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1.
Previous characterization of Escherichia coli endonuclease IV has shown that the enzyme specifically cleaves the DNA backbone at apurinic/apyrimidinic sites and removes 3' DNA blocking groups. By contrast, and unlike the major apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease exonuclease III, negligible exonuclease activity has been associated with endonuclease IV. Here we report that endonuclease IV does possess an intrinsic 3'-5' exonuclease activity. The activity was detected in purified preparations of the endonuclease IV protein from E. coli and from the distantly related thermophile Thermotoga maritima; it co-eluted with both enzymes under different chromatographic conditions. Induction of either endonuclease IV in an E. coli overexpression system resulted in induction of the exonuclease activity, and the E. coli exonuclease activity had similar heat stability to the endonuclease IV AP endonuclease activity. Characterization of the exonuclease activity showed that its progression on substrate is sensitive to ionic strength, metal ions, EDTA, and reducing conditions. Substrates with 3' recessed ends were preferred substrates for the 3'-5' exonuclease activity. Comparison of the relative apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease and exonuclease activity of endonuclease IV shows that the relative exonuclease activity is high and is likely to be significant in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
The oligonucleotide [5'-32P]pdT8d(-)dTn, containing an apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) site [d(-)], yields three radioactive products when incubated at alkaline pH: two of them, forming a doublet approximately at the level of pdT8dA when analysed by polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, are the result of the beta-elimination reaction, whereas the third is pdT8p resulting from beta delta-elimination. The incubation of [5'-32P]pdT8d(-)dTn, hybridized with poly(dA), with E. coli endonuclease III yields two radioactive products which have the same electrophoretic behaviour as the doublet obtained by alkaline beta-elimination. The oligonucleotide pdT8d(-) is degraded by the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of T4 DNA polymerase as well as pdT8dA, showing that a base-free deoxyribose at the 3' end is not an obstacle for this activity. The radioactive products from [5'-32P]pdT8d(-)dTn cleaved by alkaline beta-elimination or by E. coli endonuclease III are not degraded by the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of T4 DNA polymerase. When DNA containing AP sites labelled with 32P 5' to the base-free deoxyribose labelled with 3H in the 1' and 2' positions is degraded by E. coli endonuclease VI (exonuclease III) and snake venom phosphodiesterase, the two radionuclides are found exclusively in deoxyribose 5-phosphate and the 3H/32P ratio in this sugar phosphate is the same as in the substrate DNA. When DNA containing these doubly-labelled AP sites is degraded by alkaline treatment or with Lys-Trp-Lys, followed by E. coli endonuclease VI (exonuclease III), some 3H is found in a volatile compound (probably 3H2O) whereas the 3H/32P ratio is decreased in the resulting sugar phosphate which has a chromatographic behaviour different from that of deoxyribose 5-phosphate. Treatment of the DNA containing doubly-labelled AP sites with E. coli endonuclease III, then with E. coli endonuclease VI (exonuclease III), also results in the loss of 3H and the formation of a sugar phosphate with a lower 3H/32P ratio that behaves chromatographically as the beta-elimination product digested with E. coli endonuclease VI (exonuclease III). From these data, we conclude that E. coli endonuclease III cleaves the phosphodiester bond 3' to the AP site, but that the cleavage is not a hydrolysis leaving a base-free deoxyribose at the 3' end as it has been so far assumed. The cleavage might be the result of a beta-elimination analogous to the one produced by an alkaline pH or Lys-Trp-Lys. Thus it would seem that E. coli 'endonuclease III' is, after all, not an endonuclease.  相似文献   

3.
Escherichia coli endonuclease IV hydrolyses the C(3')-O-P bond 5' to a 3'-terminal base-free deoxyribose. It also hydrolyses the C(3')-O-P bond 5' to a 3'-terminal base-free 2',3'-unsaturated sugar produced by nicking 3' to an AP (apurinic or apyrimidinic) site by beta-elimination; this explains why the unproductive end produced by beta-elimination is converted by the enzyme into a 3'-OH end able to prime DNA synthesis. The action of E. coli endonuclease IV on an internal AP site is more complex: in a first step the C(3')-O-P bond 5' to the AP site is hydrolysed, but in a second step the 5'-terminal base-free deoxyribose 5'-phosphate is lost. This loss is due to a spontaneous beta-elimination reaction in which the enzyme plays no role. The extreme lability of the C(3')-O-P bond 3' to a 5'-terminal AP site contrasts with the relative stability of the same bond 3' to an internal AP site; in the absence of beta-elimination catalysts, at 37 degrees C the half-life of the former is about 2 h and that of the latter 200 h. The extreme lability of a 5'-terminal AP site means that, after nicking 5' to an AP site with an AP endonuclease, in principle no 5'----3' exonuclease is needed to excise the AP site: it falls off spontaneously. We have repaired DNA containing AP sites with an AP endonuclease (E. coli endonuclease IV or the chromatin AP endonuclease from rat liver), a DNA polymerase devoid of 5'----3' exonuclease activity (Klenow polymerase or rat liver DNA polymerase beta) and a DNA ligase. Catalysts of beta-elimination, such as spermine, can drastically shorten the already brief half-life of a 5'-terminal AP site; it is what very probably happens in the chromatin of eukaryotic cells. E. coli endonuclease IV also probably participates in the repair of strand breaks produced by ionizing radiations: as E. coli endonuclease VI/exonuclease III, it is a 3'-phosphoglycollatase and also a 3'-phosphatase. The 3'-phosphatase activity of E. coli endonuclease VI/exonuclease III and E. coli endonuclease IV can also be useful when the AP site has been excised by a beta delta-elimination reaction.  相似文献   

