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1.
The action of the exonuclease SP3 DNAase is inhibited by chemical modification of DNA with the cation N-cyclohexyl-N'-beta-(4-methylmorpholinium)-ethylcarbodiimide (CME). The limited activity of the enzyme on CMA-modified DNA makes it possible to demonstrate that the enzyme also initiates its attack on polydeoxyribonucleotides at the 5'-termini. This was determined by the analysis of the products from the digestion of CME-modified DNA containing labeled 5'-terminal phosphate groups. Such procedure can be adopted as a general approach for the determination of the direction of hydrolysis of other processive exonucleases. SP3 DNAase has been shown able to degrade oligo- and polydeoxyribonucleotides with or without 5'-terminal phosphate groups with equal efficiency (Aposhian, H.V., Friedman, N., Nichihara M., Heimer, E.P., and Nussbaum, A.L. (1970) J. Mol. Biol. 49, 367-379). The present work also shows that the enzyme can even hydrolyze oligo- and polynucleotides containing derivatized phosphate groups.  相似文献   

2.
The lambda exonuclease, an enzyme that has been implicated in genetic recombination, rapidly and processively degrades native DNA, starting at the 5' terminus. The enzyme will also degrade the 5'-terminated strand at a single-stranded branch. The experiments reported here reveal various interactions of the enzyme with single-stranded DNA. The rate of digestion is related inversely to the length of single strands. Chains of 100 nucleotides are digested at about 10% the rate of digestion of native DNA. Digestion of the single-stranded ends of lambda DNA does not appear to occur processively. The enzyme binds to circular as well as linear single strands and the affinity for single strands is also related inversely to the chain length. In an equimolar mixture of single- and double-stranded DNA the action of lambda exonuclease on the latteris about half-inhibited. At 20 degrees the initiation of digestion at the 5' terminus of duplex DNA is blocked sterically when such DNA has 3'-terminal single strands that are longer than 100 nucleotides. Information about these properties is important for the practical use of lambda exonuclease as well as for reflections on the role of the enzyme in genetic recombination.  相似文献   

3.
The specificity of hydrolysis of polynucleotide termini by Escherichia coli exonuclease III was studied with the use of oligothymidylate annealed to polydeoxyadenylate. The size of the products after 3' leads to 5'-hydrolysis of 5'-labeled substrate is temperature-dependent. At 25 degrees the enzyme can hydrolyze a polynucleotide chain up to the last 5'-terminal dinucleotide. A gradation of higher 5'-terminal oligonucleotides of defined chain lengths is produced after limit digestion by the enzyme when the temperature is raised between 25 degrees to 60 degrees. When the oligothymidylate was labeled at the 3'-ends with ribonucleotides, it was observed that exonuclease III can cleave a single or two consecutive ribonucleotides regardless of whether the ribonucleotides are base-paired or mismatched.  相似文献   

4.
Purified DNA polymerase III has two distinct exonuclease activities: one initiates hydrolsis at the 3 termini, and the other at the 5 termini of single-stranded DNA. Both exonucleases have the same relative mobility on polyacrylamide gels as the polymerase activity. Molecular identity of the three activities is further indicated by their comparative rates of thermal inactivation and their sensitivity to ionic strength. The 3-5 exonuclease activity hydrolyzes only single-standed DNA. The rate of hydrolysis is twice the optimal rate of polymerization. The products are 5-mononucleotides, but the 3-5 activity is unable to cleave free dinucleotides or the 5-terminal dinucleotide of a polydeoxynucleotide chain. The 3-5 activity will not degrade 3-phosphoryl-terminated oligonucleotides such as d(pTpTpTp). The 5-3 activity catalyzes the hydrolysis of single-stranded DNA at 1/15 the rate of the 3-5 exonuclease. The 5-3 exonuclease requires the presence of a 5 single-stranded terminus in order to initiate hydrolysis, but will thereafter proceed into a double-stranded region. Although the limit products found during hydrolysis of substrates designed to assay specifically the 5-3 activity are predominantly mono- and dinucleotides, these products probably arise from the subsequent hydrolysis of oligonucleotides by the 3-5 hydrolytic activity. This interpretation is supported by (a) the relatively greater activity of the 3-5 exonuclease, (b) the inability of the enzyme to degrade d(pTpTpTp), and (c) the release of the 5 terminus of a single-stranded DNA molecule as an oligonucleotide. The 5-3 exonuclease attacks ultraviolet-irradiated duplex DNA which has first been incised by the Micrococcus luteus endonuclease specific for thymine dimers in DNA.  相似文献   

