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1.
2.
Despite the fact that its DNA carries six EcoRI cleavage sites, bacteriophage T5 is able to grow on an EcoRI restricting host, suggesting that it specifies a restriction protection system. In the hope of identifying this protection system, mutants of T5 have been isolated which are unable to grow on an EcoRI restricting host. Analysis of the DNA of such mutants shows that they have each acquired two new EcoRI sites per molecule as a consequence of a single EcoRI site (ris) mutation located in the terminally repetitious, first step transfer (FST) region of the genome. The EcoRI sites generated by the ris mutations differ from the natural EcoRI sites in that the latter are situated on the second step transfer (SST) DNA, which suggests that the in vivo sensitivity of ris mutants is a consequence of having an EcoRI site on the FST DNA. This is understandable, if the hypothetical restriction protection genes are also located on the FST DNA. While expression of these genes would protect natural sites on the SST DNA, the ris sites would, on the contrary, enter an environment in which the protection, products had not yet been synthesized.Construction of double and triple ris mutants has allowed the ordering of the ris sites and the construction of an EcoRI restriction map of the FST region. In addition, the ris mutants allow estimation of the size of the terminal repetition of T5 DNA as 5.9 × 106 to 6.0 × 106 daltons. Correlation of the physical map of the FST region with the already established genetic map of this region allows orientation of the pre-early genes on the genetic and physical maps, and approximate localization of two amber mutations on the physical map.  相似文献   

3.
A physical map of the streptococcal macrolides, lincomycin, and streptogramin B (MLS) resistance plasmid pDB101 was constructed using six different restriction endonucleases. Ten recognition sites were found for HindIII, seven for HindII, eight for HaeII, and one each for EcoRI, HpaII, and KpnI. The localization of the restriction cleavage sites was determined by double and triple digestions of the plasmid DNA or sequential digestions of partial cleavage products and isolated restriction fragments, and all sites were aligned with a single EcoRI reference site. Plasmid pDB101 meets all requirements essential for a potential molecular cloning vehicle in streptococci; i.e., single restriction sites, a MLS selection marker, and a multiple plasmid copy number. The vector plasmid described here makes it possible to clone selectively any fragment of DNA cleaved with EcoRI, HpaII, or KpnI, or since the sites are close to each other in map position, any combination of two of these restriction enzymes.  相似文献   

4.
Electron microscopy of negatively stained isolated restriction enzyme EcoRI revealed particle projections with triangular or square outlines, indicating that the enzyme, in its tetrameric state, is tetrahedron-like. The two dimers making up the tetramer appear to be arranged in two planes orthogonal to each other. Complexes formed by EcoRI with the plasmids pBR322 or pGW10 were investigated by electron microscopic spreading techniques. In the presence of Mg2+, EcoRI was bound to the DNA molecules to form pearl necklace-like aggregates. The number of bound EcoRI particles was much higher as the sum of EcoRI-and 5..AATT..3 sites (with exceptions, the 5..AATT..3 sites may function as one type of EcoRI* sites) along the DNAs, indicating unspecific binding. In the absence of Mg2+, EcoRI was bound to the DNA only at the recognition site for EcoRI and the sites where the tetranucleotide sequence 5..AATT..3 was present. A direct correlation of the local concentrations of the bases A and T within the flanking sequences of the binding sites with the frequency of EcoRI to the DNA was observed. Dimers and tetramers of the enzyme was found to bind to the DNA. Tetramers occasionally exhibited two binding sites for DNA as indicated by the observation of DNA loops originating at the sites of bound tetrameric EcoRI particles.Abbreviations BAC Benzyldimethylalkylammoniumchloride - bp base pairs - Kb kilobases - SDS sodium dodecylsulfate Enzymes (EC 3.1.23.13) Restrictionendonuclease EcoRI - (EC 3.1.23.21) Restrictionendonuclease HindIII - (EC 3.1.23.37) Restrictionendonuclease SalGI Dedicated Professor H. G. Schlegel on occasion of this 60th birthday  相似文献   

