首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The repair of some types of DNA double-strand breaks is thought to proceed through DNA flap structure intermediates. A DNA flap is a bifurcated structure composed of double-stranded DNA and a displaced single-strand. To identify DNA flap cleaving activities in mammalian nuclear extracts, we created an assay utilizing a synthetic DNA flap substrate. This assay has allowed the first purification of a mammalian DNA structure-specific nuclease. The enzyme described here, flap endonuclease-1 (FEN-1), cleaves DNA flap strands that terminate with a 5' single-stranded end. As expected for an enzyme which functions in double-strand break repair flap resolution, FEN-1 cleavage is flap strand-specific and independent of flap strand length. Furthermore, efficient flap cleavage requires the presence of the entire flap structure. Substrates missing one strand are not cleaved by FEN-1. Other branch structures, including Holliday junctions, are also not cleaved by FEN-1. In addition to endonuclease activity, FEN-1 has a 5'-3' exonuclease activity which is specific for double-stranded DNA. The endo- and exonuclease activities of FEN-1 are discussed in the context of DNA replication, recombination and repair.  相似文献   

2.
Flap endonuclease-1 (FEN-1) is a structure-specific nuclease best known for its involvement in RNA primer removal and long-patch base excision repair. This enzyme is known to possess 5′-flap endo- (FEN) and 5′–3′ exo- (EXO) nuclease activities. Recently, FEN-1 has been reported to also possess a gap endonuclease (GEN) activity, which is possibly involved in apoptotic DNA fragmentation and the resolution of stalled DNA replication forks. In the current study, we compare the kinetics of these activities to shed light on the aspects of DNA structure and FEN-1 DNA-binding elements that affect substrate cleavage. By using DNA binding deficient mutants of FEN-1, we determine that the GEN activity is analogous to FEN activity in that the single-stranded DNA region of DNA substrates interacts with the clamp region of FEN-1. In addition, we show that the C-terminal extension of human FEN-1 likely interacts with the downstream duplex portion of all substrates. Taken together, a substrate-binding model that explains how FEN-1, which has a single active center, can have seemingly different activities is proposed. Furthermore, based on the evidence that GEN activity in complex with WRN protein cleaves hairpin and internal loop substrates, we suggest that the GEN activity may prevent repeat expansions and duplication mutations.  相似文献   

3.
The interaction between flap endonuclease 1 (FEN-1) and proliferation cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) is critical for faithful and efficient Okazaki fragment maturation. In a living cell, this interaction is probably important for PCNA to load FEN-1 to the replication fork, to coordinate the sequential functions of FEN-1 and other enzymes, and to stimulate its enzyme activity. The FEN-1/PCNA interaction is mediated by the motif (337)QGRLDDFFK(345) of FEN-1, such that an F343AF344A (FFAA) mutant cannot bind to PCNA but retains its nuclease activities. To determine the physiological roles of the FEN-1/PCNA interaction in a mammalian system, we knocked the FFAA Fen1 mutation into the Fen1 gene locus of mice. FFAA/FFAA mouse embryo fibroblasts underwent DNA replication and division at a slower pace, and FFAA/FFAA mutant embryos displayed significant defects in growth and development, particularly in the lung and blood systems. All newborn FFAA mutant pups died at birth, likely due to pulmonary hypoplasia and pancytopenia. Collectively, our data demonstrate the importance of the FEN-1/PCNA complex in DNA replication and in the embryonic development of mice.  相似文献   

