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1.
Betalactam antibiotics (BLA) are the most widely used antibacterial drugs in practical medicine. Recent experiments suggested that BLA, especially after "aging" in aqueous solutions, have an inhibitory effect on the growth of a variety of cultured human cells by interfering with DNA synthesis (Neftel et al. Cell Biol. Toxicol. 2, 513-521, 1986). Our initial observation that the replicative DNA polymerase alpha might be the target of the action of betalactam compounds (Hübscher et al. Cell Biol Toxicol. 2, 541-548, 1986) is now substantiated due to the following experimental data: (i) extractable DNA polymerase alpha is greatly reduced in cells that had been treated with BLA; (ii) the relative cellular distribution of thymidine and of its phosphorylated derivatives is not affected by BLA; (iii) BLA inhibit crude and highly purified mammalian DNA polymerase alpha; (iv) the inhibitory effect appears to be of the mixed type with a slight deviation from purely non-competitive behaviour towards the four deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates and; (v) the inhibition is evident in aphidicolin sensitive DNA polymerases from mammalian tissues and in DNA polymerases from DNA viruses such as Herpes simplex and Vaccinia. In sum, the results suggest that one of the most commonly used class of drugs has a target within eukaryotic cells being most likely the replicative DNA polymerase alpha.  相似文献   

2.
The abundance of the histonelike H protein of Escherichia coli (U. Hübscher, H. Lutz, and A. Kornberg, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 77:5097-5101, 1980) was determined by using monoclonal antibodies against H protein, immunoblotting, and homogeneous H protein as a standard. H protein was found to be present at approximately 120,000 monomeric molecules per fast-growing E. coli cell. This amount of H protein corresponds to a ratio of one H protein molecule to approximately 200 base pairs of the bacterial chromosome. Together with previous results, these findings suggest that H protein has histonelike function similar to that of histone protein H2A, its counterpart in the eucaryotic cell.  相似文献   

3.
Two ribonucleases H (RNases H) were purified to apparent homogeneity from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The enzymes were separated from the previously described yeast ribonuclease H (RNase H(70), Karwan, R., Blutsch, H., and Wintersberger, U. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 5500-5507) by chromatography on Mono Q and blue-Sepharose columns and from each other on a Mono S column. The two proteins, RNase H(55) of molecular weight around 55,000 and RNase H(42) of molecular weight around 42,000, exhibit distinct enzymatic properties: RNase H(55) acts as a 5'-exonuclease of low specific activity and produces predominantly monoribonucleotides from the synthetic hybrid poly(rA)-poly(dT). RNase H(42) efficiently releases oligoribonucleotides from the same substrate. Polyclonal antibodies against these proteins do not cross-react with RNase H(70), and thus, these two RNases H probably do not represent proteolytic breakdown products of RNase H(70). Peptide maps obtained by total digestion of RNase H(55) and RNase H(42) with trypsin reveal several common peptides and, therefore, suggest that the two enzymes are related to each other. We tentatively conclude that RNase H(55) is proteolytically processed to RNase H(42) in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
DNA polymerase alpha, delta and epsilon can be isolated simultaneously from calf thymus. DNA polymerase delta was purified to apparent homogeneity by a four-column procedure including DEAE-Sephacel, phenyl-Sepharose, phosphocellulose, and hydroxylapatite, yielding two polypeptides of 125 and 48 kDa, respectively. On hydroxylapatite DNA polymerase delta can completely be separated from DNA polymerase epsilon. By KCl DNA polymerase delta is eluted first, while addition of potassium phosphate elutes DNA polymerase epsilon. DNA polymerases delta and epsilon could be distinguished from DNA polymerase alpha by their (i) resistance to the monoclonal antibody SJK 132-20, (ii) relative resistance to N2-[p-(n-butyl)phenyl]-2-deoxyguanosine triphosphate and 2-[p-(n-butyl)anilino]-2-deoxyadenosine triphosphate, (iii) presence of a 3'----5' exonuclease, (iv) polypeptide composition, (v) template requirements, (vi) processivities on the homopolymer poly(dA)/oligo(dT12-18), and (vii) lack of primase. The following differences of DNA polymerase delta to DNA polymerase epsilon were evident: (i) the independence of DNA polymerase epsilon to proliferating cell nuclear antigen for processivity, (ii) utilization of deoxy- and ribonucleotide primers, (iii) template requirements in the absence of proliferating cell nuclear antigen, (iv) mode of elution from hydroxylapatite, and (v) sensitivity to d2TTP and to dimethyl sulfoxide. Both enzymes contain a 3'----5' exonuclease, but are devoid of endonuclease, RNase H, DNA helicase, DNA dependent ATPase, DNA primase, and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase. DNA polymerase delta is 100-150 fold dependent on proliferating cell nuclear antigen for activity and processivity on poly(dA)/oligo(dT12-18) at base ratios between 1:1 to 100:1. The activity of DNA polymerase delta requires an acidic pH of 6.5 and is also found on poly(dT)/oligo(dA12-18) and on poly(dT)/oligo(A12-18) but not on 10 other templates tested. All three DNA polymerases can be classified according to the revised nomenclature for eukaryotic DNA polymerases (Burgers, P.M. J., Bambara, R. A., Campbell, J. L., Chang, L. M. S., Downey, K. M., Hübscher, U., Lee, M. Y. W. T., Linn, S. M., So, A. G., and Spadari, S. (1990) Eur. J. Biochem. 191, 617-618).  相似文献   

