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1.
A novel endonuclease has been isolated from extracts of spinach leaves (Spinacia oleracea). The enzyme has been purified by a series of column chromatography steps and has a molecular size of approximately 43,000 daltons. The spinach endonuclease cleaved double stranded DNA damaged by ultraviolet light or cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (II) primarily at sites of adenine when end-labelled DNA fragments of defined sequence were employed as substrates. The nature of the structural distortion contained in damaged, duplex DNA appears to be an important determinant for endonuclease cleavage. DNA helical distortions produced by UV light-induced (6-4) pyrimidine-pyrimidone photoproducts, but not cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers are recognized by the enzyme. The DNA cleavage products generated by the enzyme contain 3'-hydroxyl and 5'-phosphoryl termini. Single stranded DNA and RNA are hydrolyzed by the spinach endonuclease. This enzyme, which we call nuclease SP, is similar in several respects to other single-strand-specific nucleases such as N. crassa and mung bean nucleases and may function in DNA repair and/or recombination events in spinach cells. Nuclease SP should be a useful tool for the analysis of (6-4) photoproducts occurring in duplex DNA.  相似文献   

2.
The fruit body of shiitake (Lentinus edodes) produces two acid nucleases, nuclease Le1 and nuclease Le3, both of which are thought to be candidates for the enzyme that produces a flavorful substance, 5'-GMP, and the primary structure of one of the nucleases, nuclease Le1, has been analyzed by both protein chemistry and gene cloning [Biosci. Biotechnol. Biochem. 64, 948-957 (2000)]. In this study the amino acid sequence of nuclease Le3 was analyzed by protein chemistry and gene cloning. Nuclease Le3 is a glycoprotein that contains 280 amino acid residues, and the molecular mass of the protein moiety of nuclease Le3 is 31,045. The nucleotide sequence of the cDNA and genomic DNA encoding nuclease Le3 revealed the presence of an 18-residue putative signal peptide. Nuclease Le3 contains 170, 108, and 98 amino acid residues that are identical to residues of nuclease Le1, nuclease P1, and nuclease S, respectively. The amino acid residues involved in coordination with Zn2+ atoms in nuclease P1 are all conserved in nuclease Le3. Nuclease Le3 contains 9 half-cystine residues, and 7 of them are located in the same positions as in nuclease Le1.  相似文献   

3.
The structures of guinea pig satellite DNAs I, II, and III have been analyzed by digestion with seven restriction nucleases. From the cleavage patterns it is obvious that the long-range periodicities in these three satellites differ rather characteristically Satellite I is fairly resistant to six nucleases and gives only a number of weak discrete bands which do not show a simple regularity. By the restriction nuclease from Arthrobacter luteus, however, it is cleaved extensively and yields very heterogeneous breakdown products. This is consistent with the high extent of divergence previously found for this satellite, e. g. by sequence analysis. Satellite II is almost completely resistant to all nucleases, indicative of a high degree of sequence homogeneity of this satellite. Satellite III is completely broken by the restriction nuclease from Bacillus subtilis into fragments which form a novel, highly regular series of bands in gel electrophoresis. The patterns show that the satellite is composed of tandem repeats ofapproximately 215 nucleotide pairs length, each repeat unit containing two cleavage sites for this nuclease. The data are consistent with the assumption that 30--40% of all cleavage sites have been eliminated by a random process. Satellite III DNA yields weak degradation patterns of the same periodicity with a number of other restriction nucleases. Cleavage sites for these nuclease are clustered on separatesmall segments of the satellite DNA. In this respect, the satellite is similar to others, notably the mouse satellite DNA. The three guinea pig satellites are examples of more general types of satellite structures also found in othe organisms. Similarities and differences to other satellites are discussed with special consideration to theories on the evolution of this class of DNA.  相似文献   

4.
The fruit bodies of Lentinus edodes produce two acid nucleases, nucleases Le1 and Le3, both of which are thought to be candidates for the enzymes producing a tasty substance, 5'-GMP. To obtain the basic information on the mechanism of production of 5'-GMP, and structure-function relationship of these nucleases, the primary structure of nuclease Le1 was estimated by both protein chemistry and gene cloning. Nuclease Le1 is a glycoprotein and consists of 290 amino acid residues, and about 2 and 6 residues of hexosamine and neutral sugar, respectively. The nucleotide sequence of cDNA and genomic DNA encoding nuclease Le1 indicated the presence of 20 amino acid residues of a signal peptide. Nuclease Le1 has 115 and 108 residues of identical amino acid residues with nucleases P1 and S, respectively. The amino acid residues concerning the coordination with Zn2+ in nuclease P1 are all conserved in nuclease Le1. Nuclease Le1 contains 8 half-cystine residues and 4 of them are located at the same places as those of nucleases P1 and S.  相似文献   

