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1.
A genetic system was constructed for the mutagenesis of the EcoRV restriction endonuclease and for the overproduction of mutant proteins. The system was used to make two mutants of EcoRV, with Ala in place of either Asn185 or Asn188. In the crystal structure of the EcoRV-DNA complex, both Asn185 and Asn188 contact the DNA within the EcoRV recognition sequence. But neither mutation affected the ability of the protein to bind to DNA. In the absence of metal ion cofactors, the mutants bound DNA with almost the same affinity as that of the wild-type enzyme. In the presence of Mg2+, both mutants retained the ability to cleave DNA specifically at the EcoRV recognition sequence, but their activities were severely depressed relative to that of the wild-type. In contrast, with Mn2+ as the cofactor, the mutant enzymes cleaved the EcoRV recognition site with activities that were close to that of the wild-type. When bound to DNA at the EcoRV recognition site, the mutant proteins bound Mn2+ ions readily, but they had much lower affinities for Mg2+ ions than the wild-type enzyme. This was the reason for their low activities with Mg2+ as the cofactor. The arrangement of the DNA recognition functions, at one location in the EcoRV restriction enzyme, are therefore responsible for organizing the catalytic functions at a separate location in the protein.  相似文献   

2.
EcoRV restriction endonuclease binds all DNA sequences with equal affinity   总被引:21,自引:0,他引:21  
In the presence of MgCl2, the EcoRV restriction endonuclease cleaves its recognition sequence on DNA at least a million times more readily than any other sequence. In this study, the binding of the EcoRV restriction enzyme to DNA was examined in the absence of Mg2+. With each DNA fragment tested, several DNA-protein complexes were detected by electrophoresis through polyacrylamide. No differences were observed between isogenic DNA molecules that either contained or lacked the EcoRV recognition site. The number of complexes with each fragment varied with the length of the DNA. Three complexes were formed with a DNA molecule of 55 base pairs, corresponding to the DNA bound to 1, 2, or 3 molecules of the protein, while greater than 15 complexes were formed with a DNA of 381 base pairs. A new method was developed to analyze the binding of a protein to multiple sites on DNA. The method showed that the EcoRV enzyme binds to all DNA sequences, including the EcoRV recognition site, with the same equilibrium constant, though two molecules of the protein bind preferentially to adjacent sites on the DNA in a cooperative fashion. All of the complexes with a substrate that contained the EcoRV site dissociated upon addition of competitor DNA, but when the competitor was mixed with MgCl2, a fraction of the substrate was cleaved at the EcoRV site. The fraction cleaved was due mainly to the translocation of the enzyme from nonspecific sites on the DNA to the specific site.  相似文献   

3.
Discrimination between DNA sequences by the EcoRV restriction endonuclease   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
J D Taylor  S E Halford 《Biochemistry》1989,28(15):6198-6207
The EcoRV restriction endonuclease cleaves not only its recognition sequence on DNA, GATATC, but also, at vastly reduced rates, a number of alternative DNA sequences. The plasmid pAT153 contains 12 alternative sites, each of which differs from the recognition sequence by one base pair. The EcoRV nuclease showed a marked preference for one particular site from among these alternatives. This noncognate site was located at the sequence GTTATC, and the mechanism of action of EcoRV at this site was analyzed. The mechanism differed from that at the cognate site in three respects. First, the affinity of the enzyme for the noncognate site was lower than that for the cognate site, but, by itself, this cannot account for the specificity of EcoRV as measured from the values of kcat/Km. Second, the enzyme had a lower affinity for Mg2+ when it was bound to the noncognate site than when it was bound to its cognate site: this appears to be a key factor in limiting the rates of DNA cleavage at alternative sites. Third, the reaction pathway at the noncognate site differed from that at the cognate site. At the former, the EcoRV enzyme cleaved first one strand of the DNA and then the other while at the latter, both strands were cut in one concerted reaction. The difference in reaction pathway allows DNA ligase to proofread the activity of EcoRV by selective repair of single-strand breaks at noncognate sites, as opposed to double-strand breaks at the cognate site. The addition of DNA ligase to reactions with EcoRV made no difference to product formation at the cognate site, but products from reactions at noncognate sites were no longer detected.  相似文献   