5.
RNases H participate in the replication and maintenance of genomic DNA. RNase H1 cleaves the RNA strand of RNA/DNA hybrids, and RNase H2 in addition hydrolyzes the RNA residue of RNA–DNA junctions. RNase H3 is structurally closely related to RNases H2, but its biochemical properties are similar to type 1 enzymes. Its unique N-terminal substrate-binding domain (N-domain) is related to TATA-binding protein. Here, we report the first crystal structure of RNase H3 in complex with its RNA/DNA substrate. Just like RNases H1, type 3 enzyme recognizes the 2′-OH groups of the RNA strand and detects the DNA strand by binding a phosphate group and inducing B-form conformation. Moreover, the N-domain recognizes RNA and DNA in a manner that is highly similar to the hybrid-binding domain of RNases H1. Our structure demonstrates a remarkable example of parallel evolution of the elements used in the specific recognition of RNA and DNA.  相似文献   

6.
We have analyzed the cleavage specificities of various prokaryotic Type 2 ribonucleases H (RNases H) on chimeric DNA-RNA-DNA/DNA substrates containing one to four ribonucleotides. RNases HII from Bacillus subtilis and Thermococcus kodakaraensis cleaved all of these substrates to produce a DNA segment with a 5'-monoribonucleotide. Consequently, these enzymes cleaved even the chimeric substrate containing a single ribonucleotide at the DNA-RNA junction (5'-side of the single ribonucleotide). In contrast, Escherichia coli RNase HI and B. subtilis RNase HIII did not cleave the chimeric substrate containing a single ribonucleotide. These results suggest that bacterial and archaeal RNases HII are involved in excision of a single ribonucleotide misincorporated into DNA.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND: RNases H are present in all organisms and cleave RNAs in RNA/DNA hybrids. There are two major types of RNases H that have little similarity in sequence, size and specificity. The structure of RNase HI, the smaller enzyme and most abundant in bacteria, has been extensively studied. However, no structural information is available for the larger RNase H, which is most abundant in eukaryotes and archaea. Mammalian RNase H participates in DNA replication, removal of the Okazaki fragments and possibly DNA repair. RESULTS: The crystal structure of RNase HII from the hypothermophile Methanococcus jannaschii, which is homologous to mammalian RNase H, was solved using a multiwavelength anomalous dispersion (MAD) phasing method at 2 A resolution. The structure contains two compact domains. Despite the absence of sequence similarity, the large N-terminal domain shares a similar fold with the RNase HI of bacteria. The active site of RNase HII contains three aspartates: Asp7, Asp112 and Asp149. The nucleotide-binding site is located in the cleft between the N-terminal and C-terminal domains. CONCLUSIONS: Despite a lack of any detectable similarity in primary structure, RNase HII shares a similar structural domain with RNase HI, suggesting that the two classes of RNases H have a common catalytic mechanism and possibly a common evolutionary origin. The involvement of the unique C-terminal domain in substrate recognition explains the different reaction specificity observed between the two classes of RNase H.  相似文献   