5.
The P1 restriction endonuclease (EcoP1) prepared from a P1 lysogen of Escherichia coli makes one double-strand break in simian virus (SV40) DNA. In the presence of cofactors S-adenosylmethionine and ATP the enzyme cleaves 70% of the closed circular SV40 DNA molecules once to produce unit-length linear molecules and renders the remaining 30% resistant to further cleavage. No molecules were found by electron microscopy or by gel electrophoresis that were cleaved more than once. It would appear that the double-strand break is made by two nearly simultaneous single-strand breaks, since no circular DNA molecules containing one single-strand break were found as intermediates during the cleavage reaction. The EcoP1 endonuclease-cleaved linear SV40 DNA molecules are not cleaved at a unique site, as shown by the generation of about 65% circular molecules after denaturation and renaturation. These EcoP1 endonuclease-cleaved, renatured circular molecules are resistant to further cleavage by EcoP1 endonuclease.The EcoP1 endonuclease cleavage sites on SV40 DNA were mapped relative to the partial denaturation map and to the EcoRI and HpaII restriction endonuclease cleavage sites. These maps suggest there are a minimum of four unique but widely spaced cleavage sites at 0.09, 0.19, 0.52, and 0.66 SV40 units relative to the EcoRI site. The frequency of cleavage at any particular site differs from that at another site. If S-adenosylmethionine is omitted from the enzyme reaction mix, SV40 DNA is cleaved into several fragments.An average of 4.6 ± 1 methyl groups are transferred to SV40 DNA from S-adenosylmethionine during the course of a normal reaction containing the cofactors. Under conditions which optimize this methylation, 7 ± 1 methyl groups can be transferred to DNA. This methylation protects most of the molecules from further cleavage. The methyl groups were mapped relative to the Hemophilus influenzae restriction endonuclease fragments. The A fragment receives three to four methyl groups and the B and G fragments each receive one to two methyl groups. These fragments correspond to those in which cleavage sites are located.  相似文献   

6.
The non-defective (heavy) virions from a simian virus 40-like virus (DAR virus) isolated from human brain have been serially passaged at high input multi-plicities in primary monkey kidney cells. The 32P-labeled, progeny DAR-viral genomes have been purified and tested for sensitivity to the RI restriction endouclease from Escherichia coli (Eco RI3 restriction nuclease). The parental DAR-viral genomes share many physical properties with “standard” simian virus 40 DNA and are cleaved once by the Eco RI restriction nuclease. After the fourth serial passage, three populations of genomes could be distinguished: Eco RI resistant, Eco RI sensitive (one cleavage site) and Eco RI “supersensitive” (three, symmetrically-located, cleavage sites). The Eco RI cleavage product of the “supersensitive” form is one-third the physical size (10.4 S) of simian virus 40 DNA and reassociates about three times more rapidly than sheared, denatured simian virus 40 DNA. From the fourth to the eighth serial passages, the genomes containing this specific triplication of viral DNA sequences were selected for and became the predominant viral DNA species.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Abstract

A complex consisting of the EcoRI endonuclease site-specifically bound to spin-labeled DNA 26mers was prepared to provide a model system for studying possible conformational changes resulting from protein binding. EPR was used to monitor the mobility of the spin labels that were strategically placed in position 6, 9, or 11 with respect to the dyad axis of the 26mer. These positions are located within the flanking region on either side of the EcoRI hexamer binding site. This allows the monitoring of potential distal structural changes in the DNA helix caused by protein binding. The spectral line shapes indicate that the spin label closest to the EcoRI endonuclease binding site, i.e., in position 6, is most influenced by the binding event. The EPR data are analyzed according to a model that distinguishes between spectral effects due to a change in the hydrodynamic shape of the complex and those resulting from local variations in the spin-label mobility as characterized by a local order parameter S. S reflecting the motional restriction of the spin-labeled base is 0.20 ± 0.01 for all three oligomers as well as for the two complexes with the label in position 9 or 11, while the position 6 labeled complex yields S=0.25. To further evaluate the origin of the slightly larger EPR effect observed with position 6 labeled material, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were used to explore the space accessible to the probes in positions 6, 9, and 11. MD results gave similar nitroxide trajectories for all three labeled 26mers in the absence or presence of EcoRI. Thus, the small position 6 effect is attributed to a structural distortion in the major groove of the DNA at this location possibly corresponding to a bend induced by protein binding. The observation that the spectral changes are small indicates the absence of any significant structural disruption being propagated along the helix as a result of protein binding. Also, the fact that the line shape of the 26mers did not change as expected from hydrodynamic theory in view of the significant increase in molecular volume upon protein binding suggests that there are additional relaxation processes involving the protein and nucleic acid.  相似文献   