4.
Flap endonuclease-1 (FEN-1) is a critical enzyme for DNA replication and repair. Intensive studies have been carried out on its structure-specific nuclease activities and biological functions in yeast cells. However, its specific interactions with DNA substrates as an initial step of catalysis are not defined. An understanding of the ability of FEN-1 to recognize and bind a flap DNA substrate is critical for the elucidation of its molecular mechanism and for the explanation of possible pathological consequences resulting from its failure to bind DNA. Using human FEN-1 in this study, we identified two positively charged amino acid residues, Arg-47 and Arg-70 in human FEN-1, as candidates responsible for substrate binding. Mutation of the Arg-70 significantly reduced flap endonuclease activity and eliminated exonuclease activity. Mutation or protonation of Arg-47 shifted cleavage sites with flap substrate and significantly reduced the exonuclease activity. We revealed that these alterations are due to the defects in DNA-protein interactions. Although the effect of the single Arg-47 mutation on binding activities is not as severe as R70A, its double mutation with Asp-181 had a synergistic effect. Furthermore the possible interaction sites of these positively charged residues with DNA substrates were discussed based on FEN-1 cleavage patterns using different substrates. Finally data were provided to indicate that the observed negative effects of a high concentration of Mg(2+) on enzymatic activity are probably due to the competition between the arginine residues and metal ions with DNA substrate since mutants were found to be less tolerant.  相似文献   

5.
X Wu  J Li  X Li  C L Hsieh  P M Burgers    M R Lieber 《Nucleic acids research》1996,24(11):2036-2043
In eukaryotic cells, a 5' flap DNA endonuclease activity and a ds DNA 5'-exonuclease activity exist within a single enzyme called FEN-1 [flap endo-nuclease and 5(five)'-exo-nuclease]. This 42 kDa endo-/exonuclease, FEN-1, is highly homologous to human XP-G, Saccharomyces cerevisiae RAD2 and S.cerevisiae RTH1. These structure-specific nucleases recognize and cleave a branched DNA structure called a DNA flap, and its derivative called a pseudo Y-structure. FEN-1 is essential for lagging strand DNA synthesis in Okazaki fragment joining. FEN-1 also appears to be important in mismatch repair. Here we find that human PCNA, the processivity factor for eukaryotic polymerases, physically associates with human FEN-1 and stimulates its endonucleolytic activity at branched DNA structures and its exonucleolytic activity at nick and gap structures. Structural requirements for FEN-1 and PCNA loading provide an interesting picture of this stimulation. PCNA loads on to substrates at double-stranded DNA ends. In contrast, FEN-1 requires a free single-stranded 5' terminus and appears to load by tracking along the single-stranded DNA branch. These physical constraints define the range of DNA replication, recombination and repair processes in which this family of structure-specific nucleases participate. A model explaining the exonucleolytic activity of FEN-1 in terms of its endonucleolytic activity is proposed based on these observations.  相似文献   

6.
There is much evidence to indicate that FEN-1 efficiently cleaves single-stranded DNA flaps but is unable to process double-stranded flaps or flaps adopting secondary structures. However, the absence of Fen1 in yeast results in a significant increase in trinucleotide repeat (TNR) expansion. There are then two possibilities. One is that TNRs do not always form stable secondary structures or that FEN-1 has an alternative approach to resolve the secondary structures. In the present study, we test the hypothesis that concerted action of exonuclease and gap-dependent endonuclease activities of FEN-1 play a role in the resolution of secondary structures formed by (CTG)n and (GAA)n repeats. Employing a yeast FEN-1 mutant, E176A, which is deficient in exonuclease (EXO) and gap endonuclease (GEN) activities but retains almost all of its flap endonuclease (FEN) activity, we show severe defects in the cleavage of various TNR intermediate substrates. Precise knock-in of this point mutation causes an increase in both the expansion and fragility of a (CTG)n tract in vivo. Taken together, our biochemical and genetic analyses suggest that although FEN activity is important for single-stranded flap processing, EXO and GEN activities may contribute to the resolution of structured flaps. A model is presented to explain how the concerted action of EXO and GEN activities may contribute to resolving structured flaps, thereby preventing their expansion in the genome.  相似文献   

