共查询到16条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Din-Pow Ma Yueh-Tsu King Kim Young William S. Luckett Jr. 《Plant molecular biology》1992,18(5):1001-1004
The mitochondrial DNA molecules of two interfertile algal species, Chlamydomonas smithii and C. reinhardtii, are co-linear except for a 1075 bp intron (the -insert) that is present in the cob gene of C. smithii. The -insert, a group I intron (Cs cob·1) containing an open reading frame (ORF) which encodes a basic, hydrophilic protein of 237 amino acids, is unidirectionally transmitted to all diploid progeny during interspecific crosses. In this report, we show that the Cs cob·1-encoded protein is a site-specific endonuclease (I-Csm I) which could mediate the intron transfer via the gene conversion mechanism. The Cs cob·1 ORF was cloned into the vector pMALcr1 and over-expressed as a hybrid protein fused to maltose-binding protein (MBP). This fusion protein exhibited an in vivo endonuclease activity which specifically cleaved the intron homing site within the intronless cob gene. 相似文献
2.
Cleavage pattern of the homing endonuclease encoded by the fifth intron in the chloroplast large subunit rRNA-encoding gene of Chlamydomonas eugametos 总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16
The fifth group-I intron in the chloroplast large subunit rRNA-encoding gene of Chlamydomonas eugametos (CeLSU.5) is mobile during interspecific crosses between C. eugametos and Chlamydomonas moewusii. Like the six other mobile introns that have been well characterized so far, CeLSU.5 contains a long open reading frame (ceuIR) coding for a site-specific endonuclease (I-CeuI) that cleaves the C. moewusii intronless gene in the vicinity of the intron-insertion site. This stimulates gap repair and mediates efficient transfer of the intron at its cognate site. By expressing the ceuIR gene in the Escherichia coli vectors pKK233-2 and pTRC-99A, we recently demonstrated that the endonuclease is highly toxic to E. coli [Gauthier et al., Curr. Genet. 19 (1991) 43-47]. To eliminate this problem and characterize the cleavage pattern and recognition sequence of the I-CeuI endonuclease, we have expressed the ceuIR gene in E. coli under the control of a bacteriophage T7 promoter in a tightly regulated M13 system, and developed an in vitro system to assay partially purified I-CeuI activity. This allowed us to determine that I-CeuI recognizes a sequence of less than 26 bp centered around the insertion site and produces a staggered cut 5 bp downstream from this site, yielding 4-nucleotide (CTAA), 3'-OH overhangs. 相似文献
3.
Several group-I introns have been shown to specifically invade intron-minus alleles of the genes that contain them. This type of intron mobility is referred to as 'intron homing', and depends on restriction endonucleases (ENases) encoded by the mobile introns. The ENase cleaves the intron-minus allele near the site of intron insertion, thereby initiating gene conversion. The 23S (LSU) rRNA-encoding gene (LSU) of the chloroplast genome of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii contains a self-splicing group-I intron (CrLSU) that has a free-standing open reading frame (ORF) of 163 codons. Translation of CrLSU intron RNA in cell-free systems produces a polypeptide of approx. 18 kDa, the size expected for correct translation of the ORF. The in vitro-synthesized 18-kDa protein cleaves plasmid DNA that contains a portion of LSU where the intron normally resides, but lacking the intron itself. Cleavage by the intron-encoded enzyme (I-CreI) occurs 5 bp and 1 bp 3' to the intron insertion site (in the 3'-exon) in the top (/) and bottom (,) strands, respectively, resulting in 4-nt single-stranded overhangs with 3'-OH termini. We also show that the recognition sequence of I-CreI spans the cleavage site and is 24 bp in length (5'-CAAAACGTC,GTGA/GACAGTTTGGT). 相似文献
4.
The nicking homing endonuclease I-BasI is encoded by a group I intron in the DNA polymerase gene of the Bacillus thuringiensis phage Bastille 下载免费PDF全文
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
5.
