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1.
An electron microscopic method for demonstrating the presence of and mapping the positions of proteins specifically bound to nucleic acids is described. The nucleic acid-protein complex is treated with dinitrofluorobenzene under conditions such that dinitrophenyl (DNP) groups are attached to nucleophilic groups on the protein, with only a low level of random attachment to the nuclei acid. This product is treated with rabbit anti-DNP IgG. The position of the protein-(DNP)n(IgG)m complex on the nucleic acid strand can be observed by electron microscopy by protein free spreading methods and, in many cases, by cytochrome-c spreading. If necessary for visualization by the latter method, the size of the labeled region can be increased by treatment with goat anti-rabbit IgG. High efficiency of electron microscopic labeling is achieved. Examples studied are: the adenovirus-2 DNA terminal protein, a protein covalently bound to SV40 DNA, DNA polymerase I bound to DNA, E. coli RNA polymerase bound to T7 DNA, and proteins UV crosslinked to avian sarcoma virus RNA.  相似文献   

2.
Adenovirus 5 DNA-protein complex is isolated from virions as a duplex DNA molecule covalently attached by the 5' termini of each strand to virion protein of unknown function. The DNA-protein complex can be digested with E. coli exonuclease III to generate molecules analogous to DNA replication intermediates in that they contain long single stranded regions ending in 5' termini bound to terminal protein. The infectivity of pronase digested Adenovirus 5 DNA is greatly diminished by exonuclease III digestion. However, the infectivity of the DNA-protein complex is not significantly altered when up to at least 2400 nucleotides are removed from the 3' ends of each strand. This indicates that the terminal protein protects 5' terminated single stranded regions from digestion by a cellular exonuclease. DNA-protein complex prepared from a host range mutant with a mutation mapping in the left 4% of the genome was digested with exonuclease III, hybridized to a wild type restriction fragment comprising the left 8% of the genome, and transfected into HeLa cells. Virus with wild type phenotype was recovered at high frequency.  相似文献   

3.
T7 phage DNA eroded with lambda exonuclease (to create 3'-protruding strands) or exonuclease III (to create 5'-protruding strands) was treated under unwinding assay conditions with DNA helicase II. Single-stranded DNA-binding protein (of Escherichia coli or phage T4) was added to disentangle the denatured DNA and the complexes were examined in the electron microscope. DNA helicase II complexes filtered through a gel column before assay retain the ability to generate forks suggesting that DNA helicase II unwinds in a preformed complex by translocating along the bound DNA strand. The enzyme initiates preferentially at the ends of the lambda-exonuclease-treated duplexes and is found at a fork on the initially protruding strand. It also initiates at the ends of the exonuclease-III-treated duplexes where, as with approximately 5% of the forks traceable back to a single-stranded gap, it is found on the initially recessed strand. The results are consistent with the view that DNA helicase II unwinds in the 3'-5' direction relative to the bound strand. They also confirm that the enzyme can initiate at the end of a fully base-paired strand. At a fork, DNA helicase II is bound as a tract of molecules of approximately 110 nm in length. Tracts of enzyme assemble from non-cooperatively bound molecules in the presence of ATP. During unwinding, DNA helicase II apparently can translocate to the displaced strand which conceivably can deplete the leading strand of the enzyme. Continued adsorption of enzyme to DNA might replenish forks arrested by strand switch of the unwinding enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
5.
H Van Heuverswyn  W Fiers 《Gene》1980,9(3-4):195-203
Restriction endonuclease BglI recognizes the DNA sequence (Formula: see text) and cleaves each strand at the site indicated, thus generating 3' protruding ends. The recognition sequence was deduced by correlating mapping data with nucleotide sequence information and the position of cleavage was unambiguously determined by 32P labeling of 5' termini produced by BglI digestion.  相似文献   

6.
R Craigie  K Mizuuchi 《Cell》1987,51(3):493-501
Transposition of Mu involves transfer of the 3' ends of Mu DNA to the 5' ends of a staggered cut in the target DNA. We find that cleavage at the 3' ends of Mu DNA precedes cutting of the target DNA. The resulting nicked species exists as a noncovalent nucleoprotein complex in which the two Mu ends are held together. This cleaved donor complex completes strand transfer when a target DNA, Mu B protein, and ATP are provided. Mu end DNA sequences that have been precisely cut at their 3' ends by a restriction endonuclease, instead of by Mu A protein and HU, are efficiently transferred to a target DNA upon subsequent incubation with Mu A protein, Mu B protein, and ATP. Cleavage of the Mu ends therefore cannot be energetically coupled with joining these ends to a target DNA. We discuss the DNA strand transfer mechanism in view of these results, and propose a model involving direct transfer of the 5' ends of the cut target DNA, from their original partners, to the 3' ends of Mu.  相似文献   

