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1.
The DNA polymerase-encoding gene of Bacillus subtilis bacteriophage SPO1.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
V Scarlato  S Gargano 《Gene》1992,118(1):109-113
The bacteriophage SPO1 DNA polymerase-encoding gene, which contains a self-splicing intron, has been sequenced and its amino acid (aa) sequence has been deduced. The aa sequence of SPO1 DNA polymerase shows a high degree of similarity with that of DNA polymerase I from Escherichia coli (Po1I). Alignment with the sequences of Po1I, and the phi 29 and SPO1 DNA polymerases indicate that the aa residues that have been implicated in 3'----5' exonuclease activities are conserved.  相似文献   

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Some of the early genes of Bacillus subtilis bacteriophage SPO1 were hypothesized to function in the shutoff of host biosyntheses. Two of these genes, e3 and e22, were cloned and sequenced. E22 showed no similarity to any known protein, while E3, a highly acidic protein, showed significant similarity only to other similarly acidic proteins. Each gene was immediately downstream of a very active early promoter. Each was expressed actively during the first few minutes of infection and was then rapidly shut off and its RNA rapidly degraded. An e3 nonsense mutation severely retarded the degradation of e3 RNA. Expression of a plasmid-borne e3 gene, in either B. subtilis or Escherichia coli, resulted in the inhibition of host DNA, RNA, and protein syntheses and prevented colony formation. However, the e3 nonsense mutation caused no measurable decrease in either burst size or host shutoff during infection and, in fact, caused an increased burst size at high multiplicities of infection. We suggest that e3 is one of several genes involved in host shutoff, that its function is dispensable both for host shutoff and for phage multiplication, and that its shutoff function is not entirely specific to host activities.  相似文献   

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Group I introns are inserted into genes of a wide variety of bacteriophages of gram-positive bacteria. However, among the phages of enteric and other gram-negative proteobacteria, introns have been encountered only in phage T4 and several of its close relatives. Here we report the insertion of a self-splicing group I intron in the coding sequence of the DNA polymerase genes of PhiI and W31, phages that are closely related to T7. The introns belong to subgroup IA2 and both contain an open reading frame, inserted into structural element P6a, encoding a protein belonging to the HNH family of homing endonucleases. The introns splice efficiently in vivo and self-splice in vitro under mild conditions of ionic strength and temperature. We conclude that there is no barrier for maintenance of group I introns in phages of proteobacteria.  相似文献   

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Y Yoneda  S Graham  F E Young 《Gene》1979,7(1):51-68
The endonucleases BglI, BglII, EcoRI, SalI, SmaI, and XbaI were used to fragment the phage SPO2 DNA. Electrophoretic analysis using ethidiumbromide agarose gels showed the phage to have nine BglI sites, one BglII site, four EcoRI sites, one SalI site, one SmaI site, and six XbaI sites. Using partial digestions, multiple endonuclease digestion, and autoradiography the fragments were sized and ordered into a circular map of 23 Md. Such an analysis locates the endonuclease sites, indicates which endonucleases are potentially useful in cloning with SPO2, and allows insertions and/or deletions in the SPO2 DNA to be characterized.  相似文献   

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The self-splicing intron ribozymes have been regarded as primitive forms of the splicing machinery for eukaryotic pre-mRNAs. The splicing activity of group I self-splicing introns is dependent on an absolutely conserved and exceptionally densely packed core region composed of two helical domains, P3-P7 and P4-P6, that are connected rigidly via base triples. Here we show that a mutant group I intron ribozyme lacking both the P4-P6 domain and the base triples can perform the phosphoester transfer reactions required for splicing at both the 5' and 3' splice sites, demonstrating that the elements required for splicing are concentrated in the stacked helical P3-P7 domain. This finding establishes that the conserved core of the intron consists of two physically and functionally separable components, and we present a model showing the architecture of a prototype of this class of intron and the course of its molecular evolution.  相似文献   

