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1.
The assembly of the primosome, a multienzyme complex responsible for priming of lagging-strand DNA synthesis in Escherichia coli, occurs on defined regions of DNA. These primosome assembly sites are on the order of 70 nucleotides in length, yet they share little DNA sequence homology. In order to understand the interaction of the primosomal proteins with these sites, the isolation of single-base substitution mutants of the wild-type sequences has been undertaken. The response of 32 of these mutated primosome assembly sites to increasing concentrations of monovalent and divalent cations when they were used as DNA effectors for E. coli replication factor Y-catalyzed ATP hydrolysis and their efficiency as primosome-dependent DNA replication templates have revealed the existence of four distinct classes of mutations in primosome assembly sites. Class I mutations have essentially no effect on the activities elicited by the DNA site; thus, it is likely that they define nonessential or spacer nucleotide residues. Class II mutated DNAs require higher Mg2+ concentrations than the wild-type DNA to be fully activated as factor Y ATPase effectors and cannot be stimulated in the ATPase reaction by monovalent salt at suboptimal levels of Mg2+. The implication of this mutant phenotype on the role of secondary and tertiary DNA structure in determining an active site is examined in the accompanying article (Soeller, W., Abarzúa, P., and Marians, K. J. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 14293-14300). Class III mutations coinactivate both the ATPase effector and DNA replication template activity of the site, indicating that they probably represent essential contact points between factor Y and the DNA. Class IV mutated DNAs behave in a manner similar to class II mutated DNAs in the ATPase reaction, but have a replication template activity intermediate between that of the class III and class II mutant DNAs. It is possible that these mutant DNAs are deficient in their ability to catalyze, during primosome assembly, a step subsequent to that of factor Y binding.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Based on their activity as effectors for the ATPase activity of Escherichia coli replication factor Y and as templates for primosome-directed DNA synthesis, single-point mutations in the L- and H-strand primosome assembly sites from pBR322 DNA have been grouped into four classes (Abarzúa, P., Soeller, W., and Marians, K. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 14286-14292). In this report, the effect of various ligands on the characteristic activities of primosome assembly site class II mutants has been examined. Both Mn2+ and spermidine can, at low levels, substitute for Mg2+ in the activation of wild-type sites as effectors for factor Y-catalyzed hydrolysis of ATP. Class II mutant sites characteristically require higher levels of these ligands for activation, suggesting that the specific higher order structure of an active primosome assembly site is maintained through base pairing within the single-stranded DNA sequence. This conclusion is supported by the following. 1) Excess levels of the E. coli single-stranded DNA-binding protein can inactivate wild-type sites at 1 mM Mg2+. Either the addition of NaCl to 80 mM or an increase in the Mg2+ concentration to 5 mM protects against this inactivation. Class II mutant sites, however, cannot be stabilized by 80 mM NaCl at 1 mM Mg2+, and only some class II mutants can be stabilized at 5 mM Mg2+. 2) Active second-site revertants, isolated in vivo and in vitro, of inactive primosome assembly sites containing multiple-base substitutions have mutated to restore lost base pairs in the proposed stem and loop structure of the sites.  相似文献   

3.
The primosome is a mobile multiprotein DNA replication-priming apparatus that requires seven Escherichia coli proteins (replication factor Y (protein n'), proteins n and n", and the products of the dnaB, dnaC, dnaT, and dnaG genes) for assembly at a specific site (termed a primosome assembly site) on single-stranded DNA binding protein-coated single-stranded DNA. Two of the protein components of the primosome have intrinsic DNA helicase activity. The DNA B protein acts in the 5'----3' direction, whereas factor Y acts in the 3'----5' direction. The primosome complex has DNA helicase activity when present at a replication fork in conjunction with the DNA polymerase III holoenzyme. In this report, evidence is presented that the multiprotein primosome per se can act as a DNA helicase in the absence of the DNA polymerase III holoenzyme. The primosome DNA helicase activity can be manifested in either direction along the DNA strand. The directionality of the primosome DNA helicase activity is modulated by the concentration and type of nucleoside triphosphate present in the reaction mixture. This DNA helicase activity requires all the preprimosomal proteins (the primosomal proteins minus the dnaG-encoded primase). Preprimosome complexes must assemble at a primosome assembly site in order to be loaded onto the single-stranded DNA and act subsequently as a DNA helicase. The 5'----3' primosome DNA helicase activity requires a 3' single-stranded tail on the fragment to be displaced, while the 3'----5' activity does not require a 5' single-stranded tail on the fragment to be displaced. Multienzyme preprimosomes moving in either direction are capable of associating with the primase to form complete primosomes that can synthesize RNA primers.  相似文献   