4.
We describe two uncommon roles for Zn2+ in enzyme KpnI restriction endonuclease (REase). Among all of the REases studied, KpnI REase is unique in its DNA binding and cleavage characteristics. The enzyme is a poor discriminator of DNA sequences, cleaving DNA in a promiscuous manner in the presence of Mg2+. Unlike most Type II REases, the active site of the enzyme comprises an HNH motif, which can accommodate Mg2+, Mn2+, or Ca2+. Among these metal ions, Mg2+ and Mn2+ induce promiscuous cleavage by the enzyme, whereas Ca2+-bound enzyme exhibits site-specific cleavage. Examination of the sequence of the protein revealed the presence of a zinc finger CCCH motif rarely found in proteins of prokaryotic origin. The zinc binding motif tightly coordinates zinc to provide a rigid structural framework for the enzyme needed for its function. In addition to this structural scaffold, another atom of zinc binds to the active site to induce high fidelity cleavage and suppress the Mg2+- and Mn2+-mediated promiscuous behavior of the enzyme. This is the first demonstration of distinct structural and catalytic roles for zinc in an enzyme, suggesting the distinct origin of KpnI REase.  相似文献   

5.
With the use of the strain-overproducer restriction endonuclease R.EcoRV was isolated and purified to homogeneity. The molecular mass of the enzyme was determined by gel filtration and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to be 25 000 daltons. According to the data of immunological tests R.EcoRV differs in its antigenic characteristics from restriction endonucleases R.EcoRI and R.EcoRII. Dependence of enzyme activity on pH, ionic strength, temperature, presence of divalent cations (Mn2+, Mg2+, Co2+, Zn2+, Ni2+ and Cd2+) and organic solvents (glycerol, dimethylsulfoxide, ethanol) has been studied. It was shown that under conditions of replacement of Mg2+ for Mn2+ or after addition of organic solvents relaxation of R.EcoRV specificity takes place. It was shown also that R.EcoRV is able to digest T-even bacteriophage DNAs with different types and extents of modification. DNA modified by the action of MR.EcoRV system in vivo is susceptible to R.EcoRV in vitro. Under conditions of relaxed specificity noncanonical sites are susceptible to R.EcoRV attack. The fragments resulted may be cloned in canonical pBR322 EcoRV site.  相似文献   

6.
Relaxed specificity of the EcoRV restriction endonuclease   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
S E Halford  B M Lovelady  S A McCallum 《Gene》1986,41(2-3):173-181
The EcoRV restriction endonuclease normally shows a high specificity for its recognition site on DNA, GATATC. In standard reactions, it cleaves DNA at this site several orders of magnitude more readily than at any alternative sequence. But in the presence of dimethyl sulphoxide and at high pH, the EcoRV enzyme cleaves DNA at several sites that differ from its recognition site by one nucleotide. Of the 18 (3 X 6) possible sequences that differ from GATATC by one base, all were cleaved readily except for the following 4 sites: TATATC, CATATC, GATATA and GATATG. However, two of the sites that could be cleaved by EcoRV in the presence of dimethyl sulphoxide, GAGATC and GATCTC, were only cleaved on DNA that lacked dam methylation: both contain the sequence GATC, the recognition site for the dam methylase of Escherichia coli.  相似文献   