A large number of group I introns encode a family of homologous proteins that either promote intron splicing (maturases) or are site-specific DNA endonucleases that function in intron mobility (a process called "homing"). Genetic studies have shown that some of these proteins have both activities, yet how a single protein carries out both functions remains obscure. The similarity between respective DNA-binding sites and the RNA structure near the 5' and 3' splice sites has fueled speculation that such proteins may use analogous interactions to perform both functions. The Aspergillus nidulans mitochondrial COB group I intron encodes a bi-functional protein, I-AniI, that has both RNA maturase and site-specific DNA endonuclease activities in vitro. Here, we show that I-AniI shows distinctive features of the endonuclease family to which it belongs, including highly specific, tight binding and sequential DNA strand cleavage. Competition experiments demonstrate that I-AniI binds the COB intron RNA even in saturating concentrations of its DNA target site substrate, suggesting that the protein has a separate binding site for RNA. In addition, we provide evidence that two different DNA-binding site mutants of I-AniI have little effect on the protein's RNA maturation activity. Since RNA splicing is likely a secondary adaptation of the protein, these observations support a model in which homing endonucleases may have developed maturase function by utilizing a hitherto "non-functional" protein surface. 相似文献
6.
The I-CeuI endonuclease recognizes a sequence of 19 base pairs and preferentially cleaves the coding strand of the Chlamydomonas moewusii chloroplast large subunit rRNA gene. 下载免费PDF全文
The I-CeuI endonuclease is a member of the growing family of homing endonucleases that catalyse mobility of group I introns by making a double-strand break at the homing site of these introns in cognate intronless alleles during genetic crosses. In a previous study, we have shown that a short DNA fragment of 26 bp, encompassing the homing site of the fifth intron in the Chlamydomonas eugametos chloroplast large subunit rRNA gene (Ce LSU.5), was sufficient for I-CeuI recognition and cleavage. Here, we report the recognition sequence of the I-CeuI endonuclease, as determined by random mutagenesis of nucleotide positions adjacent to the I-CeuI cleavage site. Single-base substitutions that completely abolish endonuclease activity delimit a 15-bp sequence whereas those that reduce the cleavage rate define a 19-bp sequence that extends from position -7 to position +12 with respect to the Ce LSU.5 intron insertion site. As the other homing endonucleases that have been studied so far, the I-CeuI endonuclease recognizes a non-symmetric degenerate sequence. The top strand of the recognition sequence is preferred for I-CeuI cleavage and the bottom strand most likely determines the rate of double-strand breaks. 相似文献
7.
8.
Purification of a site-specific endonuclease, I-Sce II, encoded by intron 4 alpha of the mitochondrial coxI gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae 总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11
C M Wernette R Saldahna P S Perlman R A Butow 《The Journal of biological chemistry》1990,265(31):18976-18982
We have purified to near homogeneity a site-specific, double-stranded DNA endonuclease (I-Sce II) encoded by intron 4 alpha (aI4 alpha) of the yeast mitochondrial coxI gene. Our purification starts with a high salt extract of mitochondria isolated from a yeast strain that overproduces the enzyme because of a block in splicing of aI4 alpha. The final step of purification is an affinity column consisting of covalently bound double-stranded DNA multimers of a synthetic sequence, 5'-TTGGTCATCCAGAAGTAT-3', which contains the I-Sce II cleavage/recognition site. Typical yields of enzyme are 3-5% with a specific activity of approximately 500,000 units/mg, where 1 unit of activity cleaves 50 ng of DNA substrate/h at 30 degrees C. I-Sce II has a monomer molecular mass of 31 kDa as estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Active enzyme purifies as a 55-kDa species, which we presume to be a homodimer. I-Sce II monomer comigrates with an in vivo synthesized mitochondrial translation product made in the strain that overproduces the enzyme. We conclude that I-Sce II is derived by proteolytic processing of a precursor polypeptide, p62, encoded by an in-frame fusion of coxI exons 1-4 with the downstream aI4 alpha reading frame. I-Sce II is most active at pH 7.5 and at 20-30 degrees C. Endonuclease activity is sensitive to salt and is dependent upon Mg2+ or Mn2+, but is unaffected by inclusion of ATP or GTP. I-Sce II is the first intron-encoded protein to be purified and characterized from yeast mitochondria. 相似文献
9.
