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1.
Purification and characterization of a novel mammalian endoribonuclease   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Endonuclease-mediated mRNA decay appears to be a common mode of mRNA degradation in mammalian cells, but yet only a few mRNA endonucleases have been described. Here, we report the existence of a second mammalian endonuclease that is capable of cleaving c-myc mRNA within the coding region in vitro. This study describes the partial purification and biochemical characterization of this enzyme. Five major proteins of approximately 10-35 kDa size co-purified with the endonuclease activity, a finding supported by gel filtration and glycerol gradient centrifugation analysis. The enzyme is an RNA-specific endonuclease that degrades single-stranded RNA, but not double-stranded RNA, DNA or DNA-RNA duplexes. It preferentially cleaves RNA in between the pyrimidine and purine dinucleotides UA, UG, and CA, at the coding region determinant (CRD) of c-myc RNA. The enzyme generates products with a 3'hydroxyl group, and it appears to be a protein-only endonuclease. It does not possess RNase A-like activity. The enzyme is capable of cleaving RNAs other than c-myc CRD RNA in vitro. It is Mg(2+)-independent and is resistant to EDTA. The endonuclease is inactivated at and above 70 degrees C. These properties distinguished the enzyme from other previously described vertebrate endonucleases.  相似文献   

2.
Mitochondrial forms of uracil DNA glycosylase and UV endonuclease have been purified and characterized from the mouse plasmacytoma cell line, MPC-11. As in other cell types, the mitochondrial uracil DNA glycosylase has properties very similar to those of the nuclear enzyme, although in this case the mitochondrial activity was also distinguishable by extreme sensitivity to dilution. Three mitochondrial UV endonuclease activities are also similar to nuclear enzymes; however, the relative amounts of these enzyme activities in the mitochondria is significantly different from that in the nucleus. In particular, mitochondria contain a much higher proportion of an activity analogous to UV endonuclease III. Nuclear UV endonuclease III activity is absent from XP group D fibroblasts and XP group D lymphoblasts have reduced, but detectable levels of the mitochondrial form of this enzyme. This residual activity differs in its properties from the normal mitochondrial form of UV endonuclease III, however. The presence of these enzyme activities which function in base excision repair suggests that such DNA repair occurs in mitochondria. Alternatively, these enzymes might act to mark damaged mitochondrial genomes for subsequent degradation.  相似文献   

3.
The mammalian ribosomal protein S3 (rpS3) is a component of the 40S ribosomal subunit. It is known to function as a DNA repair enzyme, UV endonuclease III, which cleaves DNA that is irradiated by UV. It also has an endonuclease activity on AP DNA. In this report, the yeast ribosomal protein S3 (Rps3p) in S. cerevisiae was cloned, expressed in E. coli, and affinity-purified by 285 fold. Rps3p is composed of 240 amino acids and has a 78% amino acid similarity with the human counterpart that has 243 amino acids. The major difference in the amino acid sequence between the two proteins lies in most of the C-terminal 50 residues. Surprisingly, Rps3p only showed an endonuclease activity on AP DNA, but not on DNA that was irradiated with UV. The AP endonuclease activity of Rps3p was affected by pH, KCl, and beta-mercaptoethanol, but Triton X-100 and EDTA did not affect the enzyme activity. From these results, both the mammalian rpS3 and Rps3p appear to be involved in DNA damage processing, but in different modes.  相似文献   

4.
Mammalian rpS3, a ribosomal protein S3 with a DNA repair endonuclease activity, nicks heavily UV-irradiated DNA and DNA containing AP sites. RpS3 calls for a novel endonucleolytic activity on AP sites generated from pyrimidine dimers by T4 pyrimidine dimer glycosylase activity. This study revealed that rpS3 cleaves the lesions including AP sites, thymine glycols, and other UV damaged lesions such as pyrimidine dimers. This enzyme does not have a glycosylase activity as predicted from its amino acid sequence. However, it has an endonuclease activity on DNA containing thymine glycol, which is exactly overlapped with UV-irradiated or AP DNAs, indicating that rpS3 cleaves phosphodiester bonds of DNAs containing altered bases with broad specificity acting as a base-damage-endonuclease. RpS3 cleaves supercoiled UV damaged DNA more efficiently than the relaxed counterpart, and the endonuclease activity of rpS3 was inhibited by MgCl2 on AP DNA but not on UV-irradiated DNA.  相似文献   