7.
The EcoRI restriction endonuclease was found by the filter binding technique to form stable complexes, in the absence of Mg2+, with the DNA from derivatives of bacteriophage lambda that either contain or lack EcoRI recognition sites. The amount of complex formed at different enzyme concentrations followed a hyperbolic equilibrium-binding curve with DNA molecules containing EcoRI recognition sites, but a sigmoidal equilibrium-binding curve was obtained with a DNA molecule lacking EcoRI recognition sites. The EcoRI enzyme displayed the same affinity for individual recognition sites on lambda DNA, even under conditions where it cleaves these sites at different rates. The binding of the enzyme to a DNA molecule lacking EcoRI sites was decreased by Mg2+. These observations indicate that (a) the EcoRI restriction enzyme binds preferentially to its recognition site on DNA, and that different reaction rates at different recognition sites are due to the rate of breakdown of this complex; (b) the enzyme also binds to other DNA sequences, but that two molecules of enzyme, in a different protein conformation, are involved in the formation of the complex at non-specific consequences; (c) the different affinities of the enzyme for the recognition site and for other sequences on DNA, coupled with the different protein conformations, account for the specificity of this enzyme for the cleavage of DNA at this recognition site; (d) the decrease in the affinity of the enzyme for DNA, caused by Mg2+, liberates binding energy from the DNA-protein complex that can be used in the catalytic reaction.  相似文献   

8.
The EcoRV mutant D90A which carries an amino acid substitution in its active center does not cleave DNA. Therefore, it is possible to perform DNA binding experiments with the EcoRV-D90A mutant both in the absence and in the presence of Mg2+. Like wild-type EcoRV [Taylor et al. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 8743-8753], it does not show a pronounced specificity for binding to its recognition site in the absence of Mg2+ as judged by the appearance of multiple shifted bands in an electrophoretic mobility shift assay with a 377-bp DNA fragment carrying a single EcoRV recognition sequence. In the presence of Mg2+, however, only one band corresponding to a 1:1 complex appears even with a high excess of protein over DNA. This complex most likely is the specific one, because its formation is suppressed much more effectively by a 13-bp oligodeoxynucleotide with an EcoRV site than by a corresponding oligodeoxynucleotide without an EcoRV site. The preferential interaction of the EcoRV-D90A mutant with specific DNA in the presence of Mg2+ was also demonstrated directly: a 20-bp oligodeoxynucleotide with an EcoRV site is bound with KAss = 4 x 10(8) M-1, while a corresponding oligodeoxynucleotide without an EcoRV site is bound with KAss less than or equal to 1 x 10(5) M-1. From these data it appears that Mg2+ confers DNA binding specificity to this mutant by lowering the affinity to nonspecific sites and raising the affinity to specific sites as compared to binding in the absence of Mg2+. It is concluded that this is also true for wild-type EcoRV.  相似文献   

9.
Modes of DNA cleavage by the EcoRV restriction endonuclease   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
S E Halford  A J Goodall 《Biochemistry》1988,27(5):1771-1777
The mechanism of action of the EcoRV restriction endonuclease at its single recognition site on the plasmid pAT153 was analyzed by kinetic methods. In reactions at pH 7.5, close to the optimum for this enzyme, both strands of the DNA were cut in a single concerted reaction: DNA cut in only one strand of the duplex was neither liberated from the enzyme during the catalytic turnover nor accumulated as a steady-state intermediate. In contrast, reactions at pH 6.0 involved the sequential cutting of the two strands of the DNA. Under these conditions, DNA cut in a single strand was an obligatory intermediate in the reaction pathway and a fraction of the nicked DNA dissociated from the enzyme during the turnover. The different reaction profiles are shown to be consistent with a single mechanism in which the kinetic activity of each subunit of the dimeric protein is governed by its affinity for Mg2+ ions. At pH 7.5, Mg2+ is bound to both subunits of the dimer for virtually the complete period of the catalytic turnover, while at pH 6.0 Mg2+ is bound transiently to one subunit at a time. The kinetics of the EcoRV nuclease were unaffected by DNA supercoiling.  相似文献   

10.
The SfiI endonuclease differs from other type II restriction enzymes by cleaving DNA concertedly at two copies of its recognition site, its optimal activity being with two sites on the same DNA molecule. The nature of this communication event between distant DNA sites was analysed on plasmids with recognition sites for SfiI interspersed with recombination sites for resolvase. These were converted by resolvase to catenanes carrying one SfiI site on each ring. The catenanes were cleaved by SfiI almost as readily as a single ring with two sites, in contrast to the slow reactions on DNA rings with one SfiI site. Interactions between SfiI sites on the same DNA therefore cannot follow the DNA contour and, instead, must stem from their physical proximity. In buffer lacking Mg2+, where SfiI is inactive while resolvase is active, the addition of SfiI to a plasmid with target sites for both proteins blocked recombination by resolvase, due to the restriction enzyme bridging its sites and thus isolating the sites for resolvase into separate loops. The extent of DNA looping by SfiI matched its extent of DNA cleavage in the presence of Mg2+.  相似文献   