The gene coding for small ribosomal subunit RNA in the basidiomycete Ustilago maydis contains a group I intron. 下载免费PDF全文
The nucleotide sequence of the gene coding for small ribosomal subunit RNA in the basidiomycete Ustilago maydis was determined. It revealed the presence of a group I intron with a length of 411 nucleotides. This is the third occurrence of such an intron discovered in a small subunit rRNA gene encoded by a eukaryotic nuclear genome. The other two occurrences are in Pneumocystis carinii, a fungus of uncertain taxonomic status, and Ankistrodesmus stipitatus, a green alga. The nucleotides of the conserved core structure of 101 group I intron sequences present in different genes and genome types were aligned and their evolutionary relatedness was examined. This revealed a cluster including all group I introns hitherto found in eukaryotic nuclear genes coding for small and large subunit rRNAs. A secondary structure model was designed for the area of the Ustilago maydis small ribosomal subunit RNA precursor where the intron is situated. It shows that the internal guide sequence pairing with the intron boundaries fits between two helices of the small subunit rRNA, and that minimal rearrangement of base pairs suffices to achieve the definitive secondary structure of the 18S rRNA upon splicing. 相似文献
10.
11.
Maturase and endonuclease functions depend on separate conserved domains of the bifunctional protein encoded by the group I intron aI4 alpha of yeast mitochondrial DNA. 总被引:6,自引:1,他引:6 下载免费PDF全文
Intron 4 alpha (aI4 alpha) of the yeast mitochondrial COXI gene is a mobile group I intron that contains a reading frame encoding both the homing endonuclease I-SceII and a latent maturase capable of splicing both aI4 alpha and the fourth intron of the cytochrome b (COB) gene (bI4). The aI4 alpha reading frame is a member of a large gene family recognized by the presence of related dodecapeptide sequence motifs called P1 and P2. In this study, missense mutations of P1 and P2 were placed in mitochondrial DNA by biolistic transformation. The effects of the mutations on intron mobility, endonuclease I-SceII activity and maturase function were tested. The mutations of P1 strongly affected mobility and endonuclease I-SceII activity, but had little or no effect on maturase function; mutations of P2 affected splicing but not mobility or endonuclease I-SceII activity. Surprisingly, the conditional (temperature-sensitive) mutations at P1 and P2 block one or the other function of the protein but not both. This study indicates that the two functions depend on separate domains of the intron-encoded protein. 相似文献
12.
The primary structure of a 4.0-kDa photosystem I polypeptide encoded by the chloroplast psaI gene 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
H V Scheller J S Okkels P B H?j I Svendsen P Roepstorff B L M?ller 《The Journal of biological chemistry》1989,264(31):18402-18406
Partial amino acid sequences have been determined for a 4.0-kDa photosystem I polypeptide from barley. A comparison with the sequence of the chloroplast genome of Nicotiana tabacum and Marchantia polymorpha identified the polypeptide as chloroplast-encoded. We designate the corresponding gene psaI and the polypeptide PSI-I. The barley chloroplast psaI gene was sequenced. The gene encodes a polypeptide of 36 amino acid residues with a deduced molecular mass of 4008 Da. The 4.0-kDa polypeptide is N-terminally blocked with a formyl-methionine residue. Plasma desorption mass spectrometry established that the polypeptide is not post-translationally processed except for possible conversion of a methionine residue into methionine sulfone. The hydrophobic 4.0-kDa polypeptide is predicted to have one membrane-spanning alpha-helix and is homologous to transmembrane helix E of the D2 reaction center polypeptide of photosystem II. 相似文献
13.