8.
RNase H2 cleaves RNA sequences that are part of RNA/DNA hybrids or that are incorporated into DNA, thus, preventing genomic instability and the accumulation of aberrant nucleic acid, which in humans induces Aicardi-Goutières syndrome, a severe autoimmune disorder. The 3.1 Å crystal structure of human RNase H2 presented here allowed us to map the positions of all 29 mutations found in Aicardi-Goutières syndrome patients, several of which were not visible in the previously reported mouse RNase H2. We propose the possible effects of these mutations on the protein stability and function. Bacterial and eukaryotic RNases H2 differ in composition and substrate specificity. Bacterial RNases H2 are monomeric proteins and homologs of the eukaryotic RNases H2 catalytic subunit, which in addition possesses two accessory proteins. The eukaryotic RNase H2 heterotrimeric complex recognizes RNA/DNA hybrids and (5′)RNA-DNA(3′)/DNA junction hybrids as substrates with similar efficiency, whereas bacterial RNases H2 are highly specialized in the recognition of the (5′)RNA-DNA(3′) junction and very poorly cleave RNA/DNA hybrids in the presence of Mg2+ ions. Using the crystal structure of the Thermotoga maritima RNase H2-substrate complex, we modeled the human RNase H2-substrate complex and verified the model by mutational analysis. Our model indicates that the difference in substrate preference stems from the different position of the crucial tyrosine residue involved in substrate binding and recognition.  相似文献   

9.
Ribonuclease H: from discovery to 3D structure   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
  相似文献   

10.
RNase H activity increases markedly after bacteriophage T4 infection of Escherichia coli MIC2003, an RNase H-deficient host. We have extensively purified the RNase H from these T4-infected cells and have shown that the RNase H activity copurifies with a 5' to 3' DNA exonuclease activity. The N-terminal sequence of a 35-kDa protein copurifying with the RNase H activity matches the terminus of the predicted product of an open reading frame (designated ORF A or 33.2) upstream of T4 gene 33, identified previously by Hahn and co-workers (Hahn, S., Kruse, U., and Rüger, W. (1986) Nucleic Acids Res. 14, 9311-9327). Plasmids containing ORF A under the control of the T7 promoter express RNase H and 5' to 3' DNA exonuclease activities as well as a protein that comigrates on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels with the 35-kDa protein present in the RNase H purified from T4-infected cells. T4 RNase H removes the pentamer RNA primers from DNA chains initiated by the T4 primase-helicase (gene products 61 and 41). Addition of T4 RNase H and T4 DNA ligase leads to extensive joining of discontinuous lagging strand fragments in the T4 DNA replication system in vitro.  相似文献   

11.
12.
We have isolated a 55-kDa enzyme from Saccharomyces cerevisiae on the basis of its ability to hydrolyze specifically the RNA moiety of RNA/DNA hybrids [RNase H(55)]. Remarkably, monospecific anti-[RNase H(55)] antibodies revealed that the protein associates with several small RNAs, including some of the essential yeast spliceosomal snRNAs. Moreover, immunoprecipitation as well as immunoblotting experiments demonstrated that the yeast enzyme reacts (a) with human anti-Sm autoantisera, (b) with a monoclonal antibody specific for the human snRNP proteins B/B', but (c) not with U1-ribonucleoprotein-specific autoantibodies. These results disclosed a hitherto unexpected degree of evolutionary conservation in snRNP protein structure between yeast and man. Additionally, our findings suggested a re-evaluation of the enzymatic mechanism of RNases H which recognize both RNA and RNA/DNA hybrids.  相似文献   

