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1.
Localization of replication origins in pea chloroplast DNA.   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
The locations of the two replication origins in pea chloroplast DNA (ctDNA) have been mapped by electron microscopic analysis of restriction digests of supercoiled ctDNA cross-linked with trioxalen. Both origins of replication, identified as displacement loops (D-loops), were present in the 44-kilobase-pair (kbp) SalI A fragment. The first D-loop was located at 9.0 kbp from the closest SalI restriction site. The average size of this D-loop was about 0.7 kbp. The second D-loop started 14.2 kbp in from the same restriction site and ended at about 15.5 kbp, giving it a size of about 1.3 kbp. The orientation of these two D-loops on the restriction map of pea ctDNA was determined by analyzing SmaI, PstI, and SalI-SmaI restriction digests of pea ctDNA. One D-loop has been mapped in the spacer region between the 16S and 23S rRNA genes. The second D-loop was located downstream of the 23S rRNA gene. Denaturation mapping of recombinants pCP 12-7 and pCB 1-12, which contain both D-loops, confirmed the location of the D-loops in the restriction map of pea ctDNA. Denaturation-mapping studies also showed that the two D-loops had different base compositions; the one closest to a SalI restriction site denatured readily compared with the other D-loop. The recombinants pCP 12-7 and pCB 1-12 were found to be highly active in DNA synthesis when used as templates in a partially purified replication system from pea chloroplasts. Analysis of in vitro-synthesized DNA with either of these recombinants showed that full-length template DNA was synthesized. Recombinants from other regions of the pea chloroplast genome showed no significant DNA synthesis activity in vitro.  相似文献   

2.
One of the two origins of replication in pea chloroplast DNA (oriA) maps in the rRNA spacer region downstream of the 16S rRNA gene, and further characterization of this origin is presented here. End-labeling of nascent DNA strands from in vivo replicating ctDNA was used to generate probes for Southern hybridization. Hybridization data identified the same region that was previously mapped to contain D-loops by electron microscopy. Subclones of the ori A region were tested for their ability to support in vitro DNA replication using a partially purified pea ctDNA replication system. Two-dimensional agarose gel electrophoresis identified replication intermediates for clones from the region just downstream of the 16S rRNA gene, with a 450-bp SacI-EcoRI clone showing the strongest activity. The experiments presented in this paper identify the 940 base pair region in the rRNA spacer between the 3′ end of the 16S rRNA gene and the Eco RI site as containing oriA. Previous studies by electron microscopy localized the D-loop in the spacer region just to the right of the Bam HI site, but the experiments presented here show that sequences to the left of the BamHI site are required for replication initiation from ori A. DNA sequence analysis of this region of pea ctDNA shows the presence of characteristic elements of DNA replication origins, including several direct and inverted repeat sequences, an A + T rich region, and dna A-like binding sites, most of which are unique to the pea ctDNA ori A region when compared with published rRNA spacer sequences from other chloroplast genomes.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Oenothera plants homozygous for a recessive allele at the plastome mutator (pm) locus show non-Mendelian mutation frequencies that are 1000-fold higher than spontaneous levels. Chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) was isolated from nine mutants and two green isolates of the plastome mutator line. cpDNA restriction patterns were compared to cpDNA from a representative of the progenitor Johansen strain, and cpDNAs from all eleven plastome mutator lines show changes of fragment mobility due to deletion events at five discrete regions of the plastome. Most of the mutants have cpDNA restriction patterns identical to that of one of the green isolates from the plastome mutator line, and therefore, most of the differences in fragment length are probably not responsible for the mutant phenotypes. In contrast to the plastome mutator line, cpDNA from several populations of a closely related wild-type Oenothera species have few restriction fragment length polymorphisms. This suggests that both mutation frequencies and site-specific cpDNA deletions are elevated in the plastome mutator line, and implicates a defect in the cpDNA repair or replication machinery.  相似文献   