11.
The EcoRV restriction/modification system consists of two enzymes that recognize the DNA sequence GATATC. The EcoRV restriction endonuclease cleaves DNA at this site, but the DNA of Escherichia coli carrying the EcoRV system is protected from this reaction by the EcoRV methyltransferase. However, in vitro, the EcoRV nuclease also cleaves DNA at most sites that differ from the recognition sequence by one base pair. Though the reaction of the nuclease at these sites is much slower than that at the cognate site, it still appears to be fast enough to cleave the chromosome of the cell into many fragments. The possibility that the EcoRV methyltransferase also protects the noncognate sites on the chromosome was examined. The modification enzyme methylated alternate sites in vivo, but these were not the same as the alternate sites for the nuclease. The excess methylation was found at GATC sequences, which are also the targets for the dam methyltransferase of E. coli, a protein that is homologous to the EcoRV methyltransferase. Methylation at these sites gave virtually no protection against the EcoRV nuclease: even when the EcoRV methyltransferase had been overproduced, the cellular DNA remained sensitive to the EcoRV nuclease at its noncognate sites. The viability of E. coli carrying the EcoRV restriction/modification system was found instead to depend on the activity of DNA ligase. Ligase appears to proofread the EcoRV R/M system in vivo: DNA, cut initially in one strand at a noncognate site for the nuclease, is presumably repaired by ligase before the scission of the second strand.  相似文献   

12.
K Kato  M Goto  H Fukuda 《Life sciences》1983,32(8):879-887
When investigating the effects of divalent cations (Mg2+, Ca2+, Sr2+, Ba2+, Mn2+ and Ni2+) on 3H-baclofen binding to rat cerebellar synaptic membranes, we found that the specific binding of 3H-baclofen was not only dependent on divalent cations, but was increased dose-dependently in the presence of these cations. The effects were in the following order of potency: Mn2+ congruent to Ni2+ greater than Mg2+ greater than Ca2+ greater than Sr2+ greater than Ba2+. Scatchard analysis of the binding data revealed a single component of the binding sites in the presence of 2.5 mM MgCl2, 2.5 mM CaCl2 or 0.3 mM MnCl2 whereas two components appeared in the presence of 2.5 mM MnCl2 or 1 mM NiCl2. In the former, divalent cations altered the apparent affinity (Kd) without affecting density of the binding sites (Bmax). In the latter, the high-affinity sites showed a higher affinity and lower density of the binding sites than did the single component of the former. As the maximal effects of four cations (Mg2+, Ca2+, Mn2+ and Ni2+) were not additive, there are probably common sites of action of these divalent cations. Among the ligands for GABAB sites, the affinity for (-), (+) and (+/-) baclofen, GABA and beta-phenyl GABA increased 2-6 fold in the presence of 2.5 mM MnCl2, in comparison with that in HEPES-buffered Krebs solution (containing 2.5 mM CaCl2 and 1.2 mM MgSO4), whereas that for muscimol was decreased to one-fifth. Thus, the affinity of GABAB sites for its ligands is probably regulated by divalent cations, through common sites of action.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
The endogenous endonuclease activity of chromatin in isolated rat liver nuclei in the presence of Mn2+, Mg2+ and Ca2+ + Mg2+ was studied. The existence of a Mn2+-dependent endonuclease activity not coupled with the Ca2+, Mg2+-dependent endonuclease was demonstrated, which was weaker than the former one in isolated cell nuclei but higher than in the preparation of Ca2+, Mg2+-dependent nuclease obtained by gel filtration through Toyopearl HW 60F. The Mn2+-dependent splitting of chromatin predominantly occurs at linker DNA of distal parts of chromatin loops. A split-off of purified DNA was more universal than in the presence of Ca2+, Mg2+-dependent endonuclease; the hydrolysis rate of native and denaturated DNA appeared to be the same.  相似文献   