9.
10.
EcoRI analysis of bacteriophage P22 DNA packaging.   总被引:20,自引:0,他引:20  
Bacteriophage P22 linear DNA molecules are a set of circularly permuted sequences with ends located in a limited region of the physical map. This mature form of the viral chromosome is cut in headful lengths from a concatemeric precursor during DNA encapsulation. Packaging of P22 DNA begins at a specific site, which we have termed pac, and then proceeds sequentially to cut lengths of DNA slightly longer than one complete set of P22 genes (Tye et al., 1974b). The sites of DNA maturation events have been located on the physical map of EcoRI cleavage sites in P22 DNA. EcoRI digestion products of mature P22 wild-type DNA were compared with EcoRI fragments of two deletion and two insertion mutant DNAs. These mutations decrease or increase the length of the genome, but do not alter the DNA encapsulation mechanism. Thus the position of mature molecular ends relative to EcoRI restriction sites is different in each mutant, and comparison of the digests shows which fragments come from the ends of linear molecules. From the positions of the ends of molecules processed in sequential headfuls, the location of pac and the direction of encapsulation relative to the P22 map were deduced. The pac site lies in EcoRI fragment A, 4.1 × 103 base-pairs from EcoRI cleavage site 1. Sequential packaging of the concatemer is initiated at pac and proceeds in the counterclockwise direction relative to the circular map of P22. One-third of the linears in a population are cut from the concatemer at pac, and most packaging sequences do not extend beyond four headfuls.Fragment D is produced by EcoRI cleavage at a site near the end of a linear chromosome which has been encapsulated starting at pac. The position of the pac site is therefore defined by one end of fragment D. The pac site is not located near genes 12 and 18, the only known site for initiation of P22 DNA replication, but lies among late genes at a position on the physical gene map approximately analogous to the cohesive end site (cos) of bacteriophage λ at which λ DNA is cleaved during encapsulation. Our results suggest that P22 and λ DNA maturation mechanisms have many common properties.  相似文献   

11.
Using 26 restriction endonucleases, a cleavage site survey was undertaken for DNAs of several unrelated Streptomyces phages SH3, SH5, SH10 and SH13. Only EcoRI was found to produce single cleavage in SH3 and SH10 DNA. The complete maps were prepared for the 2, 9 and 11 fragments of SH10 DNA, as generated by EcoRI, KpnI and BglII, respectively. The evidence is presented that SH10 DNA contains cohesive ends. Moreover, a clearplaque mutant of SH10 was shown to contain a deletion of 790 bp in the right part of the genome, including two KpnI sites.  相似文献   

12.
Characterization of small plasmids from Staphylococcus aureus.   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Small molecular weight plasmids from Staphylococcus aureus were characterized with respect to size, restriction enzyme cleavage pattern and transforming capacity. The plasmids pS194 and pC194 which encode streptomycin and chloramphenicol resistance respectively contained 3.0 and 2.0 megadaltons of DNA as determined by zonal rate centrifugation and electron-microscopy. Both plasmids transformed S. aureus with high efficiency. Plasmid pC194 contained only one cleavage site for endonuclease HindIII and pS194 contained single cleavage sites for HindIII and EcoRI. A natural recombinant between these two plasmids, pSC194, shared the high transforming capacity of the parental plasmids and contained one EcoRI site And two HindIII sites. pSC194 DNA also transformed B. subtilis with high efficiency. The recombinant plasmid pSC194 may be used as an EcoRI vector for construction and propagation of hybrid DNA in S. aureus as shown in the following paper (Löfdahl et al., 1978).  相似文献   