7.
Flap endonuclease 1 (FEN-1) is a 5'-3' flap exo-/endonuclease that plays an important role in Okazaki fragment maturation, nonhomologous end joining of double-stranded DNA breaks, and long patch base excision repair. Here, we demonstrate that the wild type FEN-1 binds tightly to chromatin in conjunction with proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) recruitment after MMS treatment, and the nuclease-defective FEN-1 increased the sensitivity of the cells to methylmethane sulfonate (MMS) and to UV light but not to ionizing radiation. In contrast, the cells expressing the nuclease-defective and PCNA binding-defective double mutant FEN-1 exhibited sensitivities similar to those in the cells expressing the wild type FEN-1. MMS treatment caused a prolonged delay of S phase progression and impairment in colony-forming activity of cells expressing nuclease-defective FEN-1. A comet assay demonstrated that DNA repair after MMS or UV treatment was impaired in the cells expressing nuclease-deficient FEN-1 but not in the cells with double-mutated FEN-1. Taken together, these findings suggest that FEN-1 plays an essential role in the DNA repair processes in mammalian cells and that this activity of FEN-1 is PCNA-dependent.  相似文献   

8.
Restarting stalled replication forks partly depends on the break-induced recombination pathway, in which a DNA double-stranded break (DSB) is created on the stalled replication fork to initiate the downstream recombination cascades. Single-stranded DNA gaps accumulating on stalled replication forks are potential targets for endonucleases to generate DSBs. However, it is unclear how this process is executed and which nucleases are involved in eukaryotic cells. Here, we identify a novel gap endonuclease (GEN) activity of human flap endonuclease 1 (FEN-1), critical in resolving stalled replication fork. In response to replication arrest, FEN-1 interacts specifically with Werner syndrome protein for efficient fork cleavage. Replication protein A facilitates FEN-1 interaction with DNA bubble structures. Human FEN-1, but not the GEN-deficient mutant, E178A, was shown to rescue the defect in resistance to UV and camptothecin in a yeast FEN-1 null mutant.  相似文献   

9.
Exonuclease 1 (EXO-1), a member of the RAD2 family of nucleases, has recently been proposed to function in the genetic pathways of DNA recombination, repair, and replication which are important for genome integrity. Although the role of EXO-1 is not well understood, its 5' to 3'-exonuclease and flap endonuclease activities may cleave intermediates that arise during DNA metabolism. In this study, we provide evidence that the Werner syndrome protein (WRN) physically interacts with human EXO-1 and dramatically stimulates both the exonucleolytic and endonucleolytic incision functions of EXO-1. The functional interaction between WRN and EXO-1 is mediated by a protein domain of WRN which interacts with flap endonuclease 1 (FEN-1). Thus, the genomic instability observed in WRN-/- cells may be at least partially attributed to the lack of interactions between the WRN protein and human nucleases including EXO-1.  相似文献   

10.
The mitochondrial genome is highly susceptible to damage by reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated endogenously as a byproduct of respiration. ROS-induced DNA lesions, including oxidized bases, abasic (AP) sites, and oxidized AP sites, cause DNA strand breaks and are repaired via the base excision repair (BER) pathway in both the nucleus and mitochondria. Repair of damaged bases and AP sites involving 1-nucleotide incorporation, named single nucleotide (SN)-BER, was observed with mitochondrial and nuclear extracts. During SN-BER, the 5'-phosphodeoxyribose (dRP) moiety, generated by AP-endonuclease (APE1), is removed by the lyase activity of DNA polymerase gamma (pol gamma) and polymerase beta in the mitochondria and nucleus, respectively. However, the repair of oxidized deoxyribose fragments at the 5' terminus after strand break would require 5'-exo/endonuclease activity that is provided by the flap endonuclease (FEN-1) in the nucleus, resulting in multinucleotide repair patch (long patch (LP)-BER). Here we show the presence of a 5'-exo/endonuclease in the mitochondrial extracts of mouse and human cells that is involved in the repair of a lyase-resistant AP site analog via multinucleotide incorporation, upstream and downstream to the lesion site. We conclude that LP-BER also occurs in the mitochondria requiring the 5'-exo/endonuclease and pol gamma with 3'-exonuclease activity. Although a FEN-1 antibody cross-reacting species was detected in the mitochondria, it was absent in the LP-BER-proficient APE1 immunocomplex isolated from the mitochondrial extract that contains APE1, pol gamma, and DNA ligase 3. The LP-BER activity was marginally affected in FEN-1-depleted mitochondrial extracts, further supporting the involvement of an unidentified 5'-exo/endonuclease in mitochondrial LP-BER.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Parrish JZ  Yang C  Shen B  Xue D 《The EMBO journal》2003,22(13):3451-3460
Oligonucleosomal fragmentation of chromosomes in dying cells is a hallmark of apoptosis. Little is known about how it is executed or what cellular components are involved. We show that crn-1, a Caenorhabditis elegans homologue of human flap endonuclease-1 (FEN-1) that is normally involved in DNA replication and repair, is also important for apoptosis. Reduction of crn-1 activity by RNA interference resulted in cell death phenotypes similar to those displayed by a mutant lacking the mitochondrial endonuclease CPS-6/endonuclease G. CRN-1 localizes to nuclei and can associate and cooperate with CPS-6 to promote stepwise DNA fragmentation, utilizing the endonuclease activity of CPS-6 and both the 5'-3' exonuclease activity and a previously uncharacterized gap-dependent endonuclease activity of CRN-1. Our results suggest that CRN-1/FEN-1 may play a critical role in switching the state of cells from DNA replication/repair to DNA degradation during apoptosis.  相似文献   