4.
The early steps of excision repair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers are investigated. It is demonstrated that the apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease associated with the Micrococcus luteus uv-specific endonuclease cleaves the phosphodiester bond on the 3' side of the deoxyribose leaving a 3' hydroxy terminus and a 5' phosphoryl terminus. This nick is not a substrate for T4 polynucleotide ligase. The 3' base-free deoxyribose terminus is not a substrate for either the polymerase or the 3' to 5' exonuclease activities of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I. However, the 3' terminus of the nick is converted to a substrate for DNA polymerization by the action of a 5' apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease. A three-step model for the incision step of excision repair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers is presented.  相似文献   

5.
1-Methyl-9H-pyrido-[3,4-b]indole (harmane) inhibits the apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonuclease activity of the UV endonuclease induced by phage T4, whereas it stimulates the pyrimidine dimer-DNA glycosylase activity of that enzyme. E. coli endonuclease IV, E. coli endonuclease VI (the AP endonuclease activity associated with E. coli exonuclease III), and E. coli uracil-DNA glycosylase were not inhibited by harmane. Human fibroblast AP endonucleases I and II also were only slightly inhibited. Therefore, harmane is neither a general inhibitor of AP endonucleases, nor a general inhibitor of Class I AP endonucleases which incise DNA on the 3'-side of AP sites. However, E. coli endonuclease III and its associated dihydroxythymine-DNA glycosylase activity were both inhibited by harmane. This observation suggests that harmane may inhibit only AP endonucleases which have associated glycosylase activities.  相似文献   

6.
The major abasic endonuclease of human cells, Ape1 protein, is a multifunctional enzyme with critical roles in base excision repair (BER) of DNA. In addition to its primary activity as an apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease in BER, Ape1 also possesses 3'-phosphodiesterase, 3'-phosphatase, and 3'-->5'-exonuclease functions specific for the 3' termini of internal nicks and gaps in DNA. The exonuclease activity is enhanced at 3' mismatches, which suggests a possible role in BER for Ape1 as a proofreading activity for the relatively inaccurate DNA polymerase beta. To elucidate this role more precisely, we investigated the ability of Ape1 to degrade DNA substrates that mimic BER intermediates. We found that the Ape1 exonuclease is active at both mismatched and correctly matched 3' termini, with preference for mismatches. In our hands, the exonuclease activity of Ape1 was more active at one-nucleotide gaps than at nicks in DNA, even though the latter should represent the product of repair synthesis by polymerase beta. However, the exonuclease activity was inhibited by the presence of nearby 5'-incised abasic residues, which result from the apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease activity of Ape1. The same was true for the recently described exonuclease activity of Escherichia coli endonuclease IV. Exonuclease III, the E. coli homolog of Ape1, did not discriminate among the different substrates. Removal of the 5' abasic residue by polymerase beta alleviated the inhibition of the Ape1 exonuclease activity. These results suggest roles for the Ape1 exonuclease during BER after both DNA repair synthesis and excision of the abasic deoxyribose-5-phosphate by polymerase beta.  相似文献   