5.
A protein with structure-specific endonuclease activity has been purified to near homogeneity from cauliflower ( Brassica oleracea var. botrytis) inflorescence through five successive column chromatographies. The protein is a single polypeptide with a molecular mass of 40 kDa. Using three different branched DNA structures (flap, pseudo-Y and stem-loop) we found that the enzyme, a cauliflower structure-specific endonuclease, cleaved the single-stranded tail in the 5'-flap and 5'-pseudo-Y structures, whereas it could not incise the 3'-flap and 3'-pseudo-Y structures. The incision points occur around the single strand-duplex junction in these DNA substrates and the enzyme leaves 5'-PO4 and 3'-OH termini on DNA. The protein also endonucleolytically cleaves on the 3'-side of the single-stranded region at the junction of unpaired and duplex DNA in the stem-loop structure. The structure-specific endonuclease activity is stimulated by Mg2+ and by Mn2+, but not by Ca2+. Like mammalian FEN-1, the protein has weak 5'-->3' double-stranded DNA-specific exonuclease activity. These results indicate that the cauliflower protein is a plant structure-specific endonuclease like mammalian FEN-1 or may be the plant alternative.  相似文献   

6.
We previously reported a double-stranded endonuclease from HeLa cells, endonuclease R (endo R), which specifically cleaves duplex DNA at sites rich in G.C base pairs. In this report we describe the purification of endo R to near homogeneity by conventional and affinity chromatography. The molecular mass of the active form of endo R is approximately 115-125 kDa. SDS-gel electrophoresis reveals a major protein species of 100 kDa. The enzyme requires Mg2+ as a cofactor and is equally active on closed circular and linear duplex DNA substrates that contain G-rich sequences. A 50% reduction in cleavage activity is observed with Ca2+ ions and no double-stranded cleavage occurs with Zn2+. Use of Mn2+ causes an altered specificity at low concentrations of enzyme or divalent metal ion and nonspecific degradation of the substrate at higher concentrations. Endo R is strongly inhibited by sodium or potassium chloride and exhibits a wide pH optimum of 6.0-9.0. The pI of the enzyme is between 6.5 and 7.0. A 2-fold stimulation is observed with the addition of dGTP or dATP but specific cleavage is inhibited by ATP at an equivalent concentration. Cleavage activity is competitively inhibited 10-fold more efficiently by single-stranded poly(dG)12 than by other DNA competitors. The ends of endo R cleavage products contain 5'-phosphate and 3'-hydroxyl groups, and a significant portion of these products were substrates for T4 DNA ligase. Endo R appears to be a previously uncharacterized mammalian endonuclease.  相似文献   

7.
Two DNA repair enzyme activities, uracil DNA glycosylase and AP endonuclease, were measured in extracts of T- and B-lymphocytes isolated from mice ranging in age from 3 to 24 months. T- and B-lymphocytes had roughly equal levels of AP endonuclease which did not change appreciably with age. T-lymphocytes had roughly twice as high a level of uracil DNA glycosylase as B-lymphocytes; these levels were not affected by age either. This constancy with age contrasts dramatically with increases in both enzymes--roughly 3-fold on a protein basis or 50-fold on a per cell basis--in a transformed line (MPC-11) derived from a carcinogen-induced lymphocytoma. These results are similar to those obtained with cultured murine fibroblasts, wherein a relative constancy was noted with passage of non-transformed cells, followed by dramatic changes upon transformation (La Belle, M & Linn, S, Mutat res 132 (1984) 51). Hence these enzyme assays do not support the notion of a drop in base excision DNA repair capacity as being a causative factor in aging, but suggest instead that DNA repair properties might differ dramatically in transformed vs non-transformed cells.  相似文献   