13.
A protein with structure-specific endonuclease activity has been purified to near homogeneity from cauliflower ( Brassica oleracea var. botrytis) inflorescence through five successive column chromatographies. The protein is a single polypeptide with a molecular mass of 40 kDa. Using three different branched DNA structures (flap, pseudo-Y and stem-loop) we found that the enzyme, a cauliflower structure-specific endonuclease, cleaved the single-stranded tail in the 5'-flap and 5'-pseudo-Y structures, whereas it could not incise the 3'-flap and 3'-pseudo-Y structures. The incision points occur around the single strand-duplex junction in these DNA substrates and the enzyme leaves 5'-PO4 and 3'-OH termini on DNA. The protein also endonucleolytically cleaves on the 3'-side of the single-stranded region at the junction of unpaired and duplex DNA in the stem-loop structure. The structure-specific endonuclease activity is stimulated by Mg2+ and by Mn2+, but not by Ca2+. Like mammalian FEN-1, the protein has weak 5'-->3' double-stranded DNA-specific exonuclease activity. These results indicate that the cauliflower protein is a plant structure-specific endonuclease like mammalian FEN-1 or may be the plant alternative.  相似文献   

14.
Kim CY  Park MS  Dyer RB 《Biochemistry》2001,40(10):3208-3214
Human flap endonuclease-1 (FEN-1) is a member of the structure-specific endonuclease family and is a key enzyme in DNA replication and repair. FEN-1 recognizes the 5'-flap DNA structure and cleaves it, a specialized endonuclease function essential for the processing of Okazaki fragments during DNA replication and for the repair of 5'-end single-stranded tails from nicked double-stranded DNA substrates. Magnesium is a cofactor required for nuclease activity. We have used Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy to better understand how Mg2+ and flap DNA interact with human FEN-1. FTIR spectroscopy provides three fundamentally new insights into the structural changes induced by the interaction of FEN-1 with substrate DNA and Mg2+. First, FTIR difference spectra in the amide I vibrational band (1600-1700 cm(-1)) reveal a change in the secondary structure of FEN-1 induced by substrate DNA binding. Quantitative analysis of the FTIR spectra indicates a 4% increase in helicity upon DNA binding or about 14 residues converted from disordered to helical conformations. The observation that the residues are disordered without DNA strongly implicates the flexible loop region. The conversion to helix also suggests a mechanism for locking the flexible loop region around the bound DNA. This is the first direct experimental evidence for a binding mechanism that involves a secondary structural change of the protein. Second, in contrast with DNA binding, no change is observed in the secondary structure of FEN-1 upon Mg2+ binding to the wild type or to the noncleaving D181A mutant. Third, the FTIR results provide direct evidence (via the carboxylate ligand band at 1535 cm(-1)) that not only is D181 a ligand to Mg2+ in the human enzyme but Mg2+ binding does not occur in the D181A mutant which lacks this ligand.  相似文献   

