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1.
We report the first stopped-flow fluorescence analysis of transition metal binding (Co(2+), Ni(2+), Cu(2+), and Zn(2+)) to the H-N-H endonuclease motif within colicin E9 (the E9 DNase). The H-N-H consensus forms the active site core of a number of endonuclease groups but is also structurally homologous to the so-called treble-clef motif, a ubiquitous zinc-binding motif found in a wide variety of metalloproteins. We find that all the transition metal ions tested bind via multistep mechanisms. Binding was further dissected for Ni(2+) and Zn(2+) ions through the use of E9 DNase single tryptophan mutants, which demonstrated that most steps reflect conformational rearrangements that occur after the bimolecular collision, many common to the two metals, while one appears specific to zinc. The kinetically derived equilibrium dissociation constants (K(d)) for transition metal binding to the E9 DNase agree with previously determined equilibrium measurements and so confirm the validity of the derived kinetic mechanisms. Zn(2+) binds tightest to the enzyme (K(d) approximately 10(-)(9) M) but does not support endonuclease activity, whereas the other metals (K(d) approximately 10(-)(6) M) are active in endonuclease assays implying that the additional step seen for Zn(2+) traps the enzyme in an inactive but high affinity state. Metal-induced conformational changes are likely to be a conserved feature of H-N-H/treble clef motif proteins since similar Zn(2+)-induced, multistep binding was observed for other colicin DNases. Moreover, they appear to be independent both of the conformational heterogeneity that is naturally present within the E9 DNase at equilibrium, as well as the conformational changes that accompany the binding of its cognate inhibitor protein Im9.  相似文献   

2.
The HNH motif was originally identified in the subfamily of HNH homing endonucleases, which initiate the process of the insertion of mobile genetic elements into specific sites. Several bacteria toxins, including colicin E7 (ColE7), also contain the 30 amino acid HNH motif in their nuclease domains. In this work, we found that the nuclease domain of ColE7 (nuclease-ColE7) purified from Escherichia coli contains a one-to-one stoichiometry of zinc ion and that this zinc-containing enzyme hydrolyzes DNA without externally added divalent metal ions. The apo-enzyme, in which the indigenous zinc ion was removed from nuclease-ColE7, had no DNase activity. Several divalent metal ions, including Ni2+, Mg2+, Co2+, Mn2+, Ca2+, Sr2+, Cu2+ and Zn2+, re-activated the DNase activity of the apo-enzyme to various degrees, however higher concentrations of zinc ion inhibited this DNase activity. Two charged residues located at positions close to the zinc-binding site were mutated to alanine. The single-site mutants, R538A and E542A, showed reduced DNase activity, whereas the double-point mutant, R538A + E542A, had no observable DNase activity. A gel retardation assay further demonstrated that the nuclease-ColE7 hydrolyzed DNA in the presence of zinc ions, but only bound to DNA in the absence of zinc ions. These results demonstrate that the zinc ion in the HNH motif of nuclease-ColE7 is not required for DNA binding, but is essential for DNA hydrolysis, suggesting that the zinc ion not only stabilizes the folding of the enzyme, but is also likely to be involved in DNA hydrolysis.  相似文献   

3.
Colicin endonucleases (DNases) are bound and inactivated by immunity (Im) proteins. Im proteins are broadly cross-reactive yet specific inhibitors binding cognate and non-cognate DNases with Kd values that vary between 10− 4 and 10− 14 M, characteristics that are explained by a ‘dual-recognition’ mechanism. In this work, we addressed for the first time the energetics of Im protein recognition by colicin DNases through a combination of E9 DNase alanine scanning and double-mutant cycles (DMCs) coupled with kinetic and calorimetric analyses of cognate Im9 and non-cognate Im2 binding, as well as computational analysis of alanine scanning and DMC data. We show that differential ΔΔGs observed for four E9 DNase residues cumulatively distinguish cognate Im9 association from non-cognate Im2 association. E9 DNase Phe86 is the primary specificity hotspot residue in the centre of the interface, which is coordinated by conserved and variable hotspot residues of the cognate Im protein. Experimental DMC analysis reveals that only modest coupling energies to Im9 residues are observed, in agreement with calculated DMCs using the program ROSETTA and consistent with the largely hydrophobic nature of E9 DNase-Im9 specificity contacts. Computed values for the 12 E9 DNase alanine mutants showed reasonable agreement with experimental ΔΔG data, particularly for interactions not mediated by interfacial water molecules. ΔΔG predictions for residues that contact buried water molecules calculated using solvated rotamer models met with mixed success; however, we were able to predict with a high degree of accuracy the location and energetic contribution of one such contact. Our study highlights how colicin DNases are able to utilise both conserved and variable amino acids to distinguish cognate from non-cognate Im proteins, with the energetic contributions of the conserved residues modulated by neighbouring specificity sites.  相似文献   