4.
PriA and other primosome assembly proteins of Escherichia coli recruit the major replicative helicase DnaB for replisome assembly during bacteriophage Mu transposition and replication. MuA transposase catalyzes the transfer of Mu ends to target DNA, forming a potential replication fork that provides the assembly site for the replisome. However, this fork lacks the single-stranded DNA needed to load DnaB. Although no pre-existing primosome assembly sites that bind PriA were found within the Mu end sequences, PriA was able to bind to the forked DNA structure created by MuA. The helicase activity of PriA could then open the duplex to create the DnaB binding site. In a tightly coupled reaction on synthetic forked substrates, PriA promoted both the unwinding of the lagging strand arm and preprimosome assembly to load DnaB onto the lagging strand template. PriA apparently translocated 3' to 5' along the lagging strand template until sufficient single-stranded DNA was exposed for binding of DnaB, which then translocated 5' to 3' in the opposite direction. Mutant PriA lacking helicase activity was unable to promote this process, and loss of PriA helicase impaired Mu DNA replication in vivo and in vitro. This suggests that the opening of the duplex by PriA helicase is a critical step in the initiation of Mu DNA replication. Concerted helicase and primosome assembly functions would allow PriA to act as initiator on recombination intermediates and stalled replication forks. As part of the replisome, PriA may act as a mobile initiator that minimizes interruptions in chromosomal replication.  相似文献   

5.
The Escherichia coli primosome is a mobile multiprotein DNA replication-priming apparatus that assembles at a specific site (termed a primosome assembly site (PAS] on single-stranded DNA-binding protein-coated single-stranded DNA. The PRI A protein (factor Y, protein n') is a PAS sequence-specific (d)ATPase as well as a DNA helicase and is believed to direct the assembly of the primosome at a PAS. In this report, the PRI A DNA helicase reaction is dissected in vitro, by use of a strand displacement assay, into three steps with distinct ATP requirements. First, the PRI A protein gains entry to the DNA via an ATP-independent, PAS sequence-specific binding event. Second, the PRI A protein translocates along the single-stranded DNA in the 3'----5' direction at a maximal rate of 90 nucleotides/s. DNA translocation requires ATP hydrolysis. The ATP concentration required to support half of the maximal translocation rate is 100 microM, which is identical to the Km for ATP of the PRI A protein DNA-dependent ATPase activity. Finally, the PRI A protein unwinds duplex DNA. The ATP concentration required for duplex DNA unwinding depends upon the length of the duplex region to be unwound. Displacement of a 24-nucleotide long oligomer required no more ATP than that required for the translocation of PRI A protein along single-stranded DNA, whereas displacement of a 390-nucleotide long DNA fragment required a 10-fold higher concentration of ATP than that required for oligomer displacement.  相似文献   

6.
A defined region of the viral (+) strand of phi X174 and of each strand of pBR322 DNA serves as an effector for the ATPase activity of replication factor Y from Escherichia coli. These loci can also function as complementary strand origins of DNA replication in a single-stranded circular leads to replicative form pathway whose protein requirements are characteristic of phi X174 DNA. Despite this functional similarity, these three sites possess no extensive sequence homology. To uncover a possible common structural determinant, factor Y recognition sequences were treated with pancreatic DNase or dimethyl sulfate in the presence and absence of this replication protein. When factor Y was present, the action of the nuclease was altered in a similar manner on each of the three templates, indicating that factor Y was bound to the entire length of its effector site. Factor Y-mediated modification of the dimethyl sulfate methylation patterns gave evidence of specific, tight protein-DNA contacts. Protection maps, devised by plotting the results of the methylation and footprinting experiments on duplex structures, suggest that tertiary interactions are either involved in the formation of a factor Y effector site or are induced by the binding of the protein.  相似文献   

