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1.
In probing the mechanism of inhibition of hypoxia inducible factor (HIF-1) by campothecins, we investigated the ability of human topoisomerase I to bind and cleave HIF-1 response element (HRE), which contains the known camptothecin-mediated topoisomerase I cleavage site 5′-TG. We observed that the selection of 5′-TG by human topoisomerase I and topotecan depends to a large extent on the specific flanking sequences, and that the presence of a G at the −2 position (where cleavage occurs between −1 and +1) prevents the HRE site from being a preferred site for such cleavage. Furthermore, the presence of −2 T/A can induce the cleavage at a less preferred TC or TA site. However, in the absence of a more preferred site, the HRE site is shown to be cleaved by human topoisomerase I in the presence of topotecan. Thus, it is implied that the −2 base has a significant influence on the selection of the camptothecin-mediated Topo I cleavage site, which can overcome the preference for +1G. While the cleavage site recognition has been known to be based on the concerted effect of several bases spanning the cleavage site, such a determining effect of an individual base has not been previously recognized. A possible base-specific interaction between DNA and topoisomerase I may be responsible for this sequence selectivity.  相似文献   

2.
Clerocidin (CL), a diterpenoid natural product, alkylates DNA through its epoxide moiety and exhibits both anticancer and antibacterial activities. We have examined CL action in the presence of topoisomerase IV from Streptococcus pneumoniae. CL promoted irreversible enzyme-mediated DNA cleavage leading to single- and double-stranded DNA breaks at specific sites. Reaction required the diterpenoid function: no cleavage was seen using a naphthalene-substituted analogue. Moreover, drug-induced DNA breakage was not observed using a mutant topoisomerase IV (ParC Y118F) unable to form a cleavage complex with DNA. Sequence analysis of 102 single-stranded DNA breaks and 79 double-stranded breaks revealed an overwhelming preference for G at the −1 position, i.e. immediately 5′ of the enzyme DNA scission site. This specificity contrasts with that of topoisomerase IV cleavage with antibacterial quinolones. Indeed, CL stimulated DNA breakage by a quinolone-resistant topoisomerase IV (ParC S79F). Overall, the results indicate that topoisomerase IV facilitates selective irreversible CL attack at guanine and that its cleavage complex differs markedly from that of mammalian topoisomerase II which promotes both irreversible and reversible CL attack at guanine and cytosine, respectively. The unique ability to form exclusively irreversible DNA breaks suggests topoisomerase IV may be a key intracellular target of CL in bacteria.  相似文献   

3.
Yeast cells expressing the Glu418Lys human topoisomerase I mutant display a camptothecin resistance that slowly decreases as a function of time. Molecular characterization of the single steps of the catalytic cycle of the purified mutant indicates that it has a relaxation activity identical to the wild-type protein but a different DNA sequence specificity for the cleavage sites when compared to the wild-type enzyme, as assayed on several substrates. In particular the mutant has a low specificity for CPT sensitive cleavable sites. In fact, the mutant has, at variance of the wild-type enzyme, a reduced preference for cleavage sites having a thymine base in position −1 of the scissile strand. This preference, together with the strict requirement for a thymine base in position −1 for an efficient camptothecin binding, explains the temporary camptothecin resistance of the yeast cell expressing the mutant and points out the importance of the DNA sequence in the binding of the camptothecin drug.  相似文献   

4.
Antibacterial fluoroquinolones trap a cleavage complex of gyrase and topoisomerase (topo) IV inducing site-specific DNA breakage within a bent DNA gate engaged in DNA transport. Despite its importance for drug action and in revealing potential sites of topoisomerase catalysis, the mechanism of DNA selectivity is poorly understood. To explore its functional basis, we generated mutant versions of the strongly cleaved E-site and used a novel competitive assay to examine their gemifloxacin-mediated DNA breakage by Streptococcus pneumoniae topo IV and gyrase. Parallel studies of Ca2+-induced cleavage distinguished ‘intrinsic recognition’ of DNA cleavage sites by topo IV from drug-induced preferences. Analysis revealed strong enzyme-determined requirements for −4G, −2A and −1T bases preceding the breakage site (between −1 and +1) and enzyme-unique or degenerate determinants at −3, plus drug-specific preferences at +2/+3 and for +1 purines associated with drug intercalation. Similar cleavage rules were seen additionally at the novel V-site identified here in ColE1-derived plasmids. In concert with DNA binding data, our results provide functional evidence for DNA, enzyme and drug contributions to DNA cleavage at the gate, suggest a mechanism for DNA discrimination involving enzyme-induced DNA bending/helix distortion and cleavage complex stabilization and advance understanding of fluoroquinolones as important cleavage-enhancing therapeutics.  相似文献   