5.
The 3' to 5' exonuclease of calf thymus DNA polymerase delta has properties expected of a proofreading nuclease. It digests either single-stranded DNA or the single-stranded nucleotides of a mismatched primer on a DNA template by a nonprocessive mechanism. The distribution of oligonucleotide products suggests that a significant portion of the enzyme dissociates after the removal of one nucleotide. This mechanism is expected if the substrate in vivo is an incorrect nucleotide added by the polymerase. Digestion of single-stranded DNA does not proceed to completion, producing final products six to seven nucleotides long. Digestion of a long mismatched terminus accelerates when the mismatched region is reduced to less than six nucleotides. At the point of complementation, the digestion rate is greatly reduced. These results suggest that short mismatched regions are a preferred substrate. The use of a mismatched primer-template analogue, lacking the template single strand, greatly lowers digestion efficiency at the single-stranded 3'-terminus, suggesting that the template strand is important for substrate recognition. When oligonucleotides were examined for effectiveness as exonuclease inhibitors, (dG)8 was found to be the most potent inhibitor of single-stranded DNA digestion. (dG)8 was less effective at inhibiting digestion of mismatched primer termini, again suggesting that this DNA is a preferred substrate. Overall, these results indicate that the exonuclease of DNA polymerase delta efficiently removes short mismatched DNA, a structure formed from misincorporation during DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

6.
Optimal conditions for polymerization reaction catalyzed on poly(dA) and poly(dT) templates by DNA polymerases from thermoacidophilic archaebacteria--DNA polymerase A from Sulfolobus acidocaldarius and DNA polymerase B from Thermoplasma acidophilum--have been established. Values of Km and Vmax (60 degrees C) for a set of primers d(pA)n and d(pT)n have been estimated. Minimal primers for both enzymes are dNMP. Lengthening of primers by each mononucleotide increases their affinity about 2.16-fold. Linear dependence of log Km and of log vmax on the number of mononucleotide links in primers (n) has breaking point at n = 10. The value of Vmax is about 20% of that for decanucleotide. The affinity of the primer d(pA)9p(rib*) with a deoxyribosylurea residue at the 3'-end does not differ essentially from that of d(pA)9. Substitution of the 3'-terminal nucleotide of a complementary primer for a noncomplementary nucleotide, e.g., substitution of 3'-terminal A for C in d(pA)10 in the reaction catalyzed on poly(dT), decreases the affinity of a primer by one order of magnitude.  相似文献   

7.
Lesion selectivity in blockage of lambda exonuclease by DNA damage.   总被引:4,自引:4,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Various kinds of DNA damage block the 3' to 5' exonuclease action of both E. coli exonuclease III and T4 DNA polymerase. This study shows that a variety of DNA damage likewise inhibits DNA digestion by lambda exonuclease, a 5' to 3' exonuclease. The processive degradation of DNA by the enzyme is blocked if the substrate DNA is treated with ultraviolet irradiation, anthramycin, distamycin, or benzo[a]-pyrene diol epoxide. Furthermore, as with the 3' to 5' exonucleases, the enzyme stops at discrete sites which are different for different DNA damaging agents. On the other hand, digestion of treated DNA by lambda exonuclease is only transiently inhibited at guanine residues alkylated with the acridine mustard ICR-170. The enzyme does not bypass benzo[a]-pyrene diol epoxide or anthramycin lesions even after extensive incubation. While both benzo[a]-pyrene diol epoxide and ICR-170 alkylate the guanine N-7 position, only benzo[a]-pyrene diol epoxide also reacts with the guanine N-2 position in the minor groove of DNA. Anthramycin and distamycin bind exclusively to sites in the minor groove of DNA. Thus lambda exonuclease may be particularly sensitive to obstructions in the minor groove of DNA; alternatively, the enzyme may be blocked by some local helix distortion caused by these adducts, but not by alkylation at guanine N-7 sites.  相似文献   