4.
The cytotoxic domain of the bacteriocin colicin E9 (the E9 DNase) is a nonspecific endonuclease that must traverse two membranes to reach its cellular target, bacterial DNA. Recent structural studies revealed that the active site of colicin DNases encompasses the HNH motif found in homing endonucleases, and bound within this motif a single transition metal ion (either Zn(2+) or Ni(2+)) the role of which is unknown. In the present work we find that neither Zn(2+) nor Ni(2+) is required for DNase activity, which instead requires Mg(2+) ions, but binding transition metals to the E9 DNase causes subtle changes to both secondary and tertiary structure. Spectroscopic, proteolytic, and calorimetric data show that, accompanying the binding of 1 eq of Zn(2+), Ni(2+), or Co(2+), the thermodynamic stability of the domain increased substantially, and that the equilibrium dissociation constant for Zn(2+) was less than or equal to nanomolar, while that for Co(2+) and Ni (2+) was micromolar. Our data demonstrate that the transition metal is not essential for colicin DNase activity but rather serves a structural role. We speculate that the HNH motif has been adapted for use by endonuclease colicins because of its involvement in DNA recognition and because removal of the bound metal ion destabilizes the DNase domain, a likely prerequisite for its translocation across bacterial membranes.  相似文献   

5.
The family of conserved colicin DNases E2, E7, E8, and E9 are microbial toxins that kill bacteria through random degradation of the chromosomal DNA. In the present work, we compare side by side the conformational stabilities of these four highly homologous colicin DNases. Our results indicate that the apo-forms of these colicins are at room temperature and neutral pH in a dynamic conformational equilibrium between at least two quite distinct conformers. We show that the thermal stabilities of the apo-proteins differ by up to 20 degrees C. The observed differences correlate with the observed conformational behavior, that is, the tendency of the protein to form either an open, less stable or closed, more stable conformation in solution, as deduced by both tryptophan accessibility studies and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. Given these surprising structural differences, we next probed the catalytic activity of the four DNases and also observed a significant variation in relative activities. However, no unequivocal link between the activity of the protein and its thermal and structural stability could easily be made. The observed differences in conformational and functional properties of the four colicin DNases are surprising given that they are a closely related (> or =65% identity) family of enzymes containing a highly conserved (betabetaalpha-Me) active site motif. The different behavior of the apo-enzymes must therefore most likely depend on more subtle changes in amino acid sequences, most likely in the exosite region (residues 72-98) that is required for specific high-affinity binding of the cognate immunity protein.  相似文献   

6.
Controversy surrounds the metal-dependent mechanism of H-N-H endonucleases, enzymes involved in a variety of biological functions, including intron homing and DNA repair. To address this issue we determined the crystal structures for complexes of the H-N-H motif containing bacterial toxin colicin E9 with Zn(2+), Zn(2+).DNA, and Mg(2+).DNA. The structures show that the rigid V-shaped architecture of the active site does not undergo any major conformational changes on binding to the minor groove of DNA and that the same interactions are made to the nucleic acid regardless of which metal ion is bound to the enzyme. The scissile phosphate contacts the single metal ion of the motif through distortion of the DNA brought about by the insertion of the Arg-96-Glu-100 salt bridge into the minor groove and a network of contacts to the DNA phosphate backbone that straddle the metal site. The Mg(2+)-bound structure reveals an unusual coordination scheme involving two H-N-H histidine residues, His-102 and His-127. The mechanism of DNA cleavage is likely related to that of other single metal ion-dependent endonucleases, such as I-PpoI and Vvn, although in these enzymes the single alkaline earth metal ion is coordinated by oxygen-bearing amino acids. The structures also provide a rationale as to why H-N-H endonucleases are inactive in the presence of Zn(2+) but active with other transition metal ions such as Ni(2+). This is because of coordination of the Zn(2+) ion through a third histidine, His-131. "Active" transition metal ions are those that bind more weakly to the H-N-H motif because of the disengagement of His-131, which we suggest allows a water molecule to complete the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