15.
To characterise the pH dependence of phosphodiester hydrolysis by the EcoRV endonuclease in the presence of Mn2+, single turnover reactions on a 12 bp DNA substrate were examined by stopped-flow and quench-flow methods between pH 6.0 and 8.5. At each pH value, the apparent rate constants for phosphodiester hydrolysis increased hyperbolically with the concentration of MnCl2, thus allowing values to be determined for the intrinsic rate constant at saturation with Mn2+ and the equilibrium dissociation constant for Mn2+. The equilibrium constants showed no systematic variation across the pH range tested, while the rate constants increased steeply with increasing pH up to an asymptote above pH 7.5. At low pH conditions, the gradient of a plot of log (rate constant) against pH approached a value of 2. DNA cleavage by EcoRV thus requires the de-protonation of two acidic groups. To determine whether aspartate 36 is one of the groups, mutants of EcoRV were made with other amino acid residues at position 36. Glutamate caused a partial loss of activity, while all other replacements gave near-zero activities. In contrast to wild-type EcoRV, the mutant with glutamate required the de-protonation of only one acidic group for DNA cleavage. A mechanism for EcoRV is proposed in which the water molecule that hydrolyses the phosphodiester bond is de-protonated by two Bronsted bases, probably the ionised forms of aspartate 36 and glutamate 45.  相似文献   

16.
A mitochondrial endonuclease from Drosophila melanogaster embryos was purified to near homogeneity by successive fractionation with DEAE-cellulose and heparin--avidgel-F, followed by FPLC chromatography on mono S, Superose 12 and a second mono S column. This enzyme digests double-stranded DNA more efficiently than heat-denatured DNA. The endonuclease activity has a molecular mass of 44 kDa, as determined under native conditions using a gel-filtration Superose 12 column. The prominent peptide detected by SDS/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis likewise has a molecular mass of 44 kDa, suggesting a monomeric protein. The enzyme has an absolute requirement for divalent cations, preferring Mg2+ over Mn2+. No activity could be detected when these cations were replaced by Ca2+ or Zn2+. The pH optimum for this enzyme activity is 6.5-7.4 and its isoelectric point is 4.9. Both single-strand and double-strand breaks are introduced simultaneously into a supercoiled substrate in the presence of MgCl2 or MnCl2. Endonuclease-treated DNA serves as a substrate for DNA polymerase I from Escherichia coli, suggesting that 3'-OH termini are generated during cleavage. The enzyme is free from any detectable DNA exonuclease activity but not from RNase activity. Partial inhibition by antibodies raised against mitochondrial endonucleases derived from bovine heart and Saccharomyces cerevisiae have revealed a potential structural homology between these nucleases.  相似文献   

17.
W Cao 《Biochemistry》1999,38(25):8080-8087
Restriction endonucleases achieve sequence-specific recognition and strand cleavage through the interplay of base, phosphate backbone, and metal cofactor interactions. In this study, we investigate the binding kinetics of TaqI endonuclease using the wild-type enzyme and a binding proficient, catalysis deficient mutant TaqI-D137A both in the absence of a metal cofactor and in the presence of Mg2+ or Ca2+. As demonstrated by gel mobility shift analyses, TaqI endonuclease requires a metal cofactor for achieving high-affinity specific binding to its cognate sequence, TCGA. In the absence of a metal cofactor, the enzyme binds all DNA sequences (TaqI cognate site, star site, and nonspecific site) with essentially equal affinity, thereby exhibiting little discrimination. The dissociation constant of the cognate sequence in the presence of Mg2+ at 60 degrees C is 0. 26 nM, a value comparable to our previously reported Km of 0.5 nM measured under steady-state conditions. The TaqI-TCGA-Mg2+ complex is stable, with a half-life of 21 min at 60 degrees C. The boundary of the protein-DNA interface is approximated to be about 18 bp as determined by DNase I footprinting. Data from this study support the notion that a metal cofactor plays a critical role for achieving sequence-specific discrimination in a subset of nucleases, including TaqI, EcoRV, and others.  相似文献   