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Here we describe the discovery of a group I intron in the DNA polymerase gene of Bacillus thuringiensis phage Bastille. Although the intron insertion site is identical to that of the Bacillus subtilis phages SPO1 and SP82 introns, the Bastille intron differs from them substantially in primary and secondary structure. Like the SPO1 and SP82 introns, the Bastille intron encodes a nicking DNA endonuclease of the H-N-H family, I-BasI, with a cleavage site identical to that of the SPO1-encoded enzyme I-HmuI. Unlike I-HmuI, which nicks both intron-minus and intron-plus DNA, I-BasI cleaves only intron-minus alleles, which is a characteristic of typical homing endonucleases. Interestingly, the C-terminal portions of these H-N-H phage endonucleases contain a conserved sequence motif, the intron-encoded endonuclease repeat motif (IENR1) that also has been found in endonucleases of the GIY-YIG family, and which likely comprises a small DNA-binding module with a globular ββααβ fold, suggestive of module shuffling between different homing endonuclease families.  相似文献   

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We have isolated a mutant of Bacillussubtilis deficient in DNA polymerase I, denominated polA42, which shows a reduced ability to repair the damage to DNA by UV radiation, MMS and mitomycin C;the ability to perform recombination is not appreciably impaired.DEAE cellulose chromatography allows the separation of polymerases I and II from the parental strain;a simple procedure is also described which allows to separate rapidly the polymerases II and III of the mutant strain. The three separated polymerases have similar catalytic properties but they can be distinguished for their sensitivity to inhibitors: PCMB inhibits polymerases II and III but not polymerase I; HPUra inhibits only polymerase III. All three enzymes are unaffected by nalidixate. The DNA synthesis occurring in cells of the polA42 strain permeabilized with toluene is inhibited by nalidixate, whereas the synthesis occurring in polA+ toluenized cells is unaffected by the drug. The polA gene has been mapped by transduction and localized between the phe12 and argA3 genes.  相似文献   

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Xiao M  Li T  Yuan X  Shang Y  Wang F  Chen S  Zhang Y 《Nucleic acids research》2005,33(14):4602-4611
The presence of non-conserved peripheral elements in all naturally occurring group I introns underline their importance in ensuring the natural intron function. Recently, we reported that some peripheral elements are conserved in group I introns of IE subgroup. Using self-splicing activity as a readout, our initial screening revealed that one such conserved peripheral elements, P2.1, is mainly required to fold the catalytically active structure of the Candida ribozyme, an IE intron. Unexpectedly, the essential function of P2.1 resides in a sequence-conserved short stem of P2.1 but not in a long-range interaction associated with the loop of P2.1 that stabilizes the ribozyme structure. The P2.1 stem is indispensable in folding the compact ribozyme core, most probably by forming a triple helical interaction with two core helices, P3 and P6. Surprisingly, although the ribozyme lacking the P2.1 stem renders a loosely folded core and the loss of self-splicing activity requires two consecutive transesterifications, the mutant ribozyme efficiently catalyzes the first transesterification reaction. These results suggest that the intron self-splicing demands much more ordered structure than does one independent transesterification, highlighting that the universally present peripheral elements achieve their functional importance by enabling the highly ordered structure through diverse tertiary interactions.  相似文献   

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We have constructed all single base substitutions in almost all of the highly conserved residues of the Tetrahymena self-splicing intron. Mutation of highly conserved residues almost invariably leads to loss of enzymatic activity. In many cases, activity could be regained by making additional mutations that restored predicted base-pairings; these second site suppressors in general confirm the secondary structure derived from phylogenetic data. At several positions, our suppression data can be most readily explained by assuming non-Watson-Crick base-pairings. In addition to the requirements imposed by the secondary structure, the sequence of the intron is constrained by "negative interactions", the exclusion of particular nucleotide sequences that would form undesirable secondary structures. A comparison of genetic and phylogenetic data suggests sites that may be involved in tertiary structural interactions.  相似文献   

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