8.
An endonuclease specific for apurinic, apyrimidinic (AP) sites in DNA was purified nearly to homogeneity from the extremely thermophilic bacterium Thermothrix thiopara. The enzyme has a molecular weight of approximately 26,000. It cleaves neither native nor UV- or gamma-irradiated DNAs and has no contaminating exonuclease or uracil-DNA glycosylase activities. The enzyme has no cofactor requirement and is not inhibited by EDTA or N'-ethylmaleimide. It shows maximal activity at 70 degrees C and a pH between 7.5 and 9.0. The Arrhenius activation energy of the reaction is 17 kJ/mol, and the apparent Km for AP sites is 38 nM. The rate of heat inactivation of the enzyme followed first-order kinetics, with a half-life of 10 min at 70 degrees C but about 150 min in the presence of 0.5 M ammonium sulfate or 0.5 mg of bovine serum albumin per ml at the same temperature. One cell of T. thiopara contains sufficient AP endonuclease activity for hydrolysis of about 10(6) phosphodiester bonds per h at 70 degrees C. An extract of these bacteria does not contain detectable Mg-dependent AP endonuclease activity, and the above-mentioned enzyme appears to be the main AP endonuclease of T. thiopara.  相似文献   

9.
The major AP endonuclease from Chlamydomonas reinhardi has been partially purified and characterized. The enzyme has a molecular weight of about 38 000 as measured by molecular sieving. There is an absolute requirement for a divalent cation, with magnesium being better than manganese. The activity is stimulated by dithiothreitol and Triton X-100. The activity is sensitive to ionic strength, as 50 mM NaCl or KCl results in 70% inhibition. The enzyme is specific for apurinic and apyrimidinic (AP) sites and does not cleave DNA that has been damaged by ultraviolet light, methyl methanesulfonate, osmium tetroxide or sodium bisulfite. There is no deficiency in the AP endonuclease activity in extracts prepared from two mutants of Chlamydomonas that are sensitive to both ultraviolet light and methyl methanesulfonate. There was no evidence for induction of AP endonuclease after exposure of the cells to methyl methanesulfonate.  相似文献   

10.
An apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonuclease (E.C.3.1.25.2) has been purified 1100 fold to apparent homogeneity from calf thymus by a series of ion exchange, gel filtration and hydrophobic interaction chromatographies. The purified AP endonuclease is a monomeric protein with an apparent molecular weight on SDS-PAGE of 37,000. On gel filtration the protein behaves as a protein of apparent molecular weight 40,000. DNA cleavage by this AP endonuclease is dependent on the presence of AP sites in the DNA. DNA cleavage requires the divalent cation Mg2+ and has a broad pH optimum of 7.5-9.0. Maximal rates of catalysis occur at NaCl or KCl concentrations of 25-50 mM. The amino acid composition and the amino-terminal amino acid sequence for this AP endonuclease are presented. Comparison of the properties of this AP endonuclease purified from calf thymus with the reported properties of the human AP endonuclease purified from HeLa cells or placenta indicate that the properties of such an AP endonuclease are highly conserved in these two mammalian species.  相似文献   