8.
A rapid and reproducible method for the purification of the Ca/Mg-endonuclease from porcine and rat liver and for the stabilization of the enzyme activity is presented. The optimum conditions for enzyme activity were determined. The enzyme degrades double-stranded DNA endonucleolytically. In the course of digestion of form I closed circular SV 40 DNA, the form II nicked circular DNA is the prominent intermediate product. Digestion of hen erythrocyte nuclei with added endonuclease produces a ladder of mono- and oligonucleosomal fragments similar to that generated by micrococcal nuclease digestion. Determination of the 5'-terminal nucleotides indicates the absence of a significant base specificity. Analyzing the cleavage pattern of end-labeled pBR322 restriction fragments on sequencing gels shows that the enzyme exhibits a weak preference for dinucleotides with A in the 5'-position; dinucleotides with 5%-C are less readily cleaved. Digestion of end-labeled pBR322 DNA, followed by electrophoresis in agarose gels produces a "smear"-like fragmentation pattern with weak superimposed bands, while micrococcal nuclease generates a different and much more distinct pattern. These data show that the sequence specificity of the enzyme is less pronounced than that of micrococcal nuclease and that the sites preferentially cleaved are not the same.  相似文献   

9.
Thermus aquaticus DNA polymerase was shown to contain an associated 5' to 3' exonuclease activity. Both polymerase and exonuclease activities cosedimented with a molecular weight of 72,000 during sucrose gradient centrifugation. Using a novel in situ activity gel procedure to simultaneously detect these two activities, we observed both DNA polymerase and exonuclease in a single band following either nondenaturing or denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis: therefore, DNA polymerase and exonuclease activities reside in the same polypeptide. As determined by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis this enzyme has an apparent molecular weight of 92,000. The exonuclease requires a divalent cation (MgCl2 or MnCl2), has a pH optimum of 9.0 and excises primarily deoxyribonucleoside 5'-monophosphate from double-stranded DNA. Neither heat denatured DNA nor the free oligonucleotide (24-mer) were efficient substrates for exonuclease activity. The rate of hydrolysis of a 5'-phosphorylated oligonucleotide (24-mer) annealed to M13mp2 DNA was about twofold faster than the same substrate containing a 5'-hydroxylated residue. Hydrolysis of a 5'-terminal residue from a nick was preferred threefold over the same 5'-end of duplex DNA. The 5' to 3' exonuclease activity appeared to function coordinately with the DNA polymerase to facilitate a nick translational DNA synthesis reaction.  相似文献   

10.
DNase VIII is an exonuclease purified from human placenta trophoblast nuclei. The enzyme has a pH optimum of 9.5 and requires a divalent cation. It is inhibited by salt and stimulated by Triton X-100. Glycerol gradient analysis of the activity indicates a sedimentation coefficient of 2.8 S (31,000 daltons if globular). This enzyme initiates hydrolysis from 5'-phosphorylated termini of single-stranded DNA and acts at internal phosphodiester bonds liberating 5'-phosphorylated oligonucleotides. It degrades polynucleotides of repeating base sequence as well as single-stranded DNA, yielding oligonucleotides of even number, in which the main reaction products are dinucleotides. The activity on denatured DNA is not inhibited by the presence of ultraviolet-induced photoproducts. DNase VIII can also initiate hydrolysis at those distorted termini produced by the action of Micrococcus luteus dimer specific endonuclease on duplex DNA, which contains cyclobutane dimers.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
The substrate specificity of 49+-enzyme was investigated in vitro. The enzyme showed a marked preference for rapidly sedimenting T4 DNA (greater than 1000 S) when helix-destabilizing proteins from Escherichia coli or phage T4 were added to the reaction. Regular replicative T4 DNA (200-S DNA) or denatured T4 DNA was not cleaved by the enzyme in the presence of these proteins but if they were omitted from the reaction both DNAs become good substrates for the enzyme. 200-S DNA was cleaved at its natural sites of single strandedness which occur at one-genome intervals. Gaps in T4 DNA which were constructed by treatment of a nicked DNA with exonuclease III were also cleaved by 49+-enzyme in the absence of helix-destabilizing proteins. Single-stranded T4 DNA was extensively degraded and up to 50% of the material was found to be acid-soluble in a limit digest. The degradation products were predominantly oligonucleotides of random size. No preference for a 5'-terminal nucleotide was observed in material from a limit digest with M13 DNA. Double-stranded DNA was nicked upon exposure to 49+-enzyme and double-strand breakage finally occurred by an accumulation of single-strand interruptions. No acid-soluble material was produced from native T4 DNA. The introduction of nicks in native DNA did not improve its properties as a substrate for the enzyme. Double-stranded DNA was about 100-fold less sensitive to the enzyme than single-stranded DNA.  相似文献   