7.
Since the ends of DNA chains are thought to be important in homologous recombination, the way in which RecA protein and similar recombination enzymes process ends is important. We analyzed the effects of ends both on the formation of joints, and the progression of strand exchange. When the only homologous end was provided by a single strand, there was no significant difference between the formation of joints at a 5' end or a 3' end; but in agreement with the report of Konforti & Davis, Escherichia coli single-stranded DNA binding protein (SSB) selectively inhibited the activity of 5' ends. Complete strand exchange, assessed by study of linear single-stranded and double-stranded substrates, took place only in the 5' to 3' direction relative to DNA in the nucleoprotein filament. These observations pose a paradox: in the presence of SSB, of which there are about 800 tetramers per cell, the formation of homologous joints by RecA protein is favored at a 3' end, from which, however, authentic strand exchange appears not to occur. Since observations reported here and elsewhere show that joints have different properties when formed at a 5' versus a 3' end, we suggest that they may be processed differently in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
Integration of retroviral DNA into the host cell genome requires the interaction of retroviral integrase (IN) protein with the outer ends of both viral long terminal repeats (LTRs) to remove two nucleotides from the 3' ends (3' processing) and to join the 3' ends to newly created 5' ends in target DNA (strand transfer). We have purified the IN protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) after production in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and found it to have many of the properties described for retroviral IN proteins. The protein performs both 3' processing and strand transfer reactions by using HIV-1 or HIV-2 attachment (att) site oligonucleotides. A highly conserved CA dinucleotide adjacent to the 3' processing site of HIV-1 is important for both the 3' processing and strand transfer reactions; however, it is not sufficient for full IN activity, since alteration of nucleotide sequences internal to the HIV-1 U5 CA also impairs IN function, and Moloney murine leukemia virus att site oligonucleotides are poor substrates for HIV-1 IN. When HIV-1 att sequences are positioned internally in an LTR-LTR circle junction substrate, HIV-1 IN fails to cleave the substrate preferentially at positions coinciding with correct 3' processing, implying a requirement for positioning att sites near DNA ends. The 2 bp normally located beyond the 3' CA in linear DNA are not essential for in vitro integration, since mutant oligonucleotides with single-stranded 3' or 5' extensions or with no residues beyond the CA dinucleotide are efficiently used. Selection of target sites is nonrandom when att site oligonucleotides are joined to each other in vitro. We modified an in vitro assay to distinguish oligonucleotides serving as the substrate for 3' processing and as the target for strand transfer. The modified assay demonstrates that nonrandom usage of target sites is dependent on the target oligonucleotide sequence and independent of the oligonucleotide used as the substrate for 3' processing.  相似文献   

9.
Hepatitis B virus DNA contains a tightly bound protein which was not removed by heating to 60°C with 2% SDS, 2% mercaptoethanol. The protein was indirectly demonstrated by the extraction of the DNA-protein complex with phenol before but not after its digestion with proteinase K. The DNA-protein complex had a lower buoyant density than protease-treated or free DNA; it was bound to glass fiber filters; it migrated at a slower rate in gel electrophoresis; and it could be radiolabeled by oxidative iodination. The binding site of the protein was mapped by extraction of restriction endonuclease digests with phenol and analysis of the digests for missing DNA fragments. The protein was localized to a site near the 5′ end of the complete viral DNA strand. It remained attached to this strand after heating with SDS to 90°C or treatment with 0.1 N NaOH, suggesting a covalent linkage. The 5′ end of neither viral DNA strand could be phosphorylated in a reaction with polynucleotide kinase, consistent with attachment of protein to the 5′ ends. The incomplete DNA strand, however, which is the strand elongated by the virion DNA polymerase reaction, did not contain a detectable amount of polypeptide as did the complete strand. The reasons for the apparent block of the 5′ end of the incomplete DNA strand is thus not known. The protein bound covalently to HBV DNA could be involved in the replication of the complete viral DNA strand and/or endonucleolytic generation of linear unit-length DNA pieces from replicative intermediates, although its function and origin are not yet known.  相似文献   