15.
The S phase-specific activation of NEIL1 and not of the other DNA glycosylases responsible for repairing oxidatively damaged bases in mammalian genomes and the activation of NEIL1 by proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) suggested preferential action by NEIL1 in oxidized base repair during DNA replication. Here we show that NEIL1 interacts with flap endonuclease 1 (FEN-1), an essential component of the DNA replication. FEN-1 is present in the NEIL1 immunocomplex isolated from human cell extracts, and the two proteins colocalize in the nucleus. FEN-1 stimulates the activity of NEIL1 in vitro in excising 5-hydroxyuracil from duplex, bubble, forked, and single-stranded DNA substrates by up to 5-fold. The disordered region near the C terminus of NEIL1, which is dispensable for activity, is necessary and sufficient for high affinity binding to FEN-1 (K(D) approximately = 0.2 microm). The interacting interface of FEN-1 is localized in its disordered C-terminal region uniquely present in mammalian orthologs. Fine structure mapping identified several Lys and Arg residues in this region that form salt bridges with Asp and Glu residues in NEIL1. NEIL1 was previously shown to initiate single nucleotide excision repair, which does not require FEN-1 or PCNA. The present study shows that NEIL1 could also participate in strand displacement repair synthesis (long patch repair (LP-BER)) mediated by FEN-1 and stimulated by PCNA. Interaction between NEIL1 and FEN-1 is essential for efficient NEIL1-initiated LP-BER. These studies strongly implicate NEIL1 in a distinct subpathway of LP-BER in replicating genomes.  相似文献   

16.
Stimulation of flap endonuclease-1 by the Bloom's syndrome protein   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Bloom's syndrome (BS) is a rare autosomal recessive genetic disorder associated with genomic instability and an elevated risk of cancer. Cellular features of BS include an accumulation of abnormal replication intermediates and increased sister chromatid exchange. Although it has been suggested that the underlying defect responsible for hyper-recombination in BS cells is a temporal delay in the maturation of DNA replication intermediates, the precise role of the BS gene product, BLM, in DNA metabolism remains elusive. We report here a novel interaction of the BLM protein with the human 5'-flap endonuclease/5'-3' exonuclease (FEN-1), a genome stability factor involved in Okazaki fragment processing and DNA repair. BLM protein stimulates both the endonucleolytic and exonucleolytic cleavage activity of FEN-1 and this functional interaction is independent of BLM catalytic activity. BLM and FEN-1 are associated with each other in human nuclei as shown by their reciprocal co-immunoprecipitation from HeLa nuclear extracts. The BLM-FEN-1 physical interaction is mediated through a region of the BLM C-terminal domain that shares homology with the FEN-1 interaction domain of the Werner syndrome protein, a RecQ helicase family member homologous to BLM. This study provides the first evidence for a direct interaction of BLM with a human nucleolytic enzyme. We suggest that functional interactions between RecQ helicases and Rad2 family nucleases serve to process DNA substrates that are intermediates in DNA replication and repair.  相似文献   

17.
The nuclease activity of FEN-1 is essential for both DNA replication and repair. Intermediate DNA products formed during these processes possess a variety of structures and termini. We have previously demonstrated that the 5′→3′ exonuclease activity of the Schizosaccharomyces pombe FEN-1 protein Rad2p requires a 5′-phosphoryl moiety to efficiently degrade a nick-containing substrate in a reconstituted alternative excision repair system. Here we report the effect of different 5′-terminal moieties of a variety of DNA substrates on Rad2p activity. We also show that Rad2p possesses a 5′→3′ single-stranded exonuclease activity, similar to Saccharomyces cerevisiae Rad27p and phage T5 5′→3′ exonuclease (also a FEN-1 homolog). FEN-1 nucleases have been associated with the base excision repair pathway, specifically processing cleaved abasic sites. Because several enzymes cleave abasic sites through different mechanisms resulting in different 5′-termini, we investigated the ability of Rad2p to process several different types of cleaved abasic sites. With varying efficiency, Rad2p degrades the products of an abasic site cleaved by Escherichia coli endonuclease III and endonuclease IV (prototype AP endonucleases) and S.pombe Uve1p. These results provide important insights into the roles of Rad2p in DNA repair processes in S.pombe.  相似文献   