7.
The main endonuclease for apurinic sites of Escherichia coli (endonuclease VI) has no action on normal strands, either in double-stranded or single-stranded DNA, or on alkylated sites. The enzyme has an optimum pH at 8.5, is inhibited by EDTA and needs Mg2+ for its activity; it has a half-life of 7 min at 40 degrees C. A purified preparation of endonuclease VI, free of endonuclease II activity, contained exonuclease III; the two activities (endonuclease VI and exonuclease III) copurified and were inactivated with the same half-lives at 40 degrees C. Endonuclease VI cuts the DNA strands on the 5' side of the apurinic sites giving a 3'-OH and a 5'-phosphate, and exonuclease III, working afterwards, leaves the apurinic site in the DNA molecule; this apurinic site can subsequently be removed by DNA polymerase I. The details of the excision of apurinic sites in vitro from DNA by endonuclease VI/exonuclease III, DNA polymerase I and ligase, are described; it is suggested that exonuclease III works as an antiligase to facilitate the DNA repair.  相似文献   

8.
DNA deoxyribophosphodiesterase.   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17       下载免费PDF全文
A previously unrecognized enzyme acting on damaged termini in DNA is present in Escherichia coli. The enzyme catalyses the hydrolytic release of 2-deoxyribose-5-phosphate from single-strand interruptions in DNA with a base-free residue on the 5' side. The partly purified protein appears to be free from endonuclease activity for apurinic/apyrimidinic sites, exonuclease activity and DNA 5'-phosphatase activity. The enzyme has a mol. wt of approximately 50,000-55,000 and has been termed DNA deoxyribophosphodiesterase (dRpase). The protein presumably is active in DNA excision repair to remove a sugar-phosphate residue from an endonucleolytically incised apurinic/apyrimidinic site, prior to gap filling and ligation.  相似文献   

9.
A Price  T Lindahl 《Biochemistry》1991,30(35):8631-8637
Activities that catalyze or promote the release of 5'-terminal deoxyribose phosphate residues from DNA abasic sites previously incised by an AP endonuclease have been identified in soluble extracts of several human cell lines and calf thymus. Such excision of base-free sugar phosphate residues from apurinic/apyrimidinic sites is expected to be obligatory prior to repair by gap filling and ligation. The most efficient excision function is due to a DNA deoxyribophosphodiesterase similar to the protein found in Escherichia coli. The human enzyme has been partially purified and freed from detectable exonuclease activity. This DNA deoxyribophosphodiesterase is a Mg(2+)-requiring hydrolytic enzyme with an apparent molecular mass of approximately 47 kDa and is located in the cell nucleus. By comparison, the major nuclear 5'----3' exonuclease, DNase IV, is unable to catalyze the release of 5'-terminal deoxyribose phosphate residues as free sugar phosphates but can liberate them at a slow rate as part of small oligonucleotides. Nonenzymatic removal of 5'-terminal deoxyribose phosphate from DNA by beta-elimination promoted by polyamines and basic proteins is a very slow mechanism of release compared to enzymatic hydrolysis. We conclude that a DNA deoxyribophosphodiesterase acts at an intermediate stage between an AP endonuclease and a DNA polymerase during DNA repair at apurinic/apyrimidinc sites in mammalian cells, but several alternative routes also exist for the excision of deoxyribose phosphate residues.  相似文献   

10.
DNA deoxyribophosphodiesterase (dRpase) of E. coli catalyzes the release of deoxyribose-phosphate moieties following the cleavage of DNA at an apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) site by either an AP endonuclease or AP lyase. Exonuclease I is a single-strand specific DNA nuclease which affects the expression of recombination and repair pathways in E. coli. We show here that a major dRpase activity in E. coli is associated with the exonuclease I protein. Highly purified exonuclease I isolated from an over-producing stain contains high levels of dRpase activity; it catalyzes the release of deoxyribose-5-phosphate from an AP site incised with endonuclease IV of E. coli and the release of 4-hydroxy-2-pentenal-5-phosphate from an AP site incised by the AP lyase activity of endonuclease III of E. coli. A strain containing a deletion of the sbcB gene showed little dRpase activity; the activity could be restored by transformation of the strain with a plasmid containing the sbcB gene. The dRpase activity isolated from an overproducing stain was increased 70-fold as compared to a normal sbcB+ strain (AB3027). These results suggest that the dRpase activity may be important in pathways for both DNA repair and recombination.  相似文献   

11.
Mechanism of action of Micrococcus luteus gamma-endonuclease   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Micrococcus luteus extracts contain gamma-endonuclease, a Mg2+-independent endonuclease that cleaves gamma-irradiated DNA. This enzyme has been purified approximately 1000-fold, and the purified enzyme was used to study its substrate specificity and mechanism of action. gamma-Endonuclease cleaves DNA containing either thymine glycols, urea residues, or apurinic sites but not undamaged DNA or DNA containing reduced apurinic sites. The enzyme has both N-glycosylase activity that releases thymine glycol residues from OsO4-treated DNA and an associated apurinic endonuclease activity. The location and nature of the cleavage site produced has been determined with DNA sequencing techniques. gamma-Endonuclease cleaves DNA containing thymine glycols or apurinic sites immediately 3' to the damaged or missing base. Cleavage results in a 5'-phosphate terminus and a 3' baseless sugar residue. Cleavage sites can be converted to primers for DNA polymerase I by subsequent treatment with Escherichia coli exonuclease III. The mechanism of action of gamma-endonuclease and its substrate specificity are very similar to those identified for E. coli endonuclease III.  相似文献   