5.
DNA fragmentation factor (DFF) is one of the major endonucleases responsible for internucleosomal DNA cleavage during apoptosis. Understanding the regulatory checkpoints involved in safeguarding non-apoptotic cells against accidental activation of this nuclease is as important as elucidating its activation mechanisms during apoptosis. Here we address these issues by determining DFF native subunit structures and stoichiometries in human cells before and after induction of apoptosis using the technique of native pore-exclusion limit electrophoresis in combination with Western analyses. For comparison, we employed similar techniques with recombinant proteins in conjunction with atomic force microscopy. Before induction of apoptosis, the expression of DFF subunits varied widely among the cell types studied, and the chaperone/inhibitor subunits DFF45 and DFF35 unexpectedly existed primarily as monomers in vast excess of the latent nuclease subunit, DFF40, which was stoichiometrically associated with DFF45 to form heterodimers. DFF35 was exclusively cytoplasmic as a monomer. Nuclease activation upon caspase-3 cleavage of DFF45/DFF35 was accompanied by DFF40 homo-oligomer formation, with a tetramer being the smallest unit. Interestingly, intact DFF45 can inhibit nuclease activity by associating with these homo-oligomers without mediating their disassembly. We conclude that DFF nuclease is regulated by multiple pre- and post-activation fail-safe steps.  相似文献   

6.
Spinach leaves contain a highly active nuclease called SP. The purified enzyme incises single-stranded DNA, RNA, and double-stranded DNA that has been destabilized by A-T-rich regions and DNA lesions [Strickland et al. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 9749-9756]. This broad range of activity has suggested that SP may be similar to a family of nucleases represented by S1, P1, and the mung bean nuclease. However, unlike these single-stranded nucleases that require acidic pH and low ionic strength conditions, SP has a neutral pH optimum and is active over a wide range of salt concentrations. We have extended these findings and showed that an outstanding substrate for SP is a mismatched DNA duplex. For base-substitution mismatches, SP incises at all mismatches except those containing a guanine residue. SP also cuts at insertion/deletions of one or more nucleotides. Where the extrahelical DNA loop contains one nucleotide, the preference of extrahelical nucleotide is A > T approximately C but undetectable at G. The inability of SP to cut at guanine residues and the favoring of A-T-rich regions distinguish SP from the CEL I family of neutral pH mismatch endonucleases recently discovered in celery and other plants [Oleykowski et al. (1998) Nucleic Acids Res. 26, 4597-4602]. SP, like CEL I, does not turn over after incision at a mismatched site in vitro. Similar to CEL I, the presence of a DNA polymerase or a DNA ligase allows SP to turn over and stimulate its activity in vitro by about 20-fold. The possibility that the SP nuclease may be a natural variant of the CEL I family of mismatch endonucleases is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
K R Fox 《Nucleic acids research》1992,20(24):6487-6493
The self complementary DNA dodecamers d(CGCGAATTCGCG), d(CGCGTTAACGCG), d(CGCGTATACGCG), d(CGCGATATCGCG), d(CGCAAATTTGCG), d(CGCTTTAAAGCG), d(CGCGGATCCGCG) and d(CGCGGTACCGCG) have been cloned into the Smal site of plasmid pUC19. Radiolabelled polylinker fragments containing these inserts have been digested with nucleases and chemical agents, probing the structure of the central AT base pairs. The sequences AATT and AAATTT are relatively resistant to digestion by DNase I, micrococcal nuclease and hydroxyl radicals, consistent with the suggestion that they possess a narrow minor groove. Nuclease digestion of TTAA is much more even, and comparable to that at mixed sequence DNA. TpA steps in ATAT, TATA and GTAC are cut less well by DNAse I than in TTAA. DNasel cleavage of surrounding bases, especially CpG is strongly influenced by the nature of the central sequence.  相似文献   