18.
Interaction between human flap endonuclease-1 (hFEN-1) and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) represents a good model for interactions between multiple functional proteins involved in DNA metabolic pathways. A region of 9 conserved amino acid residues (residues Gln-337 through Lys-345) in the C terminus of human FEN-1 (hFEN-1) was shown to be responsible for the interaction with PCNA. Our current study indicates that 4 amino acid residues in hFEN-1 (Leu-340, Asp-341, Phe-343, and Phe-344) are critical for human PCNA (hPCNA) interaction. A conserved PCNA interaction motif in various proteins from assorted species has been defined as Q(1)X(2)X(3)(L/I)(4)X(5)X(6)F(7)(F/Y)(8), although our results fail to implicate Q(1) (Gln-337 in hFEN-1) as a crucial residue. Surprisingly, all hFEN-1 mutants, including L340A, D341A, F343A, and F344A, retained hPCNA-mediated stimulation of both exo- and flap endonuclease activities. Furthermore, our in vitro assay showed that hPCNA failed to bind to the scRad27 (yeast homolog of FEN-1) nuclease. However, its nuclease activities were significantly enhanced in the presence of hPCNA. Four additional Saccharomyces cerevisiae scRad27 mutants, including multiple alanine mutants and a deletion mutant of the entire PCNA binding region, were constructed to confirm this result. All of these mutants retained PCNA-driven nuclease activity stimulation. We therefore conclude that stimulation of eukaryotic hFEN-1 nuclease activities by PCNA is independent of its in vitro interaction via the PCNA binding region.  相似文献   

19.
Ultraviolet (UV) irradiation induces predominantly cyclobutane and (6-4) pyrimidine dimer photoproducts in DNA. Several mechanisms for repairing these mutagenic UV-induced DNA lesions have been identified. Nucleotide excision repair is a major pathway, but mechanisms involving photolyases and DNA glycosylases have also been characterized. Recently, a novel UV damage endonuclease (UVDE) was identified that initiates an excision repair pathway different from previously established repair mechanisms. Homologues of UVDE have been found in eukaryotes as well as in bacteria. In this report, we have used oligonucleotide substrates containing site-specific cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers and (6-4) photoproducts for the characterization of this UV damage repair pathway. After introduction of single-strand breaks at the 5' sides of the photolesions by UVDE, these intermediates became substrates for cleavage by flap endonucleases (FEN-1 proteins). FEN-1 homologues from humans, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and Schizosaccharomyces pombe all cleaved the UVDE-nicked substrates at similar positions 3' to the photolesions. T4 endonuclease V-incised DNA was processed in the same way. Both nicked and flapped DNA substrates with photolesions (the latter may be intermediates in DNA polymerase-catalyzed strand displacement synthesis) were cleaved by FEN-1. The data suggest that the two enzymatic activities, UVDE and FEN-1, are part of an alternative excision repair pathway for repair of UV photoproducts.  相似文献   

20.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutants lacking the structure-specific nuclease Rad27 display an enhancement in recombination that increases as sequence length decreases, suggesting that Rad27 preferentially restricts recombination between short sequences. Since wild-type alleles of both RAD27 and its human homologue FEN1 complement the elevated short-sequence recombination (SSR) phenotype of a rad27-null mutant, this function may be conserved from yeast to humans. Furthermore, mutant Rad27 and FEN-1 enzymes with partial flap endonuclease activity but without nick-specific exonuclease activity partially complement the SSR phenotype of the rad27-null mutant. This suggests that the endonuclease activity of Rad27 (FEN-1) plays a role in limiting recombination between short sequences in eukaryotic cells.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号