5.
Camptothecin (CPT) is a topoisomerase IB (TopIB) selective inhibitor whose derivatives are currently used in cancer therapy. TopIB cleaves DNA at any sequence, but in the presence of CPT the only stabilized protein–DNA covalent complex is the one having a thymine in position −1 with respect to the cleavage site. A metadynamics simulation of two TopIB–DNA–CPT ternary complexes differing for the presence of a thymine or a cytosine in position −1 indicates the occurrence of two different drug’s unbinding pathways. The free-energy difference between the bound state and the transition state is large when a thymine is present in position −1 and is strongly reduced in presence of a cytosine, in line with the different drug stabilization properties of the two systems. Such a difference is strictly related to the changes in the hydrogen bond network between the protein, the DNA and the drug in the two systems, indicating a direct role of the protein in determining the specificity of the cleavage site sequence stabilized by the CPT. Calculations carried out in presence of one compound of the indenoisoquinoline family (NSC314622) indicate a comparable energy difference between the bound and the transition state independently of the presence of a thymine or a cytosine in position −1, in line with the experimental results.  相似文献   

6.
Based on co-crystal structures of human topoisomerase I with bound DNA, Lys(532) makes a minor groove contact with the strongly preferred thymidine residue at the site of covalent attachment (-1 position). Replacement of Lys(532) with either arginine or alanine has essentially no effect on the sequence preference of the enzyme, indicating that this interaction is not required for the preference for a T at the -1 position. Although both the cleavage and religation activities of the K532R mutant enzyme are reduced, cleavage is reduced to a greater extent than religation. The reverse is true for the K532A mutant enzyme with religation so impaired that the nicked intermediate accumulates during plasmid relaxation assays. Consistent with the shift in the cleavage religation equilibrium toward cleavage for the K532A mutant enzyme, expression of the mutant enzyme in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is cytotoxic, and thus this mutant enzyme mimics the effects of the anticancer drug camptothecin. Cleavage assays with the mutant enzymes using an oligonucleotide containing a 5'-bridging phosphorothiolate indicate that Lys(532) functions as a general acid during cleavage to protonate the leaving 5'-oxygen. It is possible that the contact with the -1 base is important during catalysis to provide positional rigidity to the active site. The corresponding residues in the vaccinia virus topoisomerase and the tyrosine recombinases may have similar critical roles in catalysis.  相似文献   

7.
In order to investigate the mechanism of topoisomerase I inhibition by camptothecin, we studied the induction of DNA cleavage by purified mammalian DNA topoisomerase I in a series of oligonucleotides and analyzed the DNA sequence locations of preferred cleavage sites in the SV40 genome. The oligonucleotides were derived from the sequence of the major camptothecin-induced cleavage site in SV40 DNA (Jaxel, C., Kohn, K. W., and Pommier, Y. (1988) Nucleic Acids Res. 16, 11157 to 11170) with the cleaved bond in their center. DNA length was critical since cleavage was detectable only in 30 and 20 base pair-(bp) oligonucleotides, but not in a 12-bp oligonucleotide. Cleavage was at the same position in the oligonucleotides as in SV40 DNA. Its intensity was greater in the 30- than in the 20-bp oligonucleotide, indicating that sequences more than 10 bp away from the cleavage site may influence intensity. Camptothecin-induced DNA cleavage required duplex DNA since none of the single-stranded oligonucleotides were cleaved. Analysis of base preferences around topoisomerase I cleavage sites in SV40 DNA indicated that camptothecin stabilized topoisomerase I preferentially at sites having a G immediately 3' to the cleaved bond. Experiments with 30-bp oligonucleotides showed that camptothecin produced most intense cleavage in a complementary duplex having a G immediately 3' to the cleavage site. Weaker cleavage was observed in a complementary duplex in which the 3'G was replaced with a T. The identity of the 3' base, however, did not affect topoisomerase I-induced DNA cleavage in the absence of drug. These results indicate that camptothecin traps preferentially a subset of the enzyme cleavage sites, those having a G immediately 3' to the cleaved bond. This strong preference suggests that camptothecin binds reversibly to the DNA at topoisomerase I cleavage sites, in analogy to a model previously proposed for inhibitors of topoisomerase II (Capranico, G., Kohn, K.W., and Pommier, Y. (1990) Nucleic Acids Res. 18, 6611-6619).  相似文献   