7.
ColE9 is a plasmid-encoded protein antibiotic produced by Escherichia coli and closely related species that kills E. coli cells expressing the BtuB receptor. The 15-kDa cytotoxic DNase domain of colicin E9 preferentially nicks double-stranded DNA at thymine bases and shares a common active-site structural motif with a variety of other nucleases, including the H-N-H homing endonucleases and the apoptotic CAD proteins of eukaryotes. Studies of the mechanism by which the DNase domain of ColE9 reaches the cytoplasm of E. coli cells are limited by the lack of a rapid, sensitive assay for the DNA damage that results. Here, we report the development of an SOS promoter-lux fusion reporter system for monitoring DNA damage in colicin-treated cells and illustrate the value of this reporter system in experiments that probe the mechanism and time required for the DNase domain of colicin E9 to reach the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

8.
H-N-H is a motif found in the nuclease domain of a subfamily of bacteria toxins, including colicin E7, that are capable of cleaving DNA nonspecifically. This H-N-H motif has also been identified in a subfamily of homing endonucleases, which cleave DNA site specifically. To better understand the role of metal ions in the H-N-H motif during DNA hydrolysis, we crystallized the nuclease domain of colicin E7 (nuclease-ColE7) in complex with its inhibitor Im7 in two different crystal forms, and we resolved the structures of EDTA-treated, Zn(2+)-bound and Mn(2+)-bound complexes in the presence of phosphate ions at resolutions of 2.6 A to 2.0 A. This study offers the first determination of the structure of a metal-free and substrate-free enzyme in the H-N-H family. The H-N-H motif contains two antiparallel beta-strands linked to a C-terminal alpha-helix, with a divalent metal ion located in the center. Here we show that the metal-binding sites in the center of the H-N-H motif, for the EDTA-treated and Mg(2+)-soaked complex crystals, were occupied by water molecules, indicating that an alkaline earth metal ion does not reside in the same position as a transition metal ion in the H-N-H motif. However, a Zn(2+) or Mn(2+) ions were observed in the center of the H-N-H motif in cases of Zn(2+) or Mn(2+)-soaked crystals, as confirmed in anomalous difference maps. A phosphate ion was found to bridge between the divalent transition metal ion and His545. Based on these structures and structural comparisons with other nucleases, we suggest a functional role for the divalent transition metal ion in the H-N-H motif in stabilizing the phosphoanion in the transition state during hydrolysis.  相似文献   

9.
Endonuclease assays of the H-N-H proteins encoded by two group I introns in the Chlamydomonas moewusii chloroplast psbA gene revealed that the CmpsbA·1 intron specifies a site-specific DNA endonuclease, designated I-CmoeI. Like most previously reported intron-encoded endonucleases, I-CmoeI generates a double-strand break near the insertion site of its encoding intron, leaving 3′ extensions of 4 nt. This enzyme was purified from Escherichia coli as a fusion protein with a His tag at its N-terminus. The recombinant protein (rI-CmoeI) requires a divalent alkaline earth cation for DNA cleavage (Mg2+ > Ca2+ > Sr2+ > Ba2+). It also requires a metal cofactor for DNA binding, a property shared with H-N-H colicins but not with the homing endonucleases characterized to date. rI-CmoeI binds its recognition sequence as a monomer, as revealed by gel retardation assays. Km and kcat values of 100 ± 40 pM and 0.26 ± 0.04 min–1, respectively, were determined. Replacement of the first histidine of the H-N-H motif by an alanine residue abolishes both rI-CmoeI activity and binding to its substrate. We propose that this conserved histidine residue plays a role in binding the metal cofactor and that such binding induces a structural modification of the enzyme which is required for DNA recognition.  相似文献   