7.
Bovine pancreatic deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) is an endonuclease which cleaves double-stranded DNA. Cocrystal structures of DNase I with oligonucleotides have revealed interactions between the side chains of several amino acids (N74, R111, N170, S206, T207, and Y211) and the DNA phosphates. The effects these interactions have on enzyme catalysis and DNA hydrolysis selectivity have been investigated by site-directed mutagenesis. Mutations to R111, N170, T207, and Y211 severely compromised activity toward both DNA and a small chromophoric substrate. A hydrogen bond between R111 (which interacts with the phosphate immediately 5' to the cutting site) and the essential amino acid H134 is probably required to maintain this histidine in the correct orientation for efficient hydrolysis. Both T207 and Y211 bind to the phosphate immediately 3' to the cleavage site. Additionally, T207 is involved in binding an essential, structural, calcium ion, and Y211 is the nearest neighbor to D212, a critical catalytic residue. N170 interacts with the scissile phosphate and appears to play a direct role in the catalytic mechanism. The mutation N74D, which interacts with a phosphate twice removed from the scissile group, strongly reduced DNA hydrolysis. However, a comparison of DNase I variants from several species suggests that certain amino acids, which allow interaction with phosphates (positively charged or hydrogen bonding), are tolerated. S206, which binds to a DNA phosphate two positions away from the cleavage site, appears to play a relatively unimportant role. None of the enzyme variants, including a triple mutation in which N74, R111, and Y211 were altered, affected DNA hydrolysis selectivity. This suggests that phosphate binding residues play no role in the selection of DNA substrates.  相似文献   

8.
The DNA polymerase holoenzyme of bacteriophage T4 contains, besides the DNA polymerase itself (the gene 43 protein), a complex of the protein products of T4 genes 44 and 62 (a DNA-dependent ATPase) and of gene 45. Together, the 44/62 and 45 proteins form an ATP-dependent "sliding clamp" that holds a moving DNA polymerase molecule at the 3' terminus of a growing DNA chain. We have used a unique DNA fragment that forms a short hairpin helix with a single-stranded 5' tail (a "primer-template junction") to map the binding sites for these polymerase accessory proteins by DNA footprinting techniques. In the absence of the DNA polymerase, the accessory proteins protect from DNase I cleavage 19-20 nucleotides just behind the 3' end of the primer strand and 27-28 nucleotides on the complementary portion of the template strand. Detection of this DNA-protein complex requires the 44/62 and 45 proteins plus the nonhydrolyzable ATP analogue adenosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate). The complex is not detected in the presence of ATP. We suggest that ATP hydrolysis by the 44/62 protein normally activates the accessory proteins at a primer-template junction, permitting the DNA polymerase to bind and thus form the complete holoenzyme. However, when the polymerase is missing, as in these experiments, ATP hydrolysis is instead followed by a release (or loosening) of the accessory protein complex.  相似文献   