8.
Antitumor drugs, such as anthracyclines, interfere with mammalian DNA topoisomerase II by forming a ternary complex, DNA-drug-enzyme, in which DNA strands are cleaved and covalently linked to the enzyme. In this work, a synthetic 36-bp DNA oligomer derived from SV40 and mutated variants were used to determine the effects of base mutations on DNA cleavage levels produced by murine topoisomerase II with and without idarubicin. Although site competition could affect cleavage levels, mutation effects were rather similar among several cleavage sites. The major sequence determinants of topoisomerase II DNA cleavage without drugs are up to five base pairs apart from the strand cut, suggesting that DNA protein contacts involving these bases are particularly critical for DNA site recognition. Cleavage sites with adenines at positions -1 were detected without idarubicin only under conditions favouring enzyme binding to DNA, showing that these sites are low affinity sites for topoisomerase II DNA cleavage and/or binding. Moreover, the results indicated that the sequence 5'-(A)TA/(A)-3' (the slash indicates the cleaved bond, parenthesis indicate conditioned preference) from -3 to +1 positions constitutes the complete base sequence preferred by anthracyclines. An important finding was that mutations that improve the fit to the above consensus on one strand can also increase cleavage on the opposite strand, suggesting that a drug molecule may effectively interact with one enzyme subunit only and trap the whole dimeric enzyme. These findings documented that DNA recognition by topoisomerase II may occur at one or the other strand, and not necessarily at both of them, and that the two subunits can act cooperatively to cleave a double helix.  相似文献   

9.
Single-strand DNA cleavages by eukaryotic topoisomerase II   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
A new purification method for eukaryotic type II DNA topoisomerase (EC 5.99.1.3) is described, and the avian enzyme has been purified and characterized. An analysis of the cleavage reaction has revealed that topoisomerase II can be trapped as a DNA-enzyme covalent complex containing DNA with double-stranded and single-stranded breaks. The data indicate that DNA cleavage by topoisomerase II proceeds by two asymmetric single-stranded cleavage and resealing steps on opposite strands (separated by 4 bp) with independent probabilities of being trapped upon addition of a protein denaturant. Single-strand cleavages were directly demonstrated at both strong and weak topoisomerase II sites. Thus, a match to the vertebrate topoisomerase II consensus sequence (sequence; see text) (N is any base, and cleavage occurs between -1 and +1) [Spitzner, J.R., & Muller, M.T. (1988) Nucleic Acids Res. 16, 5533-5556)] does not predict whether a cleavage site will be single stranded or double stranded; however, sites cleaved by topoisomerase II that contain two conserved consensus bases (G residue at +2 and T at +4) generally yield double-strand cleavage whereas recognition sites lacking these two consensus elements yield single-strand cleavages. Finally, single-strand cleavages with topoisomerase II do not appear to be an artifact caused by damaged enzyme molecules since topoisomerase II in freshly prepared, crude extracts also shows the property of single-strand cleavages.  相似文献   