13.
The ATP-dependent exonuclease V from Micrococcus lysodekticus shows a Michaelian relation between steady-state velocity and the concentration of T7 DNA substrate. The Km (expressed as a mass concentration) does not change when the T7 DNA is broken into smaller fragments by a restriction enzyme. This is interpreted to mean that the predominant process by which the exonuclease-V--DNA complex breaks down is digestion of the entire DNA molecule rather than physical dissociation, in accord with the already known processive nature of degradation by this enzyme. The way that the V and Km towards DNA vary with ATP and ADP concentration suggests that enzyme-DNA complex is predominantly formed by reaction of DNA with an enzyme-ATP complex rather than with bare enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
VDJP (V(D)J RSS Dependent DNA Joining Protein) was cloned based on binding to the nonamer portion of the V(D)J recombinational signal sequence (RSS), and genetic analysis revealed that VDJP is encoded by the same gene as the large subunit of Replication Factor C (RF-C). Recombinant VDJP has a site directed DNA joining activity and is capable of forming a covalent bond between DNA fragments containing an RSS element near their ends and exhibits 3' to 5' exonuclease activity. In this report, we examine the biochemical properties of the VDJP exonuclease activity such as directionality of nuclease action (3' to 5' or 5' to 3'), single-strand substrate preference, cleavage products, dependence on cofactors and metal cations, and optimal reaction conditions. From this analysis, we conclude that VDJP has an intrinsic 3'-5' exonuclease activity that produces mononucleotide products.  相似文献   

15.
Mechanism of action of Moloney murine leukemia virus RNase H III.   总被引:2,自引:1,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The mechanism of action of Moloney murine leukemia virus RNase H III was studied, utilizing the model substrate (A)n. (dT)n and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to assay enzyme activity. Examination by electrophoresis on 15% polyacrylamide gels in 7 M urea and on DEAE-cellulose paper in 7 M urea revealed that, early in a reaction with [3H](A)n. (dT)n as substrate, RNase H III generated products ranging in length from 80 to 90 nucleotides to less than 10 nucleotides and that after extended incubation the limit digest products generated were 3 to 15 nucleotides long. Product oligomers were of the following configuration: [5'-P, 3'-OH](A)n. RNase H III was shown to be an exonuclease requiring free ends in its substrate for activity by the inability to degrade RNA inserted in Escherichia coli ColE1 plasmid DNA. The enzyme was capable of attacking RNA in RNA-DNA hybrids in the 5' to 3' and 3' to 5' directions as demonstrated by the use of [3H, 5'-32P](A)600. (dT)n and cellulose-[3H](A)n. (dT)n. Rnase H III was random in its mode of action because addition of excess unlabeled (A)n. (dT)n to an ongoing reaction with [3H](A)n. (dT)n as substrate resulted in immediate inhibition of enzyme activity.  相似文献   