10.
The 61 kDa colicin E9 protein toxin enters the cytoplasm of susceptible cells by interacting with outer membrane and periplasmic helper proteins, and kills them by hydrolysing their DNA. The membrane translocation function is located in the N-terminal domain of the colicin, with a key signal sequence being a pentapeptide region that governs the interaction with the helper protein TolB (the TolB box). Previous NMR studies (Collins et al., 2002 J. Mol. Biol. 318, 787-804) have shown that the N-terminal 83 residues of colicin E9, which includes the TolB box, is largely unstructured and highly flexible. In order to further define the properties of this region we have studied a fusion protein containing residues 1-61 of colicin E9 connected to the N-terminus of the E9 DNase by an eight-residue linking sequence. 53 of the expected 58 backbone NH resonances for the first 61 residues and all of the expected 7 backbone NH resonances of the linking sequence were assigned with 3D (1)H-(13)C-(15)N NMR experiments, and the backbone dynamics of these regions investigated through measurement of (1)H-(15)N relaxation properties. Reduced spectral density mapping, extended Lipari-Szabo modelling, and fitting backbone R(2) relaxation rates to a polymer dynamics model identifies three clusters of interacting residues, each containing a tryptophan. Each of these clusters is perturbed by TolB binding to the intact colicin, showing that the significant region for TolB binding extends beyond the recognized five amino acids of the TolB box and demonstrating that the binding epitope for TolB involves a considerable degree of order within an otherwise disordered and flexible domain. Abbreviations : Im9, the immunity protein for colicin E9; E9 DNase, the endonuclease domain of colicin E9; HSQC, heteronuclear single quantum coherence; ppm, parts per million; DSS, 2,2-(dimethylsilyl)propanesulfonic acid; TSP, sodium 3-trimethylsilypropionate; T(1 - 61)-DNase fusion protein, residues 1-61 of colicin E9 connected to the N-terminus of the E9 DNase by an eight residue thrombin cleavage sequence.  相似文献   

11.
We explore the thermodynamic basis for high affinity binding and specificity in conserved protein complexes using colicin endonuclease-immunity protein complexes as our model system. We investigated the ability of each colicin-specific immunity protein (Im2, Im7, Im8 and Im9) to bind the endonuclease (DNase) domains of colicins E2, E7 and E8 in vitro and compared these to the previously studied colicin E9. We find that high affinity binding (Kd < or = 10(-14) M) is a common feature of cognate colicin DNase-Im protein complexes as are non-cognate protein-protein associations, which are generally 10(6)-10(8)-fold weaker. Comparative alanine scanning of Im2 and Im9 residues involved in binding the E2 DNase revealed similar behaviour to that of the two proteins binding the E9 DNase; helix III forms a conserved binding energy hotspot with specificity residues from helix II only contributing favourably in a cognate interaction, a combination we have termed as "dual recognition". Significant differences are seen, however, in the number and side-chain chemistries of specificity sites that contribute to cognate binding. In Im2, Asp33 from helix II dominates colicin E2 specificity, whereas in Im9 several hydrophobic residues, including position 33 (leucine), help define its colicin specificity. A similar distribution of specificity sites was seen using phage display where, with Im2 as the template, a library of randomised sequences was generated in helix II and the library panned against either the E2 or E9 DNase. Position 33 was the dominant specificity site recovered in all E2 DNase-selected clones, whereas a number of Im9 specificity sites were recovered in E9 DNase-selected clones, including position 33. In order to probe the relationship between biological specificity and in vitro binding affinity we compared the degree of protection afforded to bacteria against colicin E9 toxicity by a set of immunity proteins whose affinities for the E9 DNase differed by up to ten orders of magnitude. This analysis indicated that the Kd required for complete biological protection is <10(-10)M and that the "affinity window" over which the selection of novel immunity protein specificities likely evolves is 10(-6)-10(-10)M. This comprehensive survey of colicin DNase-immunity protein complexes illustrates how high affinity protein-protein interactions can be very discriminating even though binding is dominated by a conserved hotspot, with single or multiple specificity sites modulating the overall binding free energy. We discuss these results in the context of other conserved protein complexes and suggest that they point to a generic specificity mechanism in divergently evolved protein-protein interactions.  相似文献   