9.
The multi-functional PriA protein of Escherichia coli (formerly replication factor Y or protein n') serves to guide the ordered assembly of the primosome, a mobile multiprotein replication priming/helicase complex. Primosome assembly is essential for bacteriophage OX174 complementary DNA strand synthesis and ColE1-type plasmid replication reconstituted in vitro with purified proteins. The biochemical activities of the primosome suggest that it can fulfill the primase/helicase requirement on the lagging-strand DNA template during cellular DNA replication. However, reconstruction in vitro of DNA replication of small plasmids containing the E. coli origin of DNA replication (oriC) does not require the complete complement of primosomal proteins. Thus, the extent to which PriA-catalysed primosome assembly participates in chromosomal replication has remained unclear. The recent isolation of the genes encoding PriA, PriB (protein n), PriC (protein n"), and DnaT (protein i) has provided the necessary tools for addressing this issue. The phenotype of mutations in these genes, and other results described in this review, suggest that assembly of the primosome catalysed by PriA does in fact contribute at some stage to normal cellular DNA replication. A model for primososme-catalysed reactivation of a dysfunctional replication fork is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
The PriA replication protein of Escherichia coli (formerly replication factor Y or protein n') is multifunctional. It is a site-specific, single-stranded DNA-dependent ATPase (dATPase), a 3'----5' DNA helicase, and guides the ordered assembly of the primosome, a mobile, multiprotein DNA replication priming/helicase complex. Although PriA is not absolutely required for viability, priA null mutant cells grow very slowly, have poor viability, and form extensive filaments. In order to assess which of the multiple activities of PriA are required for normal replication and growth, site-directed mutagenesis was employed to introduce single amino acid substitutions for the invariant lysine within the consensus nucleotide-binding motif found in PriA. Biochemical characterization of the representative purified mutant PriA proteins revealed them to be completely deficient in nucleotide hydrolysis, incapable of translocation along a single-stranded DNA binding protein-coated single-stranded DNA template, and unable to manifest the 3'----5' DNA helicase activity of wild-type PriA. These mutant proteins were, however, capable of catalyzing the assembly of active primosomes in vitro. Furthermore, when supplied in trans to insertionally inactivated priA cells, plasmids containing a copy of these mutant priA genes restored the wild-type growth rate, viability, and cell morphology. Based on these results, a model for PriA function in vivo is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
A direct quantitative analysis of the initial steps in primosome assembly, involving PriA and PriB proteins and the minimal primosome assembly site (PAS) of phage ?X174, has been performed using fluorescence intensity, fluorescence anisotropy titration, and fluorescence resonance energy transfer techniques. We show that two PriA molecules bind to the PAS at both strong and weak binding sites on the DNA, respectively, without detectable cooperative interactions. Binding of the PriB dimer to the PriA-PAS complex dramatically increases PriA's affinity for the strong site, but only slightly affects its affinity for the weak site. Associations with the strong and weak sites are driven by apparent entropy changes, with binding to the strong site accompanied by a large unfavorable enthalpy change. The PriA-PriB complex, formed independently of the DNA, is able to directly recognize the PAS without the preceding the binding of PriA to the PAS. Thus, the high-affinity state of PriA for PAS is generated through PriA-PriB interactions. The effect of PriB is specific for PriA-PAS association, but not for PriA-double-stranded DNA or PriA-single-stranded DNA interactions. Only complexes containing two PriA molecules can generate a profound change in the PAS structure in the presence of ATP. The obtained results provide a quantitative framework for the elucidation of further steps in primosome assembly and for quantitative analyses of other molecular machines of cellular metabolism.  相似文献   

12.
McrBC, a GTP-requiring, modification-dependent endonuclease of Escherichia coli K-12, specifically recognizes DNA sites of the form 5' R(m)C 3'. DNA cleavage normally requires translocation-mediated coordination between two such recognition elements at distinct sites. We have investigated assembly of the cleavage-competent complex with gel-shift and DNase I footprint analysis. In the gel-shift system, McrB(L) binding resulted in a fast-migrating specific shifted band, in a manner requiring both GTP and Mg(2+). The binding was specific for methylated DNA and responded to local sequence changes in the same way that cleavage does. Single-stranded DNA competed for McrB(L)-binding in a modification and sequence-specific fashion. A supershifted species was formed in the presence of McrC and GTPgammaS. DNase I footprint analysis showed modest cooperativity in binding to two sites, and a two-site substrate displayed protection in non-specific spacer DNA in addition to the recognition elements. The addition of McrC did not affect the footprint obtained. We propose that McrC effects a conformational change in the complex rather than a reorganization of the DNA:protein interface.  相似文献   

13.
DNase I cleavage of branched DNA molecules   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
We report here a potentially useful signature of branched DNA structures. The base 5' to the branch and the five bases flanking the 3' side of the branch site are protected from cleavage by DNase I in both three- and four-arm branched DNA molecules. Our procedure is to measure the cleavage profile for each 5' -labeled strand in a control duplex and compare this with that of the same strand in a branched structure under conditions yielding less than one cut per strand. The resulting cleavage pattern in an immobile four-arm junction is roughly 2-fold symmetric, consistent with the pattern of Fe(II).EDTA-induced cleavage that has been observed previously. In the three-arm junction, the DNase I cleavage pattern is asymmetric, indicating lack of 3-fold symmetry. A variable pattern of protection occurs to the 5' side of the branch in some strands only for both three- and four-arm junctions, extending 2-4 residues 5' to the branch.  相似文献   

14.
A hand-off mechanism for primosome assembly in replication restart   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Collapsed DNA replication forks must be reactivated through origin-independent reloading of the replication machinery (replisome) to ensure complete duplication of cellular genomes. In E. coli, the PriA-dependent pathway is the major replication restart mechanism and requires primosome proteins PriA, PriB, and DnaT for replisome reloading. However, the molecular mechanisms that regulate origin-independent replisome loading are not fully understood. Here, we demonstrate that assembly of primosome protein complexes represents a key regulatory mechanism, as inherently weak PriA-PriB and PriB-DnaT interactions are strongly stimulated by single-stranded DNA. Furthermore, the binding site on PriB for single-stranded DNA partially overlaps the binding sites for PriA and DnaT, suggesting a dynamic primosome assembly process in which single-stranded DNA is handed off from one primosome protein to another as a repaired replication fork is reactivated. This model helps explain how origin-independent initiation of DNA replication is restricted to repaired replication forks, preventing overreplication of the genome.  相似文献   

15.
The primosome is a mobile multiprotein priming apparatus that requires seven Escherichia coli proteins for assembly (the products of the dnaB, dnaC and dnaG genes; replication factor Y (protein n'); and proteins i, n, and n"). While the primosome is analagous to the phage T7 gene 4 protein and phage T4 gene 41/61 proteins in its DNA G-catalyzed priming function, its ability to act similarly also as a DNA helicase has remained equivocal. The role of the primosome in unwinding duplex DNA strands was investigated in the coliphage phi X174 SS(c)----replicative form DNA replication reaction in vitro, which requires the E. coli single-stranded DNA binding protein, the primosomal proteins, and the DNA polymerase III holoenzyme. Multigenome-length, linear, double-stranded DNA molecules were generated in this reaction, presumably via a rolling circle-type mechanism. Synthesis of these products required the presence of a helicase-catalyzed strand-displacement activity to permit multiple cycles of continuous complementary (-) strand synthesis. The participation of the primosome in this helicase activity was supported by demonstrating that other SS(c) DNA templates (G4 and alpha-3), which lack primosome assembly sites, failed to support significant linear multimer production and that replication of phi X174 with the general priming system (the DNA B and DNA G proteins and DNA polymerase III holoenzyme) resulted in a 13-fold lower rate of linear multimer synthesis.  相似文献   

16.
Retrovirus preintegration complexes (PIC) purified from virus-infected cells are competent for efficient concerted integration of the linear viral DNA ends by integrase (IN) into target DNA (full-site integration). In this report, we have shown that the assembled complexes (intasomes) formed in vitro with linear 3.6-kbp DNA donors possessing 3'-OH-recessed attachment (att) site sequences and avian myeloblastosis virus IN (4 nm) were as competent for full-site integration as isolated retrovirus PIC. The att sites on DNA with 3'-OH-recessed ends were protected by IN in assembled intasomes from DNase I digestion up to approximately 20 bp from the terminus. Several DNA donors containing either normal blunt-ended att sites or different end mutations did not allow assembly of complexes that exhibit the approximately 20-bp DNase I footprint at 14 degrees C. At 50 and 100 mm NaCl, the approximately 20-bp DNase I footprints were produced with wild type (wt) U3 and gain-of-function att site donors for full-site integration as previously observed at 320 mm NaCl. Although the wt U5 att site donors were fully competent for full-site integration at 37 degrees C, the approximately 20-bp DNase I footprint was not observed under a variety of assembly conditions including low NaCl concentrations at 14 degrees C. Under suboptimal assembly conditions for intasomes using U3 att DNA, DNase I probing demonstrated an enhanced cleavage site 9 bp from the end of U3 suggesting that a transient structural intasome intermediate was identified. Using a single nucleotide change at position 7 from the end and a series of small size deletions of wt U3 att site sequences, we determined that sequences upstream of the 11th nucleotide position were not required by IN to produce the approximately 20-bp DNase I footprint and full-site integration. The results suggest the structural organization of IN at the att sites in reconstituted intasomes was similar to that observed in PIC.  相似文献   

17.
The role of local sequence information in establishing the chromatin structure of the human c-myc upstream region (MUR) was investigated. Adeno-associated virus (AAV)-mediated gene transduction was used to introduce an additional unrearranged copy of the 2.4 kb HindIII-XhoI fragment of the MUR into a novel location in the genome in each of two cloned HeLa cell lines. The AAV-based rep- cap- viral vector SKMA used to transduce the MUR retained only 1.4 kb (24%) of the AAV genome and could accommodate inserts as large as 2.4 kb. SKMA was capable of infecting HeLa cells and integrating into the host genome at single copy number. Integration may have occurred at a preferred site in the HeLa genome, but this site was apparently distinct from the previously identified preferred AAV integration site on human chromosome 19. Indirect end-labelling was used to map DNase I and micrococcal nuclease (MNase) cleavage sites over the transduced c-myc sequences and the endogenous c-myc loci in infected HeLa cells. A similarly ordered chromatin domain, extending 5' from c-myc promoter P0, was found to exist at the transduced c-myc locus in each clone. The position and relative sensitivity of 13 MNase cleavage sites and five DNase I hypersensitive sites, originally identified at the endogenous MUR in non-transduced cells, were shown to be conserved when this DNA was moved to a new chromosome site. A conserved DNase I hypersensitive site also was mapped to the region between the left AAV terminal repeat and AAV promoter P5. These results suggest that the information required to establish the particular chromatin structure of the MUR resides within the local DNA sequence of that region.  相似文献   

18.
PriB is not only an essential protein necessary for the replication restart on the collapsed and disintegrated replication fork, but also an important protein for assembling of primosome onto PhiX174 genomic DNA during replication initiation. Here we report a 2.0-A-resolution X-ray structure of a biologically functional form of PriB from Escherichia coli. The crystal structure revealed that despite a low level of primary sequence identity, the PriB monomer, as well as the dimeric form, are structurally identical to the N-terminal DNA-binding domain of the single-stranded DNA-binding protein (SSB) from Escherichia coli, which possesses an oligonucleotides-binding-fold. The oligonucleotide-PriB complex model based on the oligonucleotides-SSB complex structure suggested that PriB had a DNA-binding pocket conserved in SSB from Escherichia coli and might bind to single-stranded DNA in the manner of SSB. Furthermore, surface plasmon resonance analysis and fluorescence measurements demonstrated that PriB binds single-stranded DNA with high affinity, by involving tryptophan residue. The significance of these results with respect to the functional role of PriB in the assembly of primosome is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The Escherichia coli chromosome contains about 300 bacterial interspersed mosaic elements (BIMEs). These elements, located at the 3' end of genes, are composed of three types of alternating repetitive extragenic palindromes (REPs). Based on the type of REP they contain and on their ability to interact with the integration host factor (IHF), BIMEs are subdivided into two families: BIME-1 elements contain an IHF binding site flanked by converging Y and Z1 REPs, whereas BIME-2 elements contain a variable number of alternating Y and Z2 REPs without an IHF site. Although some BIMEs have been implicated in the protection of mRNA against 3' exonucleolytic degradation, the main role of elements belonging to both families remains to be elucidated. In this paper, we used oxolinic acid, a drug that reveals potential sites of DNA gyrase action, to demonstrate that DNA gyrase interacts in vivo with BIME-2 elements. The frequency of cleavage varied from one element to another, and the cleavage pattern observed in elements containing several REPs indicated that DNA gyrase cut DNA every two REPs. A single cleavage site has been identified in the Y REP in six out of seven instances, and the nucleotide sequence of a 44 bp fragment containing the scission point displayed conserved residues at six positions. The lack of one of the conserved residues accounted for the absence of cleavage in most of the Z2 REPs. Our results also showed that cleaved REPs were always associated with another REP, suggesting that a pair of diverging REPs constitutes the target of DNA gyrase. DNA gyrase cleavage at repetitive BIME-2 elements may have consequences for DNA topology and genomic rearrangements.  相似文献   

20.
We have characterized a deoxyribonuclease from Streptomyces glaucescens that cleaves double-stranded DNA preferably between the dinucleotide 5'-CC-3'. The cleavage specificity was demonstrated by both analysis of the terminal nucleotides of the generated fragments and DNA sequencing of partially digested DNA. Digestion of lambda DNA with this enzyme resulted in the production of double-stranded fragments with 5' and/or 3'-protruding single-stranded tails. DNase I footprinting experiments indicated that the nuclease specifically binds to its cleavage sites on the DNA under non-catalytic conditions. The enzyme is not affected by cytosine methylation in hemimethylated DNA.  相似文献   

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