10.
The recA protein (RecA) promotes DNA pairing and strand exchange optimally in the presence of single-stranded binding protein (SSB). Under these conditions, 3' homologous ends are essential for stable joint molecule formation between linear single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) and supercoiled DNA (i.e. 3' ends are 50-60 times more reactive than 5' ends). Linear ssDNAs with homology at the 5' end do not participate in pairing. In the absence of SSB, the strand exchange reaction is less efficient; however, linear ssDNAs with 3' end homology are still 5- to 10-fold more reactive than those with 5' end homology. The preference for a 3' homologous end in the absence of SSB suggests that this is an intrinsic property of RecA-promoted strand exchange. The preferential reactivity of 3' homologous ends is likely to be a consequence of the polarity of polymerization of RecA on ssDNA. Specifically, since RecA polymerizes in the 5'----3' direction, 3' ends are more likely to be coated with RecA and, hence, will be more reactive than 5' ends.  相似文献   

11.
Chen H  Engelman A 《Journal of virology》2000,74(17):8188-8193
Two activities of retroviral integrase, 3' processing and DNA strand transfer, are required to integrate viral cDNA into a host cell chromosome. Integrase activity has been analyzed in vitro using purified protein and recombinant DNA substrates that model the U3 and U5 ends of viral cDNA or by using viral preintegration complexes (PICs) that form during virus infection. Numerous studies have investigated changes in integrase or viral DNA for effects on both 3' processing and DNA strand transfer activities using purified protein, but similar analyses have not been carried out using PICs. Here, we analyzed PICs from human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) strain 604del, an integration-defective mutant lacking 26 bp of U5, and revE1, a revertant of 604del containing an additional 19-bp deletion, for levels of 3' processing activity that occurred in infected cells and for levels of in vitro DNA strand transfer activity. Whereas revE1 supported one-third to one-half of the level of wild-type DNA strand transfer activity, the level of 604del DNA strand transfer activity was undetectable. Surprisingly, integrase similarly processed the 3' ends of 604del and revE1 in vivo. We therefore conclude that 604del is blocked in its ability to replicate in cells after the 3' processing step of retroviral integration. Whereas Western blotting showed that wild-type, revE1, and 604del PICs contained similar levels of integrase protein, Mu-mediated PCR footprinting revealed only minimal protein-DNA complex formation at the ends of 604del cDNA. We propose that 604del is replication defective because proteins important for DNA strand transfer activity do not stably associate with this cDNA after in vivo 3' processing by integrase.  相似文献   

12.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae RAD50 and MRE11 genes are required for the nucleolytic processing of DNA double-strand breaks. We have overexpressed Rad50 and Mre11 in yeast cells and purified them to near homogeneity. Consistent with the genetic data, we show that the purified Rad50 and Mre11 proteins form a stable complex. In the Rad50.Mre11 complex, the protein components exist in equimolar amounts. Mre11 has a 3' to 5' exonuclease activity that results in the release of mononucleotides. The addition of Rad50 does not significantly alter the exonucleolytic function of Mre11. Using homopolymeric oligonucleotide-based substrates, we show that the exonuclease activity of Mre11 and Rad50.Mre11 is enhanced for substrates with duplex DNA ends. We have examined the endonucleolytic function of Mre11 on defined, radiolabeled hairpin structures that also contain 3' and 5' single-stranded DNA overhangs. Mre11 is capable of cleaving hairpins and the 3' single-stranded DNA tail. These endonuclease activities of Mre11 are enhanced markedly by Rad50 but only in the presence of ATP. Based on these results, we speculate that the Mre11 nuclease complex may mediate the nucleolytic digestion of the 5' strand at secondary structures formed upon DNA strand separation.  相似文献   

13.
14.
15.
M Wu  N Davidson    E Wimmer 《Nucleic acids research》1978,5(12):4711-4723
A recently described method (Wu, M. and Davidson, N. (1978), Nucleic Acids Research 5, in press) for visualizing proteins attached to nucleic acids in the electron microscope has been applied to study proteins attached to poliovirion RNA and to the viral double-stranded intracellular RF form. A protein is found at the 5' end of the plus strand virion RNA, and protein components are found at both ends of the duplex RF. In the RF as usually extracted, there is frequently a larger or compound protein aggregate at the end which contains the 3' end of the plus strand and the 5' end of the minus strand. Banding in CsCl-guanidinium hydrochloride in the presence of sarkosyl causes dissociation of some components of this aggregate, leaving both ends labeled with the covalently bound VPg. These results confirm and extend previous biochemical studies of proteins bound to poliovirion RNA and to the RF form.  相似文献   