11.
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) contains higher steady-state levels of oxidative damage and mutates at rates significantly greater than nuclear DNA. Oxidative lesions in mtDNA are removed by a base excision repair (BER) pathway. All mtDNA repair proteins are nuclear encoded and imported. Most mtDNA repair proteins so far discovered are either identical to nuclear DNA repair proteins or isoforms of nuclear proteins arising from differential splicing. Regulation of mitochondrial BER is therefore not expected to be independent of nuclear BER, though the extent to which mitochondrial BER is regulated with respect to mtDNA amount or damage is largely unknown. Here we have measured DNA BER activities in lysates of mitochondria isolated from human 143B TK osteosarcoma cells that had been depleted of mtDNA (ρ0) or not (wt). Despite the total absence of mtDNA in the ρ0 cells, a complete mitochondrial BER pathway was present, as demonstrated using an in vitro assay with synthetic oligonucleotides. Measurement of individual BER protein activities in mitochondrial lysates indicated that some BER activities are insensitive to the lack of mtDNA. Uracil and 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase activities were relatively insensitive to the absence of mtDNA, only about 25% reduced in ρ0 relative to wt cells. Apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonuclease and polymerase γ activities were more affected, 65 and 45% lower, respectively, in ρ0 mitochondria. Overall BER activity in lysates was also about 65% reduced in ρ0 mitochondria. To identify the limiting deficiencies in BER of ρ0 mitochondria we supplemented the BER assay of mitochondrial lysates with pure uracil DNA glycosylase, AP endonuclease and/or the catalytic subunit of polymerase γ. BER activity was stimulated by addition of uracil DNA glycosylase and polymerase γ. However, no addition or combination of additions stimulated BER activity to wt levels. This suggests that an unknown activity, factor or interaction important in BER is deficient in ρ0 mitochondria. While nuclear BER protein levels and activities were generally not altered in ρ0 cells, AP endonuclease activity was substantially reduced in nuclear and in whole cell extracts. This appeared to be due to reduced endogenous reactive oxygen species (ROS) production in ρ0 cells, and not a general dysfunction of ρ0 cells, as exposure of cells to ROS rapidly stimulated increases in AP endonuclease activities and APE1 protein levels.  相似文献   

12.
Deamination of DNA bases can occur spontaneously, generating highly mutagenic lesions such as uracil, hypoxanthine, and xanthine. When cells are under oxidative stress that is induced either by oxidizing agents or by mitochondrial dysfunction, additional deamination products such as 5-hydroxymethyluracil (5-HMU) and 5-hydroxyuracil (5-OH-Ura) are formed. The cellular level of these highly mutagenic lesions is increased substantially when cells are exposed to DNA damaging agent, such as ionizing radiation, redox reagents, nitric oxide, and others. The cellular repair of deamination products is predominantly through the base excision repair (BER) pathway, a major cellular repair pathway that is initiated by lesion specific DNA glycosylases. In BER, the lesions are removed by the combined action of a DNA glycosylase and an AP endonuclease, leaving behind a one-base gap. The gapped product is then further repaired by the sequential action of DNA polymerase and DNA ligase. DNA glycosylases that recognize uracil, 5-OH-Ura, 5-HMU (derived from 5-methylcytosine) and a T/G mismatch (derived from a 5-methylcytosine/G pair) are present in most cells. Many of these glycosylases have been cloned and well characterized. In yeast and mammalian cells, hypoxanthine is efficiently removed by methylpurine N-glycosylase, and it is thought that BER might be an important pathway for the repair of hypoxanthine. In contrast, no glycosylase that can recognize xanthine has been identified in either yeast or mammalian cells. In Escherichia coli, the major enzyme activity that initiates the repair of hypoxanthine and xanthine is endonuclease V. Endonuclease V is an endonuclease that hydrolyzes the second phosphodiester bond 3' to the lesion. It is hypothesized that the cleaved DNA is further repaired through an alternative excision repair (AER) pathway that requires the participation of either a 5' endonuclease or a 3'-5' exonuclease to remove the damaged base. The repair process is then completed by the sequential actions of DNA polymerase and DNA ligase. Endonuclease V sequence homologs are present in all kingdoms, and it is conceivable that endonuclease V might also be a major enzyme that initiates the repair of hypoxanthine and xanthine in mammalian cells.  相似文献   