12.
It has been shown previously that the DNA deoxyribophosphodiesterase (dRpase) activity of Escherichia coli excises 2-deoxyribose 5-phosphate moieties at apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites in DNA following cleavage of the DNA at the AP site by an AP endonuclease such as endonuclease IV of E coli. A second class of enzymes that cleave DNA at AP sites by a beta-elimination mechanism, AP lyases, leave a different sugar-phosphate product remaining at the AP site, which has been identified as the compound trans-4-hydroxy-2-pentenal 5-phosphate. It is shown that dRpase removes this unsaturated sugar-phosphate group following cleavage of a poly(dA-dT) substrate containing AP sites by the action of the AP lyase endonuclease III of E. coli. The Km for the removal of trans-4-hydroxy-2-pentenal 5-phosphate is 0.06 microM; the Km for the removal of 2-deoxyribose 5-phosphate is 0.17 microM. It was verified that the sugar-phosphate product removed by dRpase from the endonuclease III-cleaved substrate was trans-4-hydroxy-2-pentenal 5-phosphate by conversion of the product to the compound cyclopentane-1,2-dione. The dRpase activity is unique in its ability to remove sugar-phosphate products after cleavage by both AP endonucleases and AP lyases.  相似文献   

13.
Contradictory data have recently been published from two different laboratories on the presence vs absence of an intrinsic endonucliolytic activity of E. coli exonuclease III at apurinic sites in double-stranded DNA. It is shown here that an endonuclease activity of this specificity co-chromatographs exactly with exonuclease III on phosphocellulose and Sephadex G-75 columns, indicating that the endonuclease and exonuclease activities are due to the same enzyme. In addition, another E. coli endonuclease specific for apurinic sites exists, which can be separated from exonuclease III by the same chromatographic procedures.  相似文献   

14.
A new endonuclease from Escherichia coli acting at apurinic sites in DNA.   总被引:27,自引:0,他引:27  
A new DNA endonuclease has been purified 3000-fold from Escherichia coli. The enzyme specifically catalyzes the formation of single strand breaks at apurinic and apyrimidinic sites in DNA, but has no activity on intact or single-stranded DNA. Further, the enzyme shows little or no activity on heavily ultraviolet-irradiated DNA, but cleaves x-irradiated DNA, presumably at apurinic and apyrimidinic sites introduced by the radiation treatment. The enzyme, which is tentatively named endonuclease IV, has no detectable associated exonuclease or DNA N-glycosidase activity and does not seem to be identical with any previously known E. coli endonuclease. Endonuclease IV has no Mg2+ requirement, and is fully active in the presence of EDTA. Enzyme activity is stimulated by 0.2 to 0.3 M NaCl and is unusually salt-resistant. Further, the enzyme is fairly heat-stable, and is not inhibited by tRNA. The sidimentation coefficient, S(o)20,w, is 3.4 S. It seems that endonuclease IV is active in DNA repair.  相似文献   

15.
Apurinic/apyrimidinic endonucleases initiate the repair of abasic sites produced either spontaneously, from attack of bases by reactive oxygen species or as intermediates during base excision repair. The catalytic properties and crystal structure of Leishmania major apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease are described and compared with those of human APE1 and bacterial exonuclease III. The purified enzyme is shown to possess apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease activity of the same order as eukaryotic and prokaryotic counterparts and an equally robust 3'-phosphodiesterase activity. Consistent with this, expression of the L. major endonuclease confers resistance to both methyl methane sulphonate and H2O2 in Escherichia coli repair-deficient mutants while expression of the human homologue only reverts methyl methane sulphonate sensitivity. Structural analyses and modelling of the enzyme-DNA complex demonstrates a high degree of conservation to previously characterized homologues, although subtle differences in the active site geometry might account for the high 3'-phosphodiesterase activity. Our results confirm that the L. major's enzyme is a key element in mediating repair of apurinic/apyrimidinic sites and 3'-blocked termini and therefore must play an important role in the survival of kinetoplastid parasites after exposure to the highly oxidative environment within the host macrophage.  相似文献   