18.
Multiple equilibrium equations were solved to separate the individual effects of ionic divalent metals, free nucleotides and their chelated species on insulin receptor tyrosine kinase (IRTK). Basal IRTK is activated by divalent metal cations when present in excess of that required for substrate formation, indicating the presence of a divalent cation-dependent regulatory site on the kinase. The activatory order for basal activity was Mn2+ greater than Co2+ greater than Mg2+ and Ca2+ = 0. The insulin-dependent activation of IRTK was minimal in the absence of excess free divalent metal, even when the concentration of MnATP or MgATP substrate present exceeded the apparent Km of the kinase. The activatory order for insulin-dependent activation of IRTK changed to Mg2+ greater than Mn2+ and Co2+ = 0. The titration of the MnCl2 saturation response at several concentrations of MgCl2 revealed that the insulin-dependent response of IRTK increases as a function of increasing MgCl2, while basal activity was unaffected. This enhancement of the responsiveness to insulin in the presence of both cations was not due to differing affinities of the kinase for substrate, as evidenced by nearly identical apparent Km values for MnATP and MgATP. The Mg2+-dependent increase in the response of the kinase to insulin may be due to Mg2+ inducing a stronger coupling between receptor and kinase than that observed with Mn2+ alone. The plotting of the effect of several concentrations of free divalent metals on substrate saturation curves revealed that an increase in either of the reactants increased the affinity of the insulin-activated kinase for the other respective reactant. Accordingly, free divalent metal and metal-ATP substrate interact with IRTK in a mutually inclusive manner. CaCl2 saturation curves in the presence of constant MnCl2 and increasing MgCl2 showed that the affinity of IRTK for Ca2+ decreases and the affinity for CaATP increased with increasing Mg2+. Our data suggests that IRTK contains three sites for interaction with divalent metal cations: a MeATP (active) site, a regulatory site, and a metal-dependent site acting to couple the receptor with the kinase.  相似文献   

19.
Type II restriction enzymes generally recognize continuous sequences of 4-8 consecutive base pairs on DNA, but some recognize discontinuous sites where the specified sequence is interrupted by a defined length of nonspecific DNA. To date, a mechanism has been established for only one type II endonuclease with a discontinuous site, SfiI at GGCCNNNNNGGCC (where N is any base). In contrast to orthodox enzymes such as EcoRV, dimeric proteins that act at a single site, SfiI is a tetramer that interacts with two sites before cleaving DNA. BglI has a similar recognition sequence (GCCNNNNNGGC) to SfiI but a crystal structure like EcoRV. BglI and several other endonucleases with discontinuous sites were examined to see if they need two sites for their DNA cleavage reactions. The enzymes included some with sites containing lengthy segments of nonspecific DNA, such as XcmI (CCANNNNNNNNNTGG). In all cases, they acted at individual sites. Elongated recognition sites do not necessitate unusual reaction mechanisms. Other experiments on BglI showed that it bound to and cleaved DNA in the same manner as EcoRV, thus further delineating a distinct group of restriction enzymes with similar structures and a common reaction mechanism.  相似文献   

20.
Purification and characterization of the FokI restriction endonuclease   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The restriction endonuclease FokI from Flavobacterium okeanokoites was purified to homogeneity. Based on gel filtration, sedimentation and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, the following properties of the enzyme were determined: FokI exists in one active monomeric form, and has an Mr of 64-65.4 x 10(3).FokI is a strongly basic protein with an isoelectric point of 9.4. The enzyme exhibits restriction activity in the pH range 5.0 to 10.5 (maximum level at pH 7.0-8.5) and its divalent cation requirement is satisfied not only by Mg2+, but also by Co2+, Mn2+, Ni2+, Cd2+, Zn2+ and Fe2+.  相似文献   

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