13.
Database searches of the Caenorhabditis elegans and human genomic DNA sequences revealed genes encoding ribonuclease H1 (RNase H1) and RNase H2 in each genome. The human genome contains a single copy of each gene, whereas C. elegans has four genes encoding RNase H1-related proteins and one gene for RNase H2. By analyzing the mRNAs produced from the C. elegans genes, examining the amino acid sequence of the predicted protein, and expressing the proteins in Esherichia coli we have identified two active RNase H1-like proteins. One is similar to other eukaryotic RNases H1, whereas the second RNase H (rnh-1.1) is unique. The rnh-1.0 gene is transcribed as a dicistronic message with three dsRNA-binding domains; the mature mRNA is transspliced with SL2 splice leader and contains only one dsRNA-binding domain. Formation of RNase H1 is further regulated by differential cis-splicing events. A single rnh-2 gene, encoding a protein similar to several other eukaryotic RNase H2L's, also has been examined. The diversity and enzymatic properties of RNase H homologues are other examples of expansion of protein families in C. elegans. The presence of two RNases H1 in C. elegans suggests that two enzymes are required in this rather simple organism to perform the functions that are accomplished by a single enzyme in more complex organisms. Phylogenetic analysis indicates that the active C. elegans RNases H1 are distantly related to one another and that the C. elegans RNase H1 is more closely related to the human RNase H1. The database searches also suggest that RNase H domains of LTR-retrotransposons in C. elegans are quite unrelated to cellular RNases H1, but numerous RNase H domains of human endogenous retroviruses are more closely related to cellular RNases H.  相似文献   

14.
Mammalian DNA helicase.   总被引:8,自引:5,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
A forked DNA was constructed to serve as a substrate for DNA helicases. It contains features closely resembling a natural replication fork. The DNA was prepared in large amounts and was used to assay displacement activity during isolation from calf thymus DNA polymerases alpha holoenzyme. One form of DNA polymerase alpha holoenzyme is possibly involved leading strand replication at the replication fork and possesses DNA dependent ATPase activity (Ottiger, H.-P. and Hübscher, U. (1984) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 81, 3993-3997). The enzyme can be separated from DNA polymerase alpha by velocity sedimentation in conditions of very low ionic strength and then be purified by chromatography on Sephacryl S-200 and ATP-agarose. At all stages of purification, DNA dependent ATPase and displacement activity profiles were virtually superimposable. The DNA dependent ATPase can displace a hybridized DNA fragment with a short single-stranded tail at its 3'hydroxyl end only in the presence of ATP, and this displacement relies on ATP hydrolysis. Furthermore, homogeneous single-stranded binding proteins from calf thymus as well as from other tissues cannot perform this displacement reaction. By all this token the DNA dependent ATPase appears to be a DNA helicase. It is suggested that this DNA helicase might act in concert with DNA polymerase alpha at the leading strand, possibly pushing the replication fork ahead of the polymerase.  相似文献   