4.
J Waddell  X M Wang    M Wu 《Nucleic acids research》1984,12(9):3843-3856
Chloroplast DNA, isolated from a synchronized culture of Chlamydomonas reinhardii, was digested with restriction endonucleases and examined in the electron microscope. Restriction fragments containing displacement loops (D-loop) were photographed and measured to determine the position of replicated sequences in relation to the restriction enzyme sites. D-loops were located at two positions on the physical map of chloroplast DNA. One replication origin was mapped at about 10 kb upstream of the 5' end of a 16s rRNA gene. The second origin was spaced 6. 5kb apart from the first origin and was about 16.5 kb upstream of the same 16s rRNA. Initiations at those two sites were not always synchronized. Replication initiated with the formation of a D-loop resulting from the synthesis of one daughter strand. After a short initial lag phase, corresponding to the synthesis of 350 +/- 130 bp of one daughter strand, DNA synthesis then proceeded in both directions. Both D-loop regions were preferred binding sites of undetermined protein complexes.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The chloroplast DNAs (cpDNAs) of Oenothera berteriana and Oe. odorata (subsection Munzia) were examined by restriction endonuclease analysis with Sal I, Pvu II, Kpn I, Pst I, Hind III, and Bam HI. The fragment patterns show that these cpDNAs have all 133 restriction sites in common as well as a lot of individual bands. Nevertheless the cpDNAs of the two species can be distinguished by distinct differences in size between a small number of fragments. The 42 cleavage sites produced by Sal I, Pvu II and Kpn I were mapped on the circular cpDNAs. This was achieved by an approach which combined experimental and mathematical procedures. The overall serial order of the fragments was found to be the same for both cpDNAs. The size differences of individual fragments in the Sal I, Pvu II and Kpn I patterns between Oe. berteriana and Oe. odorata cpDNA are located within five regions scattered along the plastid chromosome. Two of these regions have been localized in the larger and one in the smaller of the two single-copy parts of the cpDNA molecule. The remaining two overlap the borders between the large single-copy and each of the duplicated parts of the molecule. The positions of distinct restriction sites are altered among the two Oenothera plastome DNAs by 0.02–0.4 MDa (30–600 base pairs). These alterations probably result from insertions/deletions.Abbreviations cpDNA chloroplast, plastid DNA - Oe. Oenothera - MDa Megadalton - rRNA, rDNA ribosomal RNA, DNA Dedicated to Professor Berthold Schwemmle, Tübingen, on the occasion of his 60th birthday  相似文献   

6.
7.
Summary Plastid DNA of the light green Oenothera plastome mutant sigma, from plastome I, which is deficient in ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase, has been compared with wild-type chloroplast DNA from plastome I and the related plastome IV. For this, double digestions with the restriction endonucleases Sal I, Pst I and Kpn I were used. Chloroplast DNA from plastomes I and IV differs in the sizes of several fragments, with the changes being from under 0.1 to about 0.6 Md in size. In the cleavage patterns of the mutant DNA compared to the wild-type DNA from plastome I, the only differences observed are two possible deletions of less than 0.1 Md from a fragment known to partly cover the genes for the ribosomal RNAs and from a fragment located in the small single-copy region of the molecule. It is concluded that the ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase deficiency in this mutant is not caused by a major deletion in the plastid DNA.  相似文献   

8.
Summary When tobacco suspension culture line BY2 cells in stationary phase are transferred into fresh medium, replication of proplastid DNA proceeds for 24 h in the absence of nuclear DNA replication. Replicative intermediates of the proplastid DNA concentrated by benzoylated, naphthoylated DEAE cellulose chromatography, were radioactively labelled and hybridized to several sets of restriction endonuclease fragments of tobacco chloroplast DNA. The intermediates hybridized preferentially to restriction fragments in the two large inverted repeats. Mapping of D-loops and of restriction fragment lengths by electron microscopy permitted the localization of the replication origin, which was close to the 23S rRNA gene in the inverted repeats. The replication origins in both segments of the inverted repeat in tobacco proplastid DNA were active in vivo.  相似文献   

9.
We describe the 159,4443-bp sequence of the plastid chromosome of Oenothera elata (evening primrose). The Oe. elata plastid chromosome represents type I of the five genetically distinguishable basic plastomes found in the subsection Euoenothera. The genus Oenothera provides an ideal system in which to address fundamental questions regarding the functional integration of the compartmentalised genetic system characteristic of the eukaryotic cell. Its highly developed taxonomy and genetics, together with a favourable combination of features in its genetic structure (interspecific fertility, stable heterozygous progeny, biparental transmission of organelles, and the phenomenon of complex heterozygosity), allow facile exchanges of nuclei, plastids and mitochondria, as well as individual chromosome pairs, between species. The resulting hybrids or cybrids are usually viable and fertile, but can display various forms of developmental disturbance. Received: 9 January 2000 / Accepted: 29 January 2000  相似文献   