12.
The restriction endonuclease (REase) R.KpnI is an orthodox Type IIP enzyme, which binds to DNA in the absence of metal ions and cleaves the DNA sequence 5′-GGTAC^C-3′ in the presence of Mg2+ as shown generating 3′ four base overhangs. Bioinformatics analysis reveals that R.KpnI contains a ββα-Me-finger fold, which is characteristic of many HNH-superfamily endonucleases, including homing endonuclease I-HmuI, structure-specific T4 endonuclease VII, colicin E9, sequence non-specific Serratia nuclease and sequence-specific homing endonuclease I-PpoI. According to our homology model of R.KpnI, D148, H149 and Q175 correspond to the critical D, H and N or H residues of the HNH nucleases. Substitutions of these three conserved residues lead to the loss of the DNA cleavage activity by R.KpnI, confirming their importance. The mutant Q175E fails to bind DNA at the standard conditions, although the DNA binding and cleavage can be rescued at pH 6.0, indicating a role for Q175 in DNA binding and cleavage. Our study provides the first experimental evidence for a Type IIP REase that does not belong to the PD…D/EXK superfamily of nucleases, instead is a member of the HNH superfamily.  相似文献   

13.
The mechanism by which E colicins recognize and then bind to BtuB receptors in the outer membrane of Escherichia coli cells is a poorly understood first step in the process that results in cell killing. Using N- and C-terminal deletions of the N-terminal 448 residues of colicin E9, we demonstrated that the smallest polypeptide encoded by one of these constructs that retained receptor-binding activity consisted of residues 343-418. The results of the in vivo receptor-binding assay were supported by an alternative competition assay that we developed using a fusion protein consisting of residues 1-497 of colicin E9 fused to the green fluorescent protein as a fluorescent probe of binding to BtuB in E. coli cells. Using this improved assay, we demonstrated competitive inhibition of the binding of the fluorescent fusion protein by the minimal receptor-binding domain of colicin E9 and by vitamin B12. Mutations located in the minimum R domain that abolished or reduced the biological activity of colicin E9 similarly affected the competitive binding of the mutant colicin protein to BtuB. The sequence of the 76-residue R domain in colicin E9 is identical to that found in colicin E3, an RNase type E colicin. Comparative sequence analysis of colicin E3 and cloacin DF13, which is also an RNase-type colicin but uses the IutA receptor to bind to E. coli cells, revealed significant sequence homology throughout the two proteins, with the exception of a region of 92 residues that included the minimum R domain. We constructed two chimeras between cloacin DF13 and colicin E9 in which (i) the DNase domain of colicin E9 was fused onto the T+R domains of cloacin DF13; and (ii) the R domain and DNase domain of colicin E9 were fused onto the T domain of cloacin DF13. The killing activities of these two chimeric colicins against indicator strains expressing BtuB or IutA receptors support the conclusion that the 76 residues of colicin E9 confer receptor specificity. The minimum receptor-binding domain polypeptide inhibited the growth of the vitamin B12-dependent E. coli 113/3 mutant cells, demonstrating that vitamin B12 and colicin E9 binding is mutually exclusive.  相似文献   

14.
The 134 amino acid DNase domain of colicin E9 contains a zinc-finger-like HNH motif that binds divalent transition metal ions. We have used 1D 1H and 2D 1H-15N NMR methods to characterise the binding of Co2+, Ni2+ and Zn2+ to this protein. Data for the Co2+-substituted and Ni2+-substituted proteins show that the metal ion is coordinated by three histidine residues; and the NMR characteristics of the Ni2+-substituted protein show that two of the histidines are coordinated through their N(epsilon2) atoms and one via its N(delta1). Furthermore, the NMR spectrum of the Ni2+-substituted protein is perturbed by the presence of phosphate, consistent with an X-ray structure showing that phosphate is coordinated to bound Ni2+, and by a change in pH, consistent with an ionisable group at the metal centre with a pKa of 7.9. Binding of an inhibitor protein to the DNase does not perturb the resonances of the metal site, suggesting there is no substantial conformation change of the DNase HNH motif on inhibitor binding. 1H-15N NMR data for the Zn2+-substituted DNase show that this protein, like the metal-free DNase, exists as two conformers with different 1H-15N correlation NMR spectra, and that the binding of Zn2+ does not significantly perturb the spectra, and hence structures, of these conformers beyond the HNH motif region.  相似文献   

15.