8.
The positions and relative frequencies of the primary cleavages made by micrococcal nuclease on the DNA of nucleosome core particles have been found by fractionating the double-stranded products of digestion and examining their single-stranded compositions. This approach overcomes the problems caused by secondary events such as the exonucleolytic and pseudo-double-stranded actions of the nuclease and, combined with the use of high resolution gel electrophoresis, enables the cutting site positions to be determined with a higher precision than has been achieved hitherto. The micrococcal nuclease primary cleavage sites lie close (on average, within 0.5 nucleotide) to those previously determined by Lutter (1981) for the nucleases DNase I and DNase II. These similarities show that the accessible regions are the same for all three nucleases, the cleavage sites being dictated by the structure of the nucleosome core. The differences in the final products of the digestion are explained in terms of secondary cleavage events of micrococcal nuclease. While the strongly protected regions of the nucleosome core DNA are common to all three nucleases, there are differences in the relative degrees of cutting at the more exposed sites characteristic of the particular enzyme. In particular, micrococcal nuclease shows a marked polarity in the 3'-5' direction in the cutting rates as plotted along a single strand of the nucleosomal DNA. This is explained in terms of the three-dimensional structure of the nucleosome where, in any accessible region of the double helix, the innermost strand is shielded by the outermost strand on the one side and the histone core on the other. The final part of the paper is concerned with the preference of micrococcal nuclease to cleave at (A,T) sequences in chromatin.  相似文献   

9.
10.
In prokaryotes, sugar-nonspecific nucleases that cleave DNA and RNA in a sequence-independent manner take part in host defense, as well as site-specific restriction enzymes. Examples include the periplasmic nuclease Vvn and the secreted nuclease ColE7, which degrade foreign nucleic acid molecules in the host periplasm and in the cytoplasm of foreign cells, respectively. Recently determined crystal structures of Vvn and ColE7 in complex with double-stranded DNA provide structural insight into nonspecific DNA interactions and cleavage by sugar-nonspecific nucleases. Both nucleases bind DNA at the minor groove through a common 'betabetaalpha-metal' endonuclease motif and primarily contact the DNA phosphate backbone, probably to avoid sequence-dependent base recognition. In eukaryotes, several apoptotic endonucleases that are responsible for DNA degradation in programmed cell death also contain a betabetaalpha-metal fold at the active site, suggesting that they may recognize and cleave DNA in a comparable way.  相似文献   

11.
Apoptosis is commonly associated with the catabolism of the genome in the dying cell. The chromatin degradation occurs in essentially two forms: (1) internucleosomal DNA cleavage to generate oligonucleosomal-length fragments (180-200 bp and multiples thereof), and (2) cleavage of higher order chromatin structures to generate approximately 30-50 Kb fragments. To investigate this component of apoptosis and identify the nuclease(s) responsible, we have developed and utilized an in vitro assay that recapitulates the genomic destruction seen during apoptosis in vivo and allows the simultaneous analysis of both forms of DNA degradation from the same sample. Using this assay we evaluated the digestion patterns of several candidate apoptotic nucleases: DNase I, DNase II, and cyclophilin (NUC18) as well as the bacterial enzyme micrococcal nuclease (not thought to be involved in apoptosis). Chromatin degraded by DNase I formed a smear of DNA on conventional static-field agarose gels and approximately amp;30 - 50 Kb DNA fragments on pulsed field gels. In contrast, DNase II, at a physiologically relevant pH, had no effect on the integrity of HeLa chromatin in either analysis. Similar to DNase I, cyclophilin C produced only approximately 30-50 Kb DNA fragments but did not generate internucleosomal fragments. In contrast, micrococcal nuclease generated both oligonucleosomal and approximately 30-50 Kb DNA fragments. Nuclear extracts from glucocorticoid-treated apoptotic thymocytes generated oligonucleosomal DNA fragments and the larger approximately 30-50 Kb DNA fragments, fully recapitulating both types of apoptotic DNA degradation. Previously, differential sensitivity of nucleases to inhibition by Zn2+ was used to argue that two distinct enzymes mediate approximately 30-50 Kb DNA cleavage and internucleosomal DNA degradation. While, the nuclease activity present in thymocyte nuclear extracts was differentially sensitive to inhibition by Zn2+ during short term incubations it was not during prolonged digestions, suggesting that differences in DNA detection are likely to account for previous results. Together our studies show that none of the nucleases commonly associated with apoptosis could fully recapitulate the DNA degradation seen in vivo.  相似文献   