10.
The bacteriophage T4-induced type II DNA topoisomerase has been shown previously to make a reversible double strand break in DNA double helices. In addition, this enzyme is shown here to bind tightly and to cleave single-stranded DNA molecules. The evidence that the single-stranded DNA cleavage activity is intrinsic to the topoisomerase includes: 1) protein linkage to the 5' ends of the newly cleaved DNA; 2) coelution of essentially homogeneous topoisomerase and the DNA cleavage activity; 3) inhibition of both single-stranded DNA cleavage and double-stranded DNA relaxation by oxolinic acid; and 4) inhibition of duplex DNA relaxation by single-stranded DNA. The major cleavage sites on phi X174 viral DNA substrates have been mapped, and several cleavage sites analyzed to determine the exact nucleotide position of cleavage. Major cleavage sites are found very near the base of predicted hairpin helices in the single-stranded DNA substrates, suggesting that DNA secondary structure recognition is important in the cleavage reaction. On the other hand, there are also many weaker cleavage sites with no obvious sequence requirements. Many of the properties of the single-stranded DNA cleavage reaction examined here differ from those of the oxolinic acid-dependent, double-stranded DNA cleavage reaction catalyzed by the same enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
Vaccinia topoisomerase, a eukaryotic type IB enzyme, catalyzes relaxation of supercoiled DNA by cleaving and rejoining DNA strands through a DNA- (3'-phosphotyrosyl)-enzyme intermediate. We have performed a kinetic analysis of mutational effects at four essential amino acids: Arg-130, Gly-132, Tyr-136 and Lys-167. Arg-130, Gly-132 and Lys-167 are conserved in all members of the type IB topoisomerase family. Tyr-136 is conserved in all poxvirus topoisomerases. We show that Arg-130 and Lys-167 are required for transesterification chemistry. Arg-130 enhances the rates of both cleavage and religation by 10(5). Lys-167 enhances the cleavage and religation reactions by 10(3) and 10(4), respectively. An instructive distinction between these two essential residues is that Arg-130 cannot be replaced by lysine, whereas substituting Lys-167 by arginine resulted in partial restoration of function relative to the alanine mutant. We propose that both basic residues interact directly with the scissile phosphate at the topoisomerase active site. Mutations at positions Gly-132 and Tyr-136 reduced the rate of strand cleavage by more than two orders of magnitude, but elicited only mild effects on religation rate. Gly-132 and Tyr-136 are suggested to facilitate a pre-cleavage activation step. The results of comprehensive mutagenesis of the vaccinia topoisomerase illuminate mechanistic and structural similarities to site-specific recombinases.  相似文献   

12.
Topoisomerases, by controlling DNA supercoiling state, are key enzymes for adaptation to high temperatures in thermophilic organisms. We focus here on the topoisomerase I from the hyperthermophilic bacterium Thermotoga maritima (optimal growth temperature, 80 degrees C). To determine the properties of the enzyme compared with those of its mesophilic homologs, we overexpressed T. maritima topoisomerase I in Escherichia coli and purified it to near homogeneity. We show that T. maritima topoisomerase I exhibits a very high DNA relaxing activity. Mapping of the cleavage sites on a variety of single-stranded oligonucleotides indicates a strong preference for a cytosine at position -4 of the cleavage, a property shared by E. coli topoisomerase I and archaeal reverse gyrases. As expected, the mutation of the putative active site Tyr 288 to Phe led to a totally inactive protein. To investigate the role of the unique zinc motif (Cys-X-Cys-X(16)-Cys-X-Cys) present in T. maritima topoisomerase I, experiments have been performed with the protein mutated on the tetracysteine motif. Strikingly, the results show that zinc binding is not required for DNA relaxation activity, contrary to the E. coli enzyme. Furthermore, neither thermostability nor cleavage specificity is altered in this mutant. This finding opens the question of the role of the zinc-binding motif in T. maritima topoisomerase I and suggests that this hyperthermophilic topoisomerase possesses a different mechanism from its mesophilic homolog.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Cline SD  Jones WR  Stone MP  Osheroff N 《Biochemistry》1999,38(47):15500-15507
Topoisomerase II is the target for several anticancer drugs that "poison" the enzyme and convert it to a cellular toxin by increasing topoisomerase II-mediated DNA cleavage. In addition to these "exogenous topoisomerase II poisons," DNA lesions such as abasic sites act as "endogenous poisons" of the enzyme. Drugs and lesions are believed to stimulate DNA scission by altering the structure of the double helix within the cleavage site of the enzyme. However, the structural alterations that enhance cleavage are unknown. Since abasic sites are an intrinsic part of the genetic material, they represent an attractive model to assess DNA distortions that lead to altered topoisomerase II function. Therefore, the structure of a double-stranded dodecamer containing a tetrahydrofuran apurinic lesion at the +2 position of a topoisomerase II DNA cleavage site was determined by NMR spectroscopy. Three major features distinguished the apurinic structure ( = 0.095) from that of wild-type ( = 0.077). First, loss of base stacking at the lesion collapsed the major groove and reduced the distance between the two scissile phosphodiester bonds. Second, the apurinic lesion induced a bend that was centered about the topoisomerase II cleavage site. Third, the base immediately opposite the lesion was extrahelical and relocated to the minor groove. All of these structural alterations have the potential to influence interactions between topoisomerase II and its DNA substrate.  相似文献   