Background

Protein transport across cellular membranes is an important aspect of toxin biology. Escherichia coli cell killing by nuclease colicins occurs through DNA (DNases) or RNA (RNases) hydrolysis and to this end their cytotoxic domains require transportation across two sets of membranes. In order to begin to unravel the molecular mechanisms underlying the membrane translocation of colicin nuclease domains, we have analysed the membrane association of four DNase domains (E9, a charge reduction E9 mutant, E8, and E7) and one ribosomal RNase domain (E3) using a biomembrane model system.

Principal Results

We demonstrate, through the use of large unilamellar vesicles composed of synthetic and E. coli lipids and a membrane surface potential sensor, that the colicin nuclease domains bind anionic membranes only, with micromolar affinity and via a cooperative binding mechanism. The evaluation of the nuclease bilayer insertion depth, through a fluorescence quenching analysis using brominated lipids, indicates that the nucleases locate to differential regions in the bilayer. Colicin DNases target the interfacial region of the lipid bilayer, with the DNase E7 showing the deepest insertion, whereas the ribosomal RNase E3 penetrates into the hydrophobic core region of the bilayer. Furthermore, the membrane association of the DNase E7 and the ribosomal RNase E3 induces vesicle aggregation, lipid mixing and content leakage to a much larger extent than that of the other DNases analysed.

Conclusions/Significance

Our results show, for the first time, that after the initial electrostatically driven membrane association, the pleiotropic membrane effects induced by colicin nuclease domains relate to their bilayer insertion depth and may be linked to their in vivo membrane translocation.  相似文献   

16.
The 61-kDa colicin E9 protein toxin enters the cytoplasm of susceptible cells by interacting with outer membrane and periplasmic helper proteins and kills them by hydrolyzing their DNA. The membrane translocation function is located in the N-terminal domain of the colicin, with a key signal sequence being a pentapeptide region that governs the interaction with the helper protein TolB (the TolB box). Previous NMR studies [Collins et al. (2002) J. Mol. Biol. 318, 787-904; MacDonald et al. (2004), J. Biomol. NMR 30, 81-96] have shown that the N-terminal 83 residues of colicin E9, which includes the TolB box, is intrinsically disordered and contains clusters of interacting side chains. To further define the properties of this region of colicin E9, we have investigated the effects on the dynamical and TolB-binding properties of three mutations of colicin E9 that inactivate it as a toxin. The mutations were contained in a fusion protein consisting of residues 1-61 of colicin E9 connected to the N terminus of the E9 DNase by an eight-residue linking sequence. The NMR data reveals that the mutations cause major alterations to the properties of some of the clusters, consistent with some form of association between them and other more distant parts of the amino acid sequence, particularly toward the N terminus of the protein. However, (15)N T(2) measurements indicates that residues 5-13 of the fusion protein bound to the 43-kDa TolB remain as flexible as they are in the free protein. The NMR data point to considerable dynamic ordering within the intrinsically disordered translocation domain of the colicin that is important for creating the TolB-binding site. Furthermore, amino acid sequence considerations suggest that the clusters of amino acids occur because of the size and polarities of the side chains forming them influenced by the propensities of the residues within the clusters and those immediately surrounding them in sequence space to form beta turns.  相似文献   