13.
Restriction of bacteriophage lambda by Escherichia coli K   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Derivatives of phage lambda, for which the numbers and positions of the recognition sites for endonuclease R. Ecok are known, were used as substrates for the Escherichia coli K restriction system in vivo and in vitro. A single unmodified recognition site was sufficient for a DNA molecule to be bound and broken by the K restriction enzyme. Although discrete fragments of DNA were not produced, the breaks were made preferentially in the proximity of the recognition site. Breakage of a DNA molecule with only one recognition site required a 10 to 40-fold higher concentration of restriction enzyme than breakage of a DNA molecule with two or more recognition sites, but these substrates were all equally effective in a binding assay for the enzyme.The polynucleotide kinase reaction provided no evidence for new 5′-terminal sequences generated by restriction in vitro; the 5′ termini were either refractory to the polynucleotide kinase reaction or had no sequence specificity.  相似文献   

14.
15.
The five EcoRI2 restriction sites in bacteriophage lambda DNA have been mapped at 0.445, 0.543, 0.656, 0.810, and 0.931 fractional lengths from the left end of the DNA molecule. These positions were determined electron-microscopically by single-site cleavage of hydrogen-bonded circular λ DNA molecules and by cleavage of various DNA heteroduplexes between λ DNA and DNA from well defined λ mutants. The DNA lengths of the EcoRI fragments are in agreement with their electrophoretic mobility on agarose gels but are not in agreement with their mobilities on polyacrylamide gels. These positions are different from those previously published by Allet et al. (1973). Partial cleavage of pure λ DNA by addition of small amounts of EcoRI endonuclease does not lead to random cleavage between molecules. Also, the first site cleaved is not randomly distributed among the five sites within a molecule. The site nearest the right end is cleaved first about ten times more frequently than either of the two center sites.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
α-Satellite DNA from African green monkey cells was analysed with restriction nucleases in some detail confirming and complementing our earlier results. With EcoRI and HaeIII (or BsuRI isoschizomer), about 25 and 10%, respectively, of the satellite DNA were cleaved into a series of fragments of the 172 bp repeat length and multiples thereof. To allow studies with fragments of homogeneous sequence unit length, HindIII fragments were covalently joined with the plasmid pBR313. After transformation 19 clones were obtained, containing up to three monomer fragments. Nine of the clones were characterized by digestion with EcoRI. Three of these had cleavage sites for this nuclease in the satellite DNA portion. In the six clones tested with HaeIII no cleavage site was detected in the cloned DNA. The results are discussed in relation to the nucleotide sequence data recently published by Rosenberg et al. (1978) and in the context of random and nonrandom processes in satellite DNA evolution.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
The break in the complementary DNA strand of early G4 replicative form II DNA (RFII) and in the viral DNA strand of late RFII DNA was located using two single cleavage restriction enzymes (EcoRI and PstI) and by limited nick translation of the break using DNA polymerase I and 32P-labelled deoxyribonucleotides followed by digestion with the restriction enzymes HaeIII and HindII. The break in the complementary DNA strand was unique and in HaeIII Z5 close to the EcoRI cleavage site whereas the break in the viral DNA strand was on the other side of the molecule in HaeIII Z2 approxiately 50% away from the EcoRI cleavage site. Distribution of a short 3H pulse in early G4 replicating intermediates that were synthesising both DNA strands at the same time showed that synthesis of the strands started on opposite sides of the molecule and proceeded in opposite convergent directions, suggesting that initiation of synthesis of the two strands was independent and not unified in a single growing fork.  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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