15.
Alternating purine-pyrimidine sequences (RY repeats) demonstrate considerable homology to the consensus sequence for vertebrate topoisomerase II (Spitzner and Muller (1988) Nucleic Acids Res. 16: 1533-1556). This is shown below and positions that can match are underscored. RYRYRYRYRYRYRYRYRY = alternating purine-pyrimidine 18 bp RNYNNCNNGYNGKTNYNY = topoisomerase II consensus sequence (R is purine, Y is pyrimidine, K is G or T.) Topoisomerase II cleavage reactions were performed (in the absence of inhibitors) on a plasmid containing a 54 base RY repeat and the single strong cleavage site mapped to the RY repeat. Analysis of this DNA on sequencing gels showed that the enzyme cleaved a number of sites, all within the 54 base pair RY repeat. Topoisomerase II also made clustered cleavages within other RY repeats that were examined. Quantitative analysis of homology to the consensus sequence, as measured by the match of a site to a matrix of base proportions from the consensus data base (the matrix mean), showed that both the locations and the frequencies of cleavage sites within RY repeats were proportional to homology scores. However, topoisomerase II cleaved RY repeats preferentially in comparison to non-RY sites with similar homology scores. The activity of the enzyme at RY repeats appears to be proportional to the length of the repeat; additionally, GT, AC and AT repeats were better substrates for cleavage than GC repeats.  相似文献   

16.
In this study, we further examined the sequence selectivity of camptothecin in mammalian topoisomerase I cDNA from human and Chinese hamster. In the absence of camptothecin, almost all the bases at the 3'-terminus of cleavage sites are T for calf thymus and wheat germ topoisomerase I. In addition, wheat germ topoisomerase I exhibits preference for C (or not T) at -3 and for T at -2 position. As for camptothecin-stimulated cleavage with topoisomerase I, G (or not T) at +1 is an additional strong preference. This sequence selectivity of camptothecin is similar to that previously found in SV40 DNA, suggesting that camptothecin preferentially interacts with topoisomerase I-mediated cleavage sites where G is the base at the 5'-terminus. These results support the stacking model of camptothecin (Jaxel et al. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 20418-20423). Comparison of calf thymus and wheat germ topoisomerase I-mediated cleavage sites in the presence of camptothecin shows that many major cleavage sites are similar. However, the relative intensities are often different. One of the differences was attributable to a bias at position -3 where calf thymus topoisomerase I prefers G and wheat germ topoisomerase I prefers C. This difference may explain the unique patterns of cleavage sites induced by the two enzymes. Sequencing analysis of camptothecin-stimulated cleavage sites in the surrounding regions of point mutations in topoisomerase I cDNA, which were found in camptothecin-resistant cell lines, reveals no direct relationship between DNA cleavage sites in vitro and mutation sites.  相似文献   

17.
Topoisomerase I is an ubiquitous DNA-cleaving enzyme and an important therapeutic target in cancer chemotherapy for camptothecins as well as for indolocarbazole antibiotics such as rebeccamycin. To achieve a sequence-specific cleavage of DNA by topoisomerase I, a triple helix-forming oligonucleotide was covalently linked to indolocarbazole-type topoisomerase I poisons. The three indolocarbazole-oligonucleotide conjugates investigated were able to direct topoisomerase I cleavage at a specific site based upon sequence recognition by triplex formation. The efficacy of topoisomerase I-mediated DNA cleavage depends markedly on the intrinsic potency of the drug. We show that DNA cleavage depends also upon the length of the linker arm between the triplex-forming oligonucleotide and the drug. Based on a known structure of the DNA-topoisomerase I complex, a molecular model of the oligonucleotide conjugates bound to the DNA-topoisomerase I complex was elaborated to facilitate the design of a potent topoisomerase I inhibitor-oligonucleotide conjugate with an optimized linker between the two moieties. The resulting oligonucleotide-indolocarbazole conjugate at 10 nM induced cleavage at the triple helix site 2-fold more efficiently than 5 microM of free indolocarbazole, while the other drug-sensitive sites were not cleaved. The rational design of drug-oligonucleotide conjugates carrying a DNA topoisomerase poison may be exploited to improve the efficacy and selectivity of chemotherapeutic cancer treatments by targeting specific genes and reducing drug toxicity.  相似文献   