12.
Mineta Y  Okamoto T  Takenaka K  Doi N  Aoyama Y  Sera T 《Biochemistry》2008,47(47):12257-12259
To enhance DNA cleavage by zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs), we sandwiched a DNA cleavage enzyme with two artificial zinc-finger proteins (AZPs). Because the DNA between the two AZP-binding sites is cleaved, the AZP-sandwiched nuclease is expected to bind preferentially to a DNA substrate rather than to cleavage products and thereby cleave it with multiple turnovers. To demonstrate the concept, we sandwiched a staphylococcal nuclease (SNase), which cleaves DNA as a monomer, between two three-finger AZPs. The AZP-sandwiched SNase cleaved large amounts of dsDNA site-specifically. Such multiple-turnover cleavage was not observed with nucleases that possess a single AZP. Thus, AZP-sandwiched nucleases will further refine ZFN technology.  相似文献   

13.
We show here that human U2 small nuclear RNA genes contain a 'strong nuclease S1 cleavage site' (SNS1 site), a sequence that is very sensitive to digestion by nuclease S1. This site is located 0.50-0.65 kb downstream of the U2 RNA coding region. It comprises a 0.15-kb region in which (dC-dT)n:(dA-dG)n co-polymeric stretches represent greater than 90% of the sequence. Nuclease S1 is able to excise unit length repeats of the human U2 RNA genes both from cloned fragments and total human genomic DNA. The precise locations of the cleavage sites are dependent on the superhelicity of the substrate DNA. In negatively supercoiled substrates, cleavages are distributed over the entire 0.15-kb region, but in linearized substrates, they occur within a more limited region, mainly at the boundary of the SNS1 site closest to the human U2 RNA coding region. Nuclease S1 cleavage of negatively supercoiled substrates occurs at pHs as high as 7.0; in contrast, cleavage of linearized substrates requires a pH less than 5.0, indicating that supercoiling contributes to the sensitivity of this site. Mung bean nuclease gives results similar to that observed with nuclease S1.  相似文献   

14.
Two molecularly and kinetically distinct major species of the extracellular nuclease BAL 31 from Alteromonas espejiana, previously characterized as the "fast" (F) and "slow" (S) BAL 31 nucleases, have been evidenced to derive from proteolysis starting from a still larger (approximately 120 kDa) precursor nuclease. The expected protease activity in the culture fluid has been confirmed and is strongly dependent on the cell growth phase. The disappearance of the largest nuclease species with the concomitant sequential appearance of first the F and then the S species has been demonstrated for nuclease obtained from culture supernatants as a function of cell growth phase. Nuclease from periplasmic extracts displayed very little of the F and S nucleases. Treatment of purified F nuclease with Pronase or subtilisin readily converted it to species with only a few percent of the native exonuclease activity against duplex DNA but retaining much of the initial activity against single-stranded DNA. Electrophoresis in nuclease-detecting gels demonstrated a parallel conversion of the larger species to one indistinguishable in molecular weight from the S species. The observed loss of exonuclease activity could correspond to the conversion of the F to the S nuclease. However, treatment of S nuclease with subtilisin resulted in a drastic reduction of exonuclease activity of this enzyme on duplex DNA with retention of most of the activity against single-stranded and nicked circular duplex DNA substrates. Evidence of internal proteolysis of the S nuclease could be seen after electrophoresis in denaturing gels but only after the denaturation buffer was adjusted to 6 M in urea. The preferential removal of the exonuclease activity may enhance the usefulness of the BAL 31 nuclease in such applications as heteroduplex mapping.  相似文献   

15.
Many types of DNA structures are generated in response to DNA damage, repair and recombination that require processing via specialized nucleases. DNA hairpins represent one such class of structures formed during V(D)J recombination, palindrome extrusion, DNA transposition and some types of double-strand breaks. Here we present biochemical and genetic evidence to suggest that Pso2 is a robust DNA hairpin opening nuclease in budding yeast. Pso2 (SNM1A in mammals) belongs to a small group of proteins thought to function predominantly during interstrand crosslink (ICL) repair. In this study, we characterized the nuclease activity of Pso2 toward a variety of DNA substrates. Unexpectedly, Pso2 was found to be an efficient, structure-specific DNA hairpin opening endonuclease. This activity was further shown to be required in vivo for repair of chromosomal breaks harboring closed hairpin ends. These findings provide the first evidence that Pso2 may function outside ICL repair and open the possibility that Pso2 may function at least in part during ICL repair by processing DNA intermediates including DNA hairpins or hairpin-like structures.  相似文献   

