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1.
GIY-YIG homing endonucleases are modular enzymes consisting of a well-defined N-terminal catalytic domain connected to a variable C-terminal DNA-binding domain. Previous studies have revealed that the role of the DNA-binding domain is to recognize and bind intronless DNA substrate, positioning the N-terminal catalytic domain such that it is poised to generate a staggered double-strand break by an unknown mechanism. Interactions of the N-terminal catalytic domain with intronless substrate are therefore a critical step in the reaction pathway but have been difficult to define. Here, we have taken advantage of the reduced activity of I-BmoI, an isoschizomer of the well-studied bacteriophage T4 homing endonuclease I-TevI, to examine double-strand break formation by I-BmoI. We present evidence demonstrating that I-BmoI generates a double-strand break by two sequential but chemically independent nicking reactions where divalent metal ion is a limiting factor in top-strand nicking. We also show by in-gel footprinting that contacts by the I-BmoI catalytic domain induce significant minor groove DNA distortions that occur independently of bottom-strand nicking. Bottom-strand contacts are critical for accurate top-strand nicking, whereas top-strand contacts have little influence on the accuracy of bottom-strand nicking. We discuss our results in the context of current models of GIY-YIG endonuclease function, with emphasis on the role of divalent metal ion and strand-specific contacts in regulating the activity of a single active site to generate a staggered double-strand break.  相似文献   

2.
The GIY-YIG nuclease domain is found within protein scaffolds that participate in diverse cellular pathways and contains a single active site that hydrolyzes DNA by a one-metal ion mechanism. GIY-YIG homing endonucleases (GIY-HEs) are two-domain proteins with N-terminal GIY-YIG nuclease domains connected to C-terminal DNA-binding and they are thought to function as monomers. Using I-BmoI as a model GIY-HE, we test mechanisms by which the single active site is used to generate a double-strand break. We show that I-BmoI is partially disordered in the absence of substrate, and that the GIY-YIG domain alone has weak affinity for DNA. Significantly, we show that I-BmoI functions as a monomer at all steps of the reaction pathway and does not transiently dimerize or use sequential transesterification reactions to cleave substrate. Our results are consistent with the I-BmoI DNA-binding domain acting as a molecular anchor to tether the GIY-YIG domain to substrate, permitting rotation of the GIY-YIG domain to sequentially nick each DNA strand. These data highlight the mechanistic differences between monomeric GIY-HEs and dimeric or tetrameric GIY-YIG restriction enzymes, and they have implications for the use of the GIY-YIG domain in genome-editing applications.  相似文献   

3.
PI-SceI, a homing endonuclease of the LAGLIDADG family, consists of two domains involved in DNA cleavage and protein splicing, respectively. Both domains cooperate in binding the recognition sequence. Comparison of the structures of PI-SceI in the absence and presence of substrate reveals major conformational changes in both the protein and DNA. Notably, in the protein-splicing domain the loop comprising residues 53-70 and adopts a "closed" conformation, thus enabling it to interact with the DNA. We have studied the dynamics of DNA binding and subsequent loop movement by fluorescence techniques. Six amino acids in loop53-70 were individually replaced by cysteine and modified by fluorescein. The interaction of the modified PI-SceI variants with the substrate, unlabeled or labeled with tetramethylrhodamine, was analyzed in equilibrium and stopped-flow experiments. A kinetic scheme was established describing the interaction between PI-SceI and DNA. It is noteworthy that the apparent hinge-flap motion of loop53-70 is only observed in the presence of a divalent metal ion cofactor. Substitution of the major Mg2+-binding ligands in PI-SceI, Asp-218 and Asp-326, by Asn or "nicking" PI-SceI with trypsin at Arg-277, which interferes with formation of an active enzyme.substrate complex, both prevent the conformational change of loop53-70. Deletion of the loop inactivates the enzyme. We conclude that loop53-70 is an important structural element that couples DNA recognition by the splicing domain with DNA cleavage by the catalytic domain and as such "communicates" with the Mg2+ binding sites at the catalytic centers.  相似文献   

4.
Several group I introns have been previously found in strains of the Bacillus cereus group at three different insertion sites in the nrdE gene of the essential nrdIEF operon coding for ribonucleotide reductase. Here, we identify an uncharacterized group IA intron in the nrdF gene in 12 strains of the B. cereus group and show that the pre-mRNA is efficiently spliced. The Bacillus thuringiensis ssp. pakistani nrdF intron encodes a homing endonuclease, denoted I-BthII, with an unconventional GIY-(X)8-YIG motif that cleaves an intronless nrdF gene 7 nt upstream of the intron insertion site, producing 2-nt 3′ extensions. We also found four additional occurrences of two of the previously reported group I introns in the nrdE gene of 25 sequenced B. thuringiensis and one B. cereus strains, and one non-annotated group I intron at a fourth nrdE insertion site in the B. thuringiensis ssp. Al Hakam sequenced genome. Two strains contain introns in both the nrdE and the nrdF genes. Phylogenetic studies of the nrdIEF operon from 39 strains of the B. cereus group suggest several events of horizontal gene transfer for two of the introns found in this operon.  相似文献   

5.
Measurements of binding equilibria of EcoRV endonuclease to DNA, for a series of base-analogue substrates, demonstrate that expression of sequence selectivity is strongly enhanced by the presence of Ca2+ ions. Binding constants were determined for short duplex oligodeoxynucleotides containing the cognate DNA site, three cleavable noncognate sites, and a fully nonspecific site. At pH 7.5 and 100 mM NaCl, the full range of specificity from the specific (tightest binding) to nonspecific (weakest binding) sites is 0.9 kcal/mol in the absence of metal ions and 5.8 kcal/mol in the presence of Ca2+. Precise determination of binding affinities in the presence of the active Mg2+ cofactor was found to be possible for substrates retaining up to 1.6% of wild-type activity, as determined by the rate of phosphoryl transfer. These measurements show that Ca2+ is a near-perfect analogue for Mg2+ in binding reactions of the wild-type enzyme with DNA base-analogue substrates, as it provides identical DeltaDeltaG degrees bind values among the cleavable noncognate sites. Equilibrium dissociation constants of wild-type and base-analogue sites were also measured for the weakly active EcoRV mutant K38A, in the presence of either Mg2+ or Ca2+. In this case, Ca2+ allows expression of a greater degree of specificity than does Mg2+. DeltaDeltaG degrees bind values of K38A toward specific versus nonspecific sites are 6.1 kcal