16.
J Herold  R Andino 《Molecular cell》2001,7(3):581-591
The mechanisms and factors involved in the replication of positive stranded RNA viruses are still unclear. Using poliovirus as a model, we show that a long-range interaction between ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes formed at the ends of the viral genome is necessary for RNA replication. Initiation of negative strand RNA synthesis requires a 3' poly(A) tail. Strikingly, it also requires a cloverleaf-like RNA structure located at the other end of the genome. An RNP complex formed around the 5' cloverleaf RNA structure interacts with the poly(A) binding protein bound to the 3' poly(A) tail, thus linking the ends of the viral RNA and effectively circularizing it. Formation of this circular RNP complex is required for initiation of negative strand RNA synthesis. RNA circularization may be a general replication mechanism for positive stranded RNA viruses.  相似文献   

17.
Telomeres are the specialized protein--DNA complexes that cap and protect the ends of linear eukaryotic chromosomes. The extreme 3' end of the telomeric DNA in Oxytricha nova is bound by a two-subunit sequence-specific and 3' end-specific protein called the telomere end-binding protein (OnTEBP). Here we describe the crystal structure of the alpha-subunit of OnTEBP in complex with T4G4 single-stranded telomeric DNA. This structure shows an (alpha--ssDNA)2 homodimer with a large approximately 7,000 A2 protein--protein interface in which the domains of alpha are rearranged extensively from their positions in the structure of an alpha--beta--ssDNA ternary complex. The (alpha--ssDNA)2 complex can bind two telomeres on opposite sides of the dimer and, thus, acts as a protein mediator of telomere--telomere associations. The structures of the (alpha--ssDNA)2 dimer presented here and the previously described alpha--beta--ssDNA complex demonstrate that OnTEBP forms multiple telomeric complexes that potentially mediate the assembly and disassembly of higher order telomeric structures.  相似文献   

18.
During conjugation, a single strand of DNA is cleaved at the origin of transfer (oriT) by the plasmid-encoded relaxase. This strand is then unwound from its complement and transferred in the 5'-to-3' direction, with the 3' end likely extended by rolling-circle replication. The resulting, newly synthesized oriT must then be cleaved as well, prior to recircularization of the strand in the recipient. Evidence is presented here that the R1162 relaxase contains only a single nucleophile capable of cleaving at oriT, with another molecule therefore required to cleave at a second site. An assay functionally isolating this second cleavage shows that this reaction can take place in the donor cell. As a result, there is a flux of strands with free 3' ends into the recipient. These ends are susceptible to degradation by exonuclease I. The degree of susceptibility is affected by the presence of an uncleaved oriT within the strand. A model is presented where these internal oriTs bind and trap the relaxase molecule covalently bound to the 5' end of the incoming strand. Such a mechanism would result in the preferential degradation of transferred DNA that had not been properly cleaved in the donor.  相似文献   

19.
The chromosomal ends of Leishmania (Leishmania) amazonensis contain conserved 5'-TTAGGG-3' telomeric repeats. Protein complexes that associate in vitro with these DNA sequences, Leishmania amazonensis G-strand telomeric protein (LaGT1-3), were identified and characterized by electrophoretic mobility shift assays and UV cross-linking using protein fractions purified from S100 and nuclear extracts. The three complexes did not form (a) with double-stranded DNA and the C-rich telomeric strand, (b) in competition assays using specific telomeric DNA oligonucleotides, or (c) after pretreatment with proteinase K. LaGT1 was the most specific and did not bind a Tetrahymena telomeric sequence. All three LaGTs associated with an RNA sequence cognate to the telomeric G-rich strand and a complex similar to LaGT1 is formed with a double-stranded DNA bearing a 3' G-overhang tail. The protein components of LaGT2 and LaGT3 were purified by affinity chromatography and identified, after renaturation, as approximately 35 and approximately 52 kDa bands, respectively. The 相似文献   

20.
Paull TT 《DNA Repair》2010,9(12):1283-1291
Double-strand breaks in chromosomal DNA are repaired efficiently in eukaryotic cells through pathways that involve direct religation of broken ends, or through pathways that utilize an unbroken, homologous DNA molecule as a template for replication. Pathways of repair that require homology initiate with the resection of the 5' strand at the break site, to uncover the 3' single-stranded DNA that becomes a critical intermediate in single-strand annealing and in homologous strand exchange. Resection of the 5' strand is regulated to occur most efficiently in S and G(2) phases of the cell cycle when sister chromatids are present as recombination templates. The mechanisms governing resection in eukaryotes have been elusive for many years, but recent work has identified the major players in short-range processing of DNA ends as well as the extensive resection of breaks that has been observed in vivo. This review focuses on the Mre11/Rad50/Xrs2(Nbs1) complex and the Sae2(CtIP) protein and their roles in initiating both short-range and long-range resection, the effects of topoisomerase-DNA conjugates on resection in vivo, and the relationship between these factors and NHEJ proteins in regulating 5' strand resection in eukaryotic cells.  相似文献   

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