10.
11.
Using 5 end-labeled nascent strands of tobacco chloroplast DNA (ctDNA) as a probe, replication displacement loop (D-loop) regions were identified. The strongest hybridization was observed with restriction fragments containing the rRNA genes from the inverted repeat region. Two-dimensional gel analysis of various digests of tobacco ctDNA suggested that a replication origin is located near each end of the 7.1 kb BamHI fragment containing part of the rRNA operon. Analysis of in vitro replication products indicated that templates from either of the origin regions supported replication, while the vector alone or ctDNA clones from other regions of the genome did not support in vitro replication. Sequences from both sides of the BamHI site in the rRNA spacer region were required for optimal in vitro DNA replication activity. Primer extension was used for the first time to identify the start site of DNA synthesis for the D-loop in the rRNA spacer region. The major 5 end of the D-loop was localized to the base of a stem-loop structure which contains the rRNA spacer BamHI site. Primer extension products were insensitive to both alkali and RNase treatment, suggesting that RNA primers had already been removed from the 5 end of nascent DNA. Location of an origin in the rRNA spacer region of ctDNA from tobacco, pea and Oenothera suggests that ctDNA replication origins may be conserved in higher plants.  相似文献   

12.
13.
14.
recA protein, which is essential for genetic recombination in Escherichia coli, causes extensive unwinding of the double helix by an ATP-dependent reaction and accumulation of positive supercoiling in closed circular double-stranded DNA. Initiation of the extensive unwinding was largely dependent on homologous single-stranded DNA. Therefore, it is likely that the extensive unwinding is initiated mainly at the site of D-loops. "Nascent D-loops" in which the two DNA molecules did not interwind were also good initiation sites of extensive unwinding. When the concentration of Mg2+ was decreased from the standard conditions for D-loop formation (13 mM MgCl2; the higher Mg2+ condition) to the lower Mg2+ condition (1 to 2 mM MgCl2), extensive unwinding by recA protein was initiated very quickly in the absence of single-stranded DNA. Results showed that this single-stranded DNA-independent initiation of extensive unwinding (i) requires negative superhelicity of the double-stranded DNA and (ii) is a first order reaction with respect to the DNA. These observations suggest that, under the lower Mg2+ condition, the extensive unwinding starts at a transiently denatured site in the negative superhelical DNA. Once initiated, the unwinding by recA protein is propagated extensively, even under conditions that do not allow its initiation. Therefore, the propagation of unwinding is a processive reaction ("processive unwinding"). Previous studies indicated that recA protein promotes "distributive unwinding" of double helix which depends on single-stranded DNA. Therefore, recA protein promotes unwinding of the double helix by either of two distinct pathways. Stress caused by the processive unwinding could explain the dissociation of D-loops and reversible inactivation of the double-stranded DNA in a D-loop cycle.  相似文献   

15.
Genetic studies have suggested that Y-family translesion DNA polymerase IV (DinB) performs error-prone recombination-directed replication (RDR) under conditions of stress due to its ability to promote mutations during double-strand break (DSB) repair in growth-limited E. coli cells. In recent studies we have demonstrated that pol IV is preferentially recruited to D-loop recombination intermediates at stress-induced concentrations and is highly mutagenic during RDR in vitro. These findings verify longstanding genetic data that have implicated pol IV in promoting stress-induced mutagenesis at D-loops. In this Extra View, we demonstrate the surprising finding that A-family pol I, which normally exhibits high-fidelity DNA synthesis, is highly error-prone at D-loops like pol IV. These findings indicate that DNA polymerases are intrinsically error-prone at RecA-mediated D-loops and suggest that auxiliary factors are necessary for suppressing mutations during RDR in non-stressed proliferating cells.  相似文献   

16.
Human mitochondrial DNA contains two physically separate and distinct origins of DNA replication. The initiation of each strand (heavy and light) occurs at a unique site and elongation proceeds unidirectionally. Animal mitochondrial DNA is novel in that short nascent strands are maintained at one origin (D-loop) in a significant percentage of the molecules. In the case of human mitochondrial DNA, there are three distinct D-loop heavy strands differing in length at the 5' end. We report here the localization of the 5' ends of nascent daughter heavy strands originating from the D-loop region. Analyses of the map positions of 5' ends relative to known restriction endonuclease cleavage sites and 5' end nucleotides indicate that the points of initiation of D-loop synthesis and actual daughter strands are the same. In contrast, the second origin is located two-thirds of the way around the genome where light strand synthesis is presumably initiated on a single-stranded template. Mapping of 5' ends of daughter light strands at this origin relative to known restriction endonuclease cleavage sites reveals two distinct points of initiation separated by 37 nucleotides. This origin is in the same relative genomic position and shows a high degree of DNA sequence homology to that of mouse mitochondrial DNA. In both cases, the DNA region within and immediately flanking the origin of DNA replication contains five tightly clustered tRNA genes. A major portion of the pronounced DNA template secondary structure at this origin includes the known tDNA sequences.  相似文献   