16.
The development of bacteriophage T7 was examined in an Escherichia coli double mutant defective for the two major apurinic, apyrimidinic endonucleases (exonuclease III and endonuclease IV, xth nfo). In cells infected with phages containing apurinic sites, the defect in repair enzymes led to a decrease of phage survival and a total absence of bacterial DNA degradation and of phage DNA synthesis. These results directly demonstrate the toxic action of apurinic sites on bacteriophage T7 at the intracellular level and its alleviation by DNA repair. In addition, untreated T7 phage unexpectedly displayed reduced plating efficiency and decreased DNA synthesis in the xth nfo double mutant.  相似文献   

17.
Escherichia coli contains multiple enzymes that hydrolyze deoxyribose fragments (phosphoglycolaldehyde, PGA) from the 3' termini of a synthetic DNA substrate. The major such activities are the main bacterial apurinic endonucleases, exonuclease III and endonuclease IV. In a double mutant deficient in both of these oxidation repair enzymes, Mg++-dependent 3'-PGA diesterase was detected at 3% the level found in wild-type bacteria. Gel filtration fractionated this residual diesterase activity into two peaks of Mr 40,000-52,000 (Pool A) and Mr 22,000-30,000 (Pool B) with differing abilities to remove 3'-phosphates from DNA. These multiple repair activities were resolved in 3'-PGA diesterase activity gels. The exonuclease III and endonuclease IV bands were identified using the purified proteins and by their specific absence from strains defective for the respective structural genes. Gel filtration Pool B yielded two activity bands of apparent Mr 25,000 and 28,000, but Pool A did not form a new band in the activity gels. Incubation of activity gels in different transition metals or boiling of the samples before electrophoresis also served to distinguish the various activities. The possible identities of the novel E. coli 3'-PGA diesterases and the importance of multiple repair enzymes for 3' damages are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
O Niwa  R E Moses 《Biochemistry》1981,20(2):238-244
phi X174 RFI DNA treated with bleomycin (BLM) under conditions permitting nicking does not serve as a template-primer for Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I. Purified exonuclease III from E. coli and extracts from wild-type E. coli strains are able to convert the BLM-treated DNA to suitable template-primer, but extracts from exonuclease III deficient strains are not. Brief digestion by exonuclease III is enough to create the template-primer, suggesting that the exonuclease III is converting the BLM-treated DNA by a modification of 3' termini. The exonucleolytic rather than the phosphatase activity of exonuclease III appears to be involved in the conversion. Comparative studies with micrococcal nuclease indicate that BLM-created nicks do not have a simple 3'-P structure. Bacterial alkaline phosphatase does not convert BLM-treated DNA to template-primer. The endonuclease VI activity associated with exonuclease III does not incise DNA treated with BLM under conditions not allowing nicking, in contrast to DNA with apurinic sites made by acid treatment, arguing that conversion does not require the endonuclease VI action on uncleaved sites.  相似文献   

19.
Escherichia coli exonuclease III and endonuclease III are two distinct DNA-repair enzymes that can cleave apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites by different mechanisms. While the AP endonuclease activity of exonuclease III generates a 3'-hydroxyl group at AP sites, the AP lyase activity of endonuclease III produces a 3'-α,β unsaturated aldehyde that prevents DNA-repair synthesis. Saccharomyces cerevisiae Apn1 is the major AP endonuclease/3'-diesterase that also produces a 3'-hydroxyl group at the AP site, but it is unrelated to either exonuclease III or endonuclease III. apn1 deletion mutants are unable to repair AP sites generated by the alkylating agent methyl methane sulphonate and display a spontaneous mutator phenotype. This work shows that either exonuclease III or endonuclease III can functionally replace yeast Apn1 in the repair of AP sites. Two conclusions can be derived from these findings. The first of these conclusions is that yeast cells can complete the repair of AP sites even though they are cleaved by AP lyase. This implies that AP lyase can contribute significantly to the repair of AP sites and that yeast cells have the ability to process the α,β unsaturated aldehyde produced by endonuclease III. The second of these conclusions is that unrepaired AP sites are strictly the cause of the high spontaneous mutation rate in the apn1 deletion mutant.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of dimeric DNA intercalating compounds was assayed on a purified AP endonuclease from Microccoccus luteus using apurinic supercoiled PM2 DNA as a substrate. Binding on apurinic sites was estimated through the competition with the intercalating compound, 9-NH2-ellipticine, which displays great specificity for apurinic sites. An acridine dimer with a spermine linker is at 0.1 microM the best inhibitor of cleavage at the apurinic site induced either by the AP endonuclease or by 9-NH2-ellipticine. Bisintercalating agents are more effective inhibitors of AP endonuclease than monointercalating ones. Most effective inhibitors among dimers have acridine residues.  相似文献   

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