13.
DNA repair mechanisms guarantee the maintenance of genome integrity, which is critical for cell viability and proliferation in all organisms. As part of the cellular defenses to DNA damage, apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonucleases repair the abasic sites produced by spontaneous hydrolysis, oxidative or alkylation base damage and during base excision repair (BER). Trypanosoma brucei, the protozoan pathogen responsible of human sleeping sickness, has a class II AP endonuclease (TBAPE1) with a high degree of homology to human APE1 and bacterial exonuclease III. The purified recombinant enzyme cleaves AP sites and removes 3'-phosphoglycolate groups from 3'-ends. To study its cellular function, we have established TBAPE1-deficient cell lines derived from bloodstream stage trypanosomes, thus confirming that the AP endonuclease is not essential for viability in this cell type under in vitro culture conditions. The role of TBAPE1 in the removal of AP sites is supported by the inverse correlation between the level of AP endonuclease in the cell and the number of endogenously generated abasic sites in its genomic DNA. Furthermore, depletion of TBAPE1 renders cells hypersensitive to AP site and strand break-inducing agents such as methotrexate and phleomycin respectively but not to alkylating agents. Finally, the increased susceptibility that TBAPE1-depleted cells show to nitric oxide suggests an essential role for this DNA repair enzyme in protection against the immune defenses of the mammalian host.  相似文献   

14.
The major apurinic (AP) DNA-binding protein was purified from a HeLa cell line and from the SV40-transformed cell line AT5BIVA derived from a patient with the repair deficiency syndrome ataxia telangiectasia (AT). This protein appears to be identical with the major cellular apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease. The two endonucleases differ in their molecular weight (HeLa, 37,600; AT, 38,900) and their dissociation equilibrium constant for AP sites (HeLa, 7.8 X 10(-11) M; AT, 28.3 X 10(-11) M). These variances might be the consequence of a different post-translational modification. Evidence for this interpretation stems from the observation that the AP DNA binding activity of AP endonuclease, as measured in a glass-fiber filter binding assay, is inactivated upon incubation with snake venom phosphodiesterase and that the AP endonuclease from AT cells in 5-10-fold more sensitive than the HeLa enzyme. For both enzymes, the diesterase treatment leads to the formation of a protein of Mr 35,500 which might be the unmodified precursor of AP endonuclease. The loss of AP DNA binding does not reduce but rather increases the catalytic activity of AP endonuclease when measured at excess substrate concentration.  相似文献   

15.
Three endonucleases from murine plasmacytoma cells that specifically nick DNA which was heavily irradiated with ultraviolet (UV) light were resolved by Sephacryl S-200 column chromatography. Two of these, UV endonucleases I and II, were purified extensively. UV endonuclease I appears to be a monomeric protein with a molecular mass of 43 kDa; UV endonuclease II has an S value of 2.9 S, with a corresponding molecular mass estimated at 28 kDa. Both enzymes act as a class I AP endonuclease, cleaving phosphodiester bonds via a beta-elimination mechanism, so as to form an unsaturated deoxyribose at the 3' terminus. Both have thymine glycol DNA glycosylase activity and their substrate specificities generally appear to be overlapping but not identical. UV endonuclease I acts on both supercoiled and relaxed DNAs, whereas II acts only on supercoiled DNA. Both enzymes are active in EDTA, but have different optima for salt, pH, and Triton X-100. Each enzyme is also present in cultured diploid human fibroblasts.  相似文献   

16.
In this study we demonstrate that the different substrate recognition properties of bacterial and human AP endonucleases might be used to quantify and localize apurinic (AP) sites formed in DNA in vivo. By using a model oligonucleotide containing a single AP site modified with methoxyamine (MX), we show that endonuclease III and IV of E. coli are able to cleave the alkoxyamine-adducted site whereas a partially purified HeLa AP endonuclease and crude cell-free extracts from HeLa cells are inhibited by this modification. In addition MX-modified AP sites in a DNA template retain their ability to block DNA synthesis in vitro. Since MX can efficiently react with AP sites formed in mammalian cells in vivo we propose that the MX modified abasic sites thus formed can be quantitated and localized at the level of the individual gene by subsequent site specific cleavage by either E. coli endonuclease III or IV in vitro.  相似文献   