16.
Kriukiene E 《FEBS letters》2006,580(26):6115-6122
A two-domain structure of the Type IIS restriction endonuclease MnlI has been identified by limited proteolysis. An N-terminal domain of the enzyme mediates the sequence-specific interaction with DNA, whereas a monomeric C-terminal domain resembles bacterial colicin nucleases in its requirement for alkaline earth as well as transition metal ions for double- and single-stranded DNA cleavage activities. The results indicate that the fusion of the non-specific HNH-type nuclease to the DNA binding domain had transformed MnlI into a Mg(2+)-, Ni(2+)-, Co(2+)-, Mn(2+)-, Zn(2+)-, Ca(2+)-dependent sequence-specific enzyme. Nevertheless, MnlI retains a residual single-stranded DNA cleavage activity controlled by its C-terminal colicin-like nuclease domain.  相似文献   

17.
We have developed two microtiter plate assays for the detection of DNA cleavage by nucleases, using 3'-biotinylated oligonucleotide substrates. In the covalently linked oligonucleotide nuclease assay (CLONA), the biotinylated substrates are phosphorylated at the 5' end to facilitate their covalent immobilization on CovaLink NH plates. The cleavage of the covalently immobilized substrate by nucleases results in biotin release. The uncleaved substrate molecules are detected with an enzyme-avidin conjugate. The affinity-linked oligonucleotide nuclease assay (ALONA) makes use of substrates with a digoxigenin on the 5' end of the 3'-biotinylated DNA strand. The substrate binds specifically to the wells of streptavidin-coated microtiter plates, in which the nuclease reaction takes place. Uncleaved substrate retains the digoxigenin label, which is detected with an enzyme-labeled anti-digoxigenin antibody. We assessed the efficiency of these two assays by measuring S1 nuclease and DNase I activities, and the inhibitory effect of EDTA and aurintricarboxylic acid on the reaction. Both methods are more convenient than the standard radioactive nuclease assay and are suitable for high-throughput screening of potential nuclease inhibitors, nucleases, and catalytic antibodies. The ALONA assay was found to be more sensitive than the CLONA assay, with a performance similar to that of the standard nuclease assay.  相似文献   

18.
SV40 DNA FO I is randomly cleaved by S1 nuclease both at moderate (50 mM) and higher salt concentrations (250 mM NaC1). Full length linear S1 cleavage products of SV40 DNA when digested with various restriction endonucleases revealed fragments that were electrophoretically indistinguishable from the products found after digestion of superhelical SV40 DNA FO I with the corresponding enzyme. Concordingly, when the linear S1 generated duplexes were melted and renatured, circular duplexes were formed in addition to complex larger structures. This indicated that cleavage must have occurred at different sites. The double-strand-cleaving activity present in S1 nuclease preparations requires circular DNA as a substrate, as linear SV40 DNA is not cleaved. With regard to these properties S1 nuclease resembles some of the complex type I restriction nucleases from Escherichia coli which also cleave SV40 DNA only once, and, completely at random.  相似文献   

19.
Secondary and tertiary structures of four yeast tRNA precursors that contain introns have been elucidated using limited digestion with a variety of single-strand- and double-strand-specific nucleases. The pre-tRNAs, representing the variety of intron sizes and potential structures, were: pre-tRNALeuCAA, pre-tRNALeuUAG, pre-tRNAIleUAU, and pre-tRNAPro-4UGG. Conventional tRNA cloverleaf structure is maintained in these precursors except that the anticodon loop is interrupted by the intron. The intron contains a sequence which is complementary to a portion of the anticodon loop and allows the formation of a double helix often extending the anticodon stem. The 5' and 3' splicing cleavage sites are located at either end of this helix and are single-stranded. The intron is the most sensitive region to nuclease cleavage, suggesting that it is on the surface of the molecule and available for interaction with the splicing endonuclease. Absence of Mg2+ or spermidine renders the dihydrouridine and T psi C loops of these precursors highly sensitive to nuclease digestion. These ionic effects mimic those observed for tRNAPhe and suggest that the tRNA portion of these precursors has native tRNA structure. We propose consensus secondary and tertiary structures which may be of significance to eventual understanding of the mechanism of yeast tRNA splicing.  相似文献   

20.
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