15.
Purification and properties of bovine kidney ribonucleases   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Two RNases (RNases K1 and K2) were purified from bovine kidney by means of column chromatography on phospho-cellulose, Sephadex G-50, CM-cellulose, heparin-Sepharose, nd agarose-APUP. They were named RNase K1 and RNase K2 in order of elution from the heparin-Sepharose column. The purity of RNase K1 thus obtained was about 90% by SDS-disc electrophoresis. RNase K2 was purified to homogeneity by SDS- and pH 4.3 disc electrophoresis. The yield of RNase K2 was 3.4 mg from 11 kg of kidneys. The antigenic properties of the two bovine renal RNases were studied by Ouchterlony's double diffusion analysis. RNase K1 and RNase A were serologically indistinguishable. RNase K2 did not cross-react immunologically with RNase K1 or RNase A. The molecular weights of these RNases determined by gel-filtration on Sephadex G-50 were 13,400 and 14,600 for RNase K1 and RNase K2, respectively. The pH optima for RNase K1 and RNase K2 were 8.5 and 6.5, respectively. Both RNase K1 and RNase K2 were as acid stable as RNase A. RNase K2 was less heat-stable than RNase K1 and RNase A. Although both renal RNases were pyrimidine nucleotide-specific enzymes, RNase K1 and RNase A were more preferential or cytidylic acid than RNase K2. The chemical composition of RNase K2 was determined. RNase K2, like human urinary RNase Us, contained one tryptophan residue. The N-terminal sequences of RNase K2 and RNase Us were determined by Edman degradation. Rnase K2 had a homologous sequence of about 10 amino acid residues with the sequence of RNase Us, a typical non-secretory RNase, within the N-terminal 30 residues.  相似文献   

16.
The gene encoding RNase HII from the psychrotrophic bacterium, Shewanella sp. SIB1 was cloned, overexpressed in Escherichia coli, and the recombinant protein was purified and biochemically characterized. SIB1 RNase HII is a monomeric protein with 212 amino acid residues and shows an amino acid sequence identity of 64% to E. coli RNase HII. The enzymatic properties of SIB1 RNase HII, such as metal ion preference, pH optimum, and cleavage mode of substrate, were similar to those of E. coli RNase HII. SIB1 RNase HII was less stable than E. coli RNase HII, but the difference was marginal. The half-lives of SIB1 and E. coli RNases HII at 30 degrees C were approximately 30 and 45 min, respectively. The midpoint of the urea denaturation curve and optimum temperature of SIB1 RNase HII were lower than those of E. coli RNase HII by approximately 0.2 M and approximately 5 degrees C, respectively. However, SIB1 RNase HII was much more active than E. coli RNase HII at all temperatures studied. The specific activity of SIB1 RNase HII at 30 degrees C was 20 times that of E. coli RNase HII. Because SIB1 RNase HII was also much more active than SIB1 RNase HI, RNases HI and HII represent low- and high-activity type RNases H, respectively, in SIB1. In contrast, RNases HI and HII represent high- and low-activity type RNases H, respectively, in E. coli. We propose that bacterial cells usually contain low- and high-activity type RNases H, but these types are not correlated with RNase H families.  相似文献   

17.
Recent techniques for detecting the catalytic activity of enzymes in sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gels have been hampered by lack of reproducibility associated with variability in commercial SDS preparations. Simple expedients which facilitate reproducible detection of DNA polymerase activity and which appear to be widely applicable to detection of other enzymes are reported here. It was observed that reproducibility of a reported procedure for DNA polymerase detection (Spanos, A., Sedgwick, S. G., Yarranton, G. T., Hübscher, U., and Banks, G. R. (1981) Nucl. Acids Res.9, 1825–1839) depends on the SDS used for electrophoresis, and that sensitivity is markedly reduced if currently available SDS is substituted for the discontinued product specified by Spanos et al. A modified procedure yielding sensitivity with contemporary commercial SDS, which exceeds the sensitivity observed when using the protocol and the SDS originally specified, is described. The modifications employed, which presumably promote renaturation of enzymes, are (1) embedding fibrinogen in gels and (2) washing detergent from gels with aqueous isopropanol after electrophoresis. These expedients permit detection of picogram amounts of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I and its Klenow fragment and nanogram amounts of calf thymus α and rat liver (Novikoff hepatoma) β polymerases. Finally, it is shown that sensitivity of DNA polymerase detection is reduced by lipophilic contaminants in contemporary commercial SDS, and that the expedients employed here mitigate the deleterious effect of these impurities.  相似文献   