17.
G L Dianov  B R Jensen  M K Kenny  V A Bohr 《Biochemistry》1999,38(34):11021-11025
Base excision repair (BER) pathway is the major cellular process for removal of endogenous base lesions and apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites in DNA. There are two base excision repair subpathways in mammalian cells, characterized by the number of nucleotides synthesized into the excision patch. They are the "single-nucleotide" (one nucleotide incorporated) and the "long-patch" (several nucleotides incorporated) BER pathways. Proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) is known to be an essential factor in long-patch base excision repair. We have studied the role of replication protein A (RPA) in PCNA-dependent, long-patch BER of AP sites in human cell extracts. PCNA and RPA were separated from the other BER proteins by fractionation of human whole-cell extract on a phosphocellulose column. The protein fraction PC-FII (phosphocellulose fraction II), which does not contain RPA and PCNA but otherwise contains all core BER proteins required for PCNA-dependent BER (AP endonuclease, DNA polymerases delta, beta and DNA ligase, and FEN1 endonuclease), had reduced ability to repair plasmid DNA containing AP sites. Purified PCNA or RPA, when added separately, could only partially restore the PC-FII repair activity of AP sites. However, additions of both proteins together greatly stimulated AP site repair by PC-FII. These results demonstrate a role for RPA in PCNA-dependent BER of AP sites.  相似文献   

18.
The mitochondrial DNA (kinetoplast DNA) of the trypanosomatid Crithidia fasciculata consists of minicircles and maxicircles topologically interlocked in a single network per cell. Individual minicircles replicate unidirectionally from either of two replication origins located 180 degrees apart on the minicircle DNA. Initiation of minicircle leading-strand synthesis involves the synthesis of an RNA primer which is removed in the last stage of replication. We report here the purification to near homogeneity of a structure-specific DNA endo-nuclease based on the RNase H activity of the enzyme on a poly(rA).poly(dT) substrate. RNase H activity gel analysis of whole cell and kinetoplast extracts shows that the enzyme is enriched in kinetoplast fractions. The DNA endonuclease activity of the enzyme is specific for DNA primers annealed to a template strand and requires an unannealed 5' tail. The enzyme cleaves 3' of the first base paired nucleotide releasing the intact tail. The purified enzyme migrates as a 32 kDa protein on SDS gels and has a Stoke's radius of 21.5 A and a sedimentation coefficient of 3.7 s, indicating that the protein is a monomer in solution with a native molecular mass of 32.4 kDa. These results suggest that the enzyme may be involved in RNA primer removal during minicircle replication.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Two group I intron-encoded proteins from the yeast mitochondrial genome have already been shown to have a specific DNA endonuclease activity. This activity mediates intron insertion by cleaving the DNA sequence corresponding to the splice junction of an intronless strain. We have discovered in mitochondrial extracts from the yeast strain 777-3A a new DNA endonuclease activity which cleaves the fused exon A3-exon A4 junction sequence of the COXI gene.  相似文献   

20.
AP endonuclease (APE), with dual activities as an endonuclease and a 3' exonuclease, is a central player in repair of oxidized and alkylated bases in the genome via the base excision repair (BER) pathway. APE acts as an endonuclease in repairing AP sites generated spontaneously or after base excision during BER. It also removes the 3' blocking groups in DNA generated directly by ROS or after AP lyase reaction. In contrast to E. coli and lower eukaryotes which express two distinct APEs of Xth and Nfo types, mammalian genomes encode only one APE, APE1, which is of the Xth type. However, while the APEs together are dispensable in the bacteria and simple eukaryotes, APE1 is essential for mammalian cells. We have shown that apoptosis of mouse embryo fibroblasts triggered by APE1 inactivation can be prevented by ectopic expression of repair competent but not repair-defective APE1. The mitochondrial APE (mtAPE) is an N-terminal truncation product of APE1. A significant fraction of APE1 is cytosolic, and oxidative stress induces its nuclear and mitochondrial translocation. Such age-dependent increase in APE activity in the nucleus and mitochondria is consistent with the hypothesis that aging is associated with chronic oxidative stress.  相似文献   

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