   

14.
We describe the isolation and characterization of a temperature-sensitive mutation within the hsdS gene of the type I restriction and modification system EcoK. This mutation appears to affect the ability of the HsdR subunit to interact with the HsdS subunit when forming an active endonuclease. We discuss the possibility that this mutant, together with another mutation described previously, may define a discontinuous domain, involved in protein-protein interactions, within the HsdS polypeptide.  相似文献   

15.
A new type II restriction endonuclease designated OLI:I has been partially purified from the halophilic bacterium Oceanospirillum linum 4-5D. OLI:I recognizes the interrupted hexanucleotide palindrome 5'-CACNN NNGTG-3' and cleaves it in the center generating blunt-ended DNA fragments.  相似文献   

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17.

Background

Restriction enzymes (REases) are commercial reagents commonly used in recombinant DNA technologies. They are attractive models for studying protein-DNA interactions and valuable targets for protein engineering. They are, however, extremely divergent: the amino acid sequence of a typical REase usually shows no detectable similarities to any other proteins, with rare exceptions of other REases that recognize identical or very similar sequences. From structural analyses and bioinformatics studies it has been learned that some REases belong to at least four unrelated and structurally distinct superfamilies of nucleases, PD-DxK, PLD, HNH, and GIY-YIG. Hence, they are extremely hard targets for structure prediction and homology-based inference of sequence-function relationships and the great majority of REases remain structurally and evolutionarily unclassified.

Results

SfiI is a REase which recognizes the interrupted palindromic sequence 5'GGCCNNNN^NGGCC3' and generates 3 nt long 3' overhangs upon cleavage. SfiI is an archetypal Type IIF enzyme, which functions as a tetramer and cleaves two copies of the recognition site in a concerted manner. Its sequence shows no similarity to other proteins and nothing is known about the localization of its active site or residues important for oligomerization. Using the threading approach for protein fold-recognition, we identified a remote relationship between SfiI and BglI, a dimeric Type IIP restriction enzyme from the PD-DxK superfamily of nucleases, which recognizes the 5'GCCNNNN^NGGC3' sequence and whose structure in complex with the substrate DNA is available. We constructed a homology model of SfiI in complex with its target sequence and used it to predict residues important for dimerization, tetramerization, DNA binding and catalysis.

Conclusions

The bioinformatics analysis suggest that SfiI, a Type IIF enzyme, is more closely related to BglI, an "orthodox" Type IIP restriction enzyme, than to any other REase, including other Type IIF REases with known structures, such as NgoMIV. NgoMIV and BglI belong to two different, very remotely related branches of the PD-DxK superfamily: the α-class (EcoRI-like), and the β-class (EcoRV-like), respectively. Thus, our analysis provides evidence that the ability to tetramerize and cut the two DNA sequences in a concerted manner was developed independently at least two times in the evolution of the PD-DxK superfamily of REases. The model of SfiI will also serve as a convenient platform for further experimental analyses.  相似文献   

18.
DNA methylation-dependent restriction enzymes have many applications in genetic engineering and in the analysis of the epigenetic state of eukaryotic genomes. Nevertheless, high-resolution structures have not yet been reported, and therefore mechanisms of DNA methylation-dependent cleavage are not understood. Here, we present a biochemical analysis and high-resolution DNA co-crystal structure of the N(6)-methyladenine (m6A)-dependent restriction enzyme R.DpnI. Our data show that R.DpnI consists of an N-terminal catalytic PD-(D/E)XK domain and a C-terminal winged helix (wH) domain. Surprisingly, both domains bind DNA in a sequence- and methylation-sensitive manner. The crystal contains R.DpnI with fully methylated target DNA bound to the wH domain, but distant from the catalytic domain. Independent readout of DNA sequence and methylation by the two domains might contribute to R.DpnI specificity or could help the monomeric enzyme to cut the second strand after introducing a nick.  相似文献   

19.
Cleavage of a DNA replication fork leads to fork restoration by recombination repair. In prokaryote cells carrying restriction–modification systems, fork passage reduces genome methylation by the modification enzyme and exposes the chromosome to attack by the restriction enzyme. Various observations have suggested a relationship between the fork and Type I restriction enzymes, which cleave DNA at a distance from a recognition sequence. Here, we demonstrate that a Type I restriction enzyme preparation cleaves a model replication fork at its branch. The enzyme probably tracks along the DNA from an unmethylated recognition site on the daughter DNA and cuts the fork upon encountering the branch point. Our finding suggests that these restriction–modification systems contribute to genome maintenance through cell death and indicates that DNA replication fork cleavage represents a critical point in genome maintenance to choose between the restoration pathway and the destruction pathway.  相似文献   

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