Soledad Funes Edgar Davidson M Gonzalo Claros Robert van Lis Xochitl Pérez-Martínez Miriam Vázquez-Acevedo Michael P King Diego González-Halphen 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2002,277(8):6051-6058
The atp6 gene, encoding the ATP6 subunit of F(1)F(0)-ATP synthase, has thus far been found only as an mtDNA-encoded gene. However, atp6 is absent from mtDNAs of some species, including that of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Analysis of C. reinhardtii expressed sequence tags revealed three overlapping sequences that encoded a protein with similarity to ATP6 proteins. PCR and 5'- and 3'-RACE were used to obtain the complete cDNA and genomic sequences of C. reinhardtii atp6. The atp6 gene exhibited characteristics of a nucleus-encoded gene: Southern hybridization signals consistent with nuclear localization, the presence of introns, and a codon usage and a polyadenylation signal typical of nuclear genes. The corresponding ATP6 protein was confirmed as a subunit of the mitochondrial F(1)F(0)-ATP synthase from C. reinhardtii by N-terminal sequencing. The predicted ATP6 polypeptide has a 107-amino acid cleavable mitochondrial targeting sequence. The mean hydrophobicity of the protein is decreased in those transmembrane regions that are predicted not to participate directly in proton translocation or in intersubunit contacts with the multimeric ring of c subunits. This is the first example of a mitochondrial protein with more than two transmembrane stretches, directly involved in proton translocation, that is nucleus-encoded. 相似文献
14.
The second subunit of DNA polymerase III (delta) is encoded by the HYS2 gene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0 下载免费PDF全文
DNA polymerase III (delta) of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is purified as a complex of at least two polypeptides with molecular masses of 125 and 55 kDa as judged by SDS-PAGE. In this paper we determine partial amino acid sequences of the 125 and 55 kDa polypeptides and find that they match parts of the amino acid sequences predicted from the nucleotide sequence of the CDC2 and HYS2 genes respectively. We also show by Western blotting that Hys2 protein co-purifies with DNA polymerase III activity as well as Cdc2 polypeptide. The complex form of DNA polymerase III activity could not be detected in thermosensitive hys2 mutant cell extracts, although another form of DNA polymerase III was found. This form of DNA polymerase III, which could also be detected in wild-type extracts, was not associated with Hys2 protein and was not stimulated by addition of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), replication factor A (RF-A) or replication factor C (RF-C). The temperature-sensitive growth phenotype of hys2-1 and hys2-2 mutations could be suppressed by the CDC2 gene on a multicopy plasmid. These data suggest that the 55 kDa polypeptide encoded by the HYS2 gene is one of the subunits of DNA polymerase III complex in S.cerevisiae and is required for highly processive DNA synthesis catalyzed by DNA polymerase III in the presence of PCNA, RF-A and RF-C. 相似文献
15.
Under standard conditions (Mg2+/150 mM NH4+) ribosomes can quantitatively participate in tRNA binding at Mg2+ concentrations of 12 to 15 mM. The overall poly(U)-directed Phe incorporation and the extent of tRNA binding to either P, E or A sites decrease in a parallel manner when the Mg2+ concentration is lowered below 10 mM. At 4 mM the inactivation amounts to about 80%. The coordinate inactivation of all three binding sites is accompanied by an increasing impairment of the ability to translocate A-site bound AcPhe-tRNA to the P site. The translocation efficiency is already reduced at 10 mM Mg2+, and is completely blocked at 6-8 mM. The severe inactivation seen at 6 mM Mg2+ vanishes when the polyamines spermine (0.6 mM) and spermidine (0.4 mM) are present in the assay; tRNA binding again becomes quantitative, the total Phe synthesis even exceeds that observed in the absence of polyamines by a factor of 4. In the presence of polyamines and low Mg2+ (3 and 6 mM) two essential features of the allosteric three-site model (Rheinberger and Nierhaus, J. Biol. Chem. 261, 9133 (1986] are demonstrated. 1) Deacylated tRNA is not released from the P site, but moves to the E site during the course of translocation. 2) Occupation of the E site reduces the A site affinity and vice versa (allosteric interactions between E and A sites). The quality of an in vitro system for protein synthesis can be assessed by two criteria. First, the incubation conditions must allow a near quantitative tRNA binding. Secondly, protein synthesis should proceed with near in vivo rate and accuracy. The 3 mM Mg2+/NH4+/polyamine-system seems to be the best compromise at present between these two requirements. 相似文献