18.
Many agents (e.g. camptothecins, indolocarbazoles, indenoisoquinolines, and dibenzonaphthyridines) stimulate topoisomerase I (TOP1)-mediated DNA cleavage (a behavior termed topoisomerase I poisoning) by interacting with both the DNA and the enzyme at the site of cleavage (typically by intercalation between the -1 and +1 base-pairs). The bibenzimidazoles, which include Hoechst 33258 and 33342, are a family of DNA minor groove-directed agents that also stimulate topoisomerase I-mediated DNA cleavage. However, the molecular mechanism by which these ligands poison TOP1 is poorly understood. Toward this goal, we have used a combination of mutational, footprinting, and DNA binding affinity analyses to define the DNA binding site for Hoechst 33258 and a related derivative that results in optimal induction of TOP1-mediated DNA cleavage. We show that this DNA binding site is located downstream from the site of DNA cleavage, encompassing the base-pairs from position +4 to +8. The distal nature of this binding site relative to the site of DNA cleavage suggests that minor groove-directed agents like the bibenzimidazoles poison TOP1 via a mechanism distinct from compounds like the camptothecins, which interact at the site of cleavage.  相似文献   

19.
DNA adducts are mutagenic and clastogenic. Because of their harmful nature, lesions are recognized by many proteins involved in DNA repair. However, mounting evidence suggests that lesions also are recognized by proteins with no obvious role in repair processes. One such protein is topoisomerase II, an essential enzyme that removes knots and tangles from the DNA. Because topoisomerase II generates a protein-linked double-stranded DNA break during its catalytic cycle, it has the potential to fragment the genome. Previous studies indicate that abasic sites and other lesions that distort the double helix stimulate topoisomerase II-mediated DNA cleavage. Therefore, to further explore interactions between DNA lesions and the enzyme, the effects of exocyclic adducts on DNA cleavage mediated by human topoisomerase IIalpha were determined. When located within the four-base overhang of a topoisomerase II cleavage site (at the +2 or +3 position 3' relative to the scissile bond), 3,N(4)-ethenodeoxycytidine, 3,N(4)-etheno-2'-ribocytidine, 1,N(2)-ethenodeoxyguanosine, pyrimido[1,2-a]purin-10(3H)-one deoxyribose (M(1)dG), and 1,N(2)-propanodeoxyguanosine increased DNA scission approximately 5-17-fold. Enhanced cleavage did not result from an increased affinity of topoisomerase IIalpha for adducted DNA or a decreased rate of religation. Therefore, it is concluded that these exocyclic lesions act by accelerating the forward rate of enzyme-mediated DNA scission. Finally, treatment of cultured human cells with 2-chloroacetaldehyde, a reactive metabolite of vinyl chloride that generates etheno adducts, increased cellular levels of DNA cleavage by topoisomerase IIalpha. This finding suggests that type II topoisomerases interact with exocyclic DNA lesions in physiological systems.  相似文献   

20.
Y Adachi  E K?s  U K Laemmli 《The EMBO journal》1989,8(13):3997-4006
DNA elements termed scaffold-associated regions (SARs) are AT-rich stretches of several hundred base pairs which are known to bind specifically to nuclear or metaphase scaffolds and are proposed to specify the base of chromatin loops. SARs contain sequences homologous to the DNA topoisomerase II cleavage consensus and this enzyme is known to be the major structural component of the mitotic chromosome scaffold. We find that purified topoisomerase II preferentially binds and aggregates SAR-containing DNA. This interaction is highly cooperative and, with increasing concentrations of topoisomerase II, the protein titrates quantitatively first SAR-containing DNA and then non-SAR DNA. About one topoisomerase II dimer is bound per 200 bp of DNA. SARs exhibit a Circe effect; they promote in cis topoisomerase II-mediated double-strand cleavage in SAR-containing DNA fragments. The AT-rich SARs contain several oligo(dA).oligo(dT) tracts which determine their protein-binding specificity. Distamycin, which is known to interact highly selectively with runs of A.T base pairs, abolishes the specific interaction of SARs with topoisomerase II, and the homopolymer oligo(dA).oligo(dT) is, above a critical length of 240 bp, a highly specific artificial SAR. These results support the notion of an involvement of SARs and topoisomerase II in chromosome structure.  相似文献   

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