16.
17.
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   

18.
Porcine liver DNA polymerase gamma was shown previously to copurify with an associated 3' to 5' exonuclease activity (Kunkel, T. A., and Mosbaugh, D. W. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 988-995). The 3' to 5' exonuclease has now been characterized, and like the DNA polymerase activity, it has an absolute requirement for a divalent metal cation (Mg2+ or Mn2+), a relatively high NaCl and KCl optimum (150-200 mM), and an alkaline pH optimum between 7 and 10. The exonuclease has a 7.5-fold preference for single-stranded over double-stranded DNA, but it cannot excise 3'-terminal dideoxy-NMP residues from either substrate. Excision of 3'-terminally mismatched nucleotides was preferred approximately 5-fold over matched 3' termini, and the hydrolysis product from both was a deoxyribonucleoside 5'-monophosphate. The kinetics of 3'-terminal excision were measured at a single site on M13mp2 DNA for each of the 16 possible matched and mismatched primer.template combinations. As defined by the substrate specificity constant (Vmax/Km), each of the 12 mismatched substrates was preferred over the four matched substrates (A.T, T.A, C.G, G.C). Furthermore, the exonuclease could efficiently excise internally mismatched nucleotides up to 4 residues from the 3' end. DNA polymerase gamma was not found to possess detectable DNA primase, endonuclease, 5' to 3' exonuclease, RNase, or RNase H activities. The DNA polymerase and exonuclease activities exhibited dissimilar rates of heat inactivation and sensitivity to N-ethylmaleimide. After nondenaturing activity gel electrophoresis, the DNA polymerase and 3' to 5' exonuclease activities were partially resolved and detected in situ as separate species. A similar analysis on a denaturing activity gel identified catalytic polypeptides with molecular weights of 127,000, 60,000, and 32,000 which possessed only DNA polymerase gamma activity. Collectively, these results suggest that the polymerase and exonuclease activities reside in separate polypeptides, which could be derived from separate gene products or from proteolysis of a single gene product.  相似文献   

19.
Apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites arise in DNA through the spontaneous loss of bases or through the release of damaged bases from DNA by DNA glycosylases. AP sites in DNA can be catalyzed by AP endonucleases such as exonuclease III and endonuclease IV, generating a 3'-hydroxyl group and a 5'-terminal sugar phosphate. Here, we have identified and characterized a novel endonuclease IV from a hyperthermophilic bacterium Thermus thermophilus designated as TthNfo. TthNfo efficiently removed AP site from double-stranded oligonucleotide substrate. No significant difference was observed in the rate of reaction of four bases opposite AP site with TthNfo. In addition, TthNfo possesses a 3'-5' exonuclease activity similar to that of Escherichia coli exonuclease III. Surprisingly, we found that TthNfo also catalyzes the excision of uracil from DNA. In comparison with other endonuclease IV proteins, the removal of uracil residue was unique to TthNfo. Based on these observations and the absence of exonuclease III in T. thermophilus, we suggest that versatile enzyme activities of TthNfo play an important role in counteracting DNA base damage in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
A mispair-specific 3'-->5' exonuclease copurifies quantitatively with the near-homogeneous Drosophila gamma polymerase (Kaguni, L.S., and Olson, M.W. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 86, 6469-6473). The exonuclease and polymerase exhibit similar reaction requirements and optima, suggesting functional coordination of their activities. Under nonpolymerization conditions, the 3'-->5' exonuclease hydrolyzes 3'-terminal mispairs approximately 15-fold more efficiently than 3'-terminal base pairs on primed single-stranded DNA substrates, whereas it does not discriminate between any of three specific mispairs (dAMP:dAMP;dGMP:dGMP; dGMP:dAMP). Under polymerization conditions, gamma polymerase does not extend a 3'-terminal mispair from the "stationary" state, even in the presence of a large excess of the next correct nucleotide. Instead, 3'-terminal mispairs are hydrolyzed quantitatively by the 3'-->5' exonuclease over the reaction time course. During DNA synthesis by gamma polymerase in the "polymerization" mode, limited misincorporation and subsequent mispair extension do occur. Here, it appears that misincorporation and not mispair extension is rate-limiting. Template-primer challenge experiments suggest that the mechanism of template-primer transfer from the 3'-->5' exonuclease active site to the DNA polymerase active site is intermolecular; transfer from the exonuclease to polymerase mode appears to require dissociation and reassociation of mitochondrial DNA polymerase.  相似文献   

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