17.
Based on the published bovine DNase sequence (Liao, T.-H., Salnikow, J., Moore, S., and Stein, W. H. (1973) J. Biol. Chem. 248, 1489-1495), the ovine DNase sequence is derived from the amino acid compositions of isolated short peptides covering all regions of the intact polypeptide. The sequence is substantiated by results of automated Edman degradation of the intact polypeptide and of the two middle CNBr fragments, and by elucidation of the complete sequence of the COOH-terminal CNBr peptide. The 12 changes from bovine to ovine DNase are at residues 22 (Ala to Ser), 29 (Val to Leu), 35 (Val to Ala), 54 (Tyr to Asp), 62 (Thr to Ser), 83 (Leu to Val), 121 (His to Pro), 127 (Glu to Ala), 132 (Ala to Pro), 159 (His to Asp), 163 (Val to Ile), and 231 (Ala to Val). A minor genetic variant form of ovine DNase has Val at residue 163. The data from automated Edman degradation of the largest CNBr peptide of bovine DNase show that the published bovine DNase sequence is in error and that an Ile-Val-Arg tripeptide must be inserted between Arg-27 and Arg-28. The corrected sequence is substantiated by two peptides covering this region each with three amino acids more than the published sequence. Comparison of the bovine, ovine, and porcine DNase sequences reveals the following: with the revised bovine sequence, all three DNase sequences can be aligned without a gap; all three DNases have a carbohydrate side chain at Asn-18, but only porcine DNase has carbohydrate at Asn-106; there are 12 changes between bovine and ovine DNases, 56 between bovine and porcine, and 50 between ovine and porcine; there are six highly variable regions and four invariable ones; bovine and ovine DNases have the same length while porcine DNase is longer by 2 amino acid residues at the COOH terminus; the residues around the nucleotide-binding site, the four pairs of salt bridges, and the essential His-134 groups are not changed.  相似文献   

18.
The activity of bovine DNase, but not that of porcine DNase, is inhibited by antisera against bovine DNase, and vice versa. Inhibition of DNase is found in the immunoglobulin G-containing fractions, as shown by ion exchange chromatography. Inactive DNase, carboxymethylated specifically at the active site His134, competes with active DNase and reverses the antisera inhibition of DNase, suggesting that the epitode responsible for inhibition does not contain the active site His134. Alignment of the sequences of DNase of these two species shows that the greatest variation occurs between residues 153 and 163, within which are three consecutive peptide bonds, Lys-Trp-His-Leu, that are readily cleaved by trypsin, chymotrypsin, or thermolysin. The 8-hr digest of DNase by each of these three proteases has lost the ability to reverse antisera inhibition. The degree of antisera inhibition varies with the metal ion used as the activator for DNase-catalyzed reactions. When Mn2+, Co2+, or Mg2+ plus Ca2+ are used as activators, inhibition is approximately 50%. When pBR322 plasmid is used as substrate, gel electrophoresis shows that the DNase-catalyzed DNA hydrolysis produces a significant amount of double-strand cuts with Mn2+, Co2+, or Mg2+ plus Ca2+ as activators and antisera inhibit DNase action only on double-strand cuts. With only Mg2+ as the activator no double-strand cuts are observed, either in the presence or absence of antisera, and the DNase activity is not significantly inhibited. We conclude that antisera inhibition is due to antibody binding of the DNase polypeptide chain within residues 153 and 163. These residues are not crucial for catalysis, but are required for DNA binding, which results in double-strand cuts.  相似文献   

19.
Homing endonucleases are classified into four families based on active site sequence motifs. Through structural comparisons we have found structural similarities between the endonuclease domain of colicin E9, an H-N-H motif-containing enzyme, and both the non-specific nuclease from Serratia and I-PpoI, a His-Cys box-containing homing endonuclease. Our comparison identifies conservation at the heart of all three enzyme active sites and so argues for a re-classification of H-N-H and His-Cys box homing endonucleases as a single family. We suggest the 'betabetaalpha-Me family' of homing enzymes to reflect the three elements of secondary structure and the metal ion that define the motif.  相似文献   

20.
Deoxyribonucleases from rat brain   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Two distinctly different DNases were isolated from rat brain and could be separated easily by ammonium sulphate fractionation. One of the DNases acts optimally at pH 5.0 hydrolysing preferentially native DNA and requiring an optimal Mg2+ concentration of about 0.03 m . The other DNase has its optimal pH between 7.4 and 8.9, acts preferentially on heat-denatured DNA and requires a lower Mg2+ concentration, the optimum being 1 × 10?4m . Cerebellum from adult rat brain has a lower acid DNase activity and higher alkaline DNase activity, and therefore has a higher ratio of alkaline DNase to acid DNase than the other areas of brain studied. This unique activity ratio in cerebellum of adult rat brain was not observed in infant rat brain.  相似文献   

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