18.
Ohtani N  Tomita M  Itaya M 《The FEBS journal》2008,275(21):5444-5455
Junction ribonuclease (JRNase) recognizes the transition from RNA to DNA of an RNA-DNA/DNA hybrid, such as an Okazaki fragment, and cleaves it, leaving a mono-ribonucleotide at the 5' terminus of the RNA-DNA junction. Although this JRNase activity was originally reported in calf RNase H2, some other RNases H have recently been suggested to possess it. This paper shows that these enzymes can also cleave an RNA-DNA/RNA heteroduplex in a manner similar to the RNA-DNA/DNA substrate. The cleavage site of the RNA-DNA/RNA substrate corresponds to the RNA/RNA duplex region, indicating that the cleavage activity cannot be categorized as RNase H activity, which specifically cleaves an RNA strand of an RNA/DNA hybrid. Examination of several RNases H with respect to JRNase activity suggested that the activity is only found in RNase HII orthologs. Therefore, RNases HIII, which are RNase HII paralogs, are distinguished from RNases HII by the absence of JRNase activity. Whether a substrate can be targeted by JRNase activity would depend only on whether or not an RNA-DNA junction consisting of one ribonucleotide and one deoxyribonucleotide is included in the duplex. In addition, although the activity has been reported not to occur on completely single-stranded RNA-DNA, it can recognize a single-stranded RNA-DNA junction if a double-stranded region is located adjacent to the junction.  相似文献   

19.
In most tissues, ribonucleases (RNases) are found in a latent form complexed with ribonuclease inhibitor (RI). To examine whether these so-called cytoplasmic RNases belong to the same superfamily as pancreatic RNases, we have purified from porcine liver two such RNases (PL1 and PL3) and examined their primary structures. It was found that RNase PL1 belonged to the same family as human RNase Us [Beintema et al. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 4530-4538] and bovine RNase K2 [Irie et al. (1988) J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 104, 289-296]. RNase PL3 was found to be a hitherto structurally uncharacterized type of RNase. Its polypeptide chain of 119 amino acid residues was N-terminally blocked with pyroglutamic acid, and its sequence differed at 63 positions with that of the pancreatic enzyme. All residues important for catalysis and substrate binding have been conserved. Comparison of the primary structure of RNase PL3 with that of its bovine counterpart (RNase BL4; M. Irie, personal communication) revealed an unusual conservation for this class of enzymes; the 2 enzymes were identical at 112 positions. Moreover, comparison of the amino acid compositions of these RNases with that of a human colon carcinoma-derived RNase, RNase HT-29 [Shapiro et al. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 7255-7264], suggested that these three proteins are orthologous gene products. The structural characteristics of RNases PL1 and PL3 were typical of secreted RNases, and this observation questions the proposed cytoplasmic origin of these RI-associated enzymes.  相似文献   

20.
RNases H are involved in the removal of RNA from RNA/DNA hybrids. Type I RNases H are thought to recognize and cleave the RNA/DNA duplex when at least four ribonucleotides are present. Here we investigated the importance of RNase H type I encoding genes for model organism Mycobacterium smegmatis. By performing gene replacement through homologous recombination, we demonstrate that each of the two presumable RNase H type I encoding genes, rnhA and MSMEG4305, can be removed from M. smegmatis genome without affecting the growth rate of the mutant. Further, we demonstrate that deletion of both RNases H type I encoding genes in M. smegmatis leads to synthetic lethality. Finally, we question the possibility of existence of RNase HI related alternative mode of initiation of DNA replication in M. smegmatis, the process initially discovered in Escherichia coli. We suspect that synthetic lethality of double mutant lacking RNases H type I is caused by formation of R-loops leading to collapse of replication forks. We report Mycobacterium smegmatis as the first bacterial species, where function of RNase H type I has been found essential.  相似文献   

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