17.
During DNA replication one or both strands transiently become single stranded: first at the sites where initiation of DNA synthesis occurs (known as origins of replication) and subsequently on the lagging strands of replication forks as discontinuous Okazaki fragments are generated. We report a genome-wide analysis of single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) formation in the presence of hydroxyurea during DNA replication in wild-type and checkpoint-deficient rad53 Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells. In wild-type cells, ssDNA was first observed at a subset of replication origins and later 'migrated' bi-directionally, suggesting that ssDNA formation is associated with continuously moving replication forks. In rad53 cells, ssDNA was observed at virtually every known origin, but remained there over time, suggesting that replication forks stall. Telomeric regions seemed to be particularly sensitive to the loss of Rad53 checkpoint function. Replication origins in Schizosaccharomyces pombe were also mapped using our method.  相似文献   

18.
In a previous study, we mapped replication origin regions of the plastid DNA around the 3 end of the 23S rRNA gene in rice suspension-cultured cells. Here, we examined initiation of the plastid DNA replication in different rice cells by two-dimensional agarose gel electrophoresis. We show for the first time, to our knowledge, that the replication origin region of the plastid DNA differs among cultured cells, coleoptiles and mature leaves. In addition, digestion of the replication intermediates from the rice cultured cells with mung bean nuclease, a single-strand-specific nuclease, revealed that both two single strands of the double-stranded parental DNA were simultaneously replicated in the origin region. This was further confirmed by two-dimensional agarose gel analysis with single-stranded RNA probes. Thus, the mode of plastid DNA replication presented here differs from the unidirectional replication started by forming displacement loops (D-loops), in which the two D-loops on the opposite strands expand toward each other and only one parental strand serves as a template.  相似文献   

19.
Replication of chloroplast DNA (ctDNA) in several plants and in Chlamydomonas reinhardii has been shown to occur by a double displacement loop (D-loop) mechanism and potentially also by a rolling circle mechanism. D-loop replication origins have been mapped in several species. Minimal replication origin sequences used as probes identified two potential binding proteins by southwestern blot analysis. A 28 kDa (apparent molecular weight by SDS-PAGE analysis) soybean protein has been isolated by origin sequence-specific DNA affinity chromatography from total chloroplast proteins. Mass spectrometry analysis identified this protein as the product of the soybean C6SY33 gene (accession number ACU14156), which is annotated as encoding a putative uncharacterized protein with a molecular weight of 25,897 Da, very near the observed molecular weight of the purified protein based on gel electrophoresis. Western blot analysis using an antibody against a homologous Arabidopsis protein indicates that this soybean protein is localized specifically in chloroplasts. The soybean protein shares some homology within a single-stranded DNA binding (SSB) domain of E. coli SSB and an Arabidopsis thaliana mitochondrial-localized SSB of about 21 kDa (mtSSB). However, the soybean protein induces a specific electrophoretic mobility shift only when incubated with a double-stranded fragment containing the previously mapped ctDNA replication oriA region. This protein has no electrophoretic mobility shift activity when incubated with single-stranded DNA. In contrast, the Arabidopsis mtSSB causes a mobility shift only with single-stranded DNA but not with the oriA fragment or with control dsDNA of unrelated sequence. These results suggest that the 26 kDa soybean protein is a specific origin binding protein that may be involved in initiation of ctDNA replication.  相似文献   

20.
Chloroplast DNA replication was studied in the green, autotrophic suspension culture line SB-1 of Glycine max. Three regions (restriction fragments Sac I 14.5, Pvu II 4.1 and Pvu II 14.8) on the plastome were identified that displayed significantly higher template activity in in vitro DNA replication assays than all other cloned restriction fragments of the organelle genome, suggesting that these clones contain sequences that are able to direct initiation of DNA replication in vitro. In order to confirm that the potential in vitro origin sites are functional in vivo as well, replication intermediates were analyzed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis using cloned restriction fragments as probes. The two Pvu II fragments that supported deoxynucleotide incorporation in vitro apparently do not contain a functional in vivo replication origin since replication intermediates from these areas of the plastome represent only fork structures. The Sac I 14.5 chloroplast DNA fragment, on the other hand, showed intermediates consistent with a replication bubble originating within its borders, which is indicative of an active in vivo origin. Closer examination of cloned Sac I 14.5 sub-fragments confirmed high template activity in vitro for two, S/B 5 and S/B 3, which also seem to contain origin sites utilized in vivo as determined by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. The types of replication intermediate patterns obtained for these sub-fragments are consistent with the double D-loop model for chloroplast DNA replication with both origins being located in the large unique region of the plastome [17, 18]. This is the first report of a chloroplast DNA replication origin in higher plants that has been directly tested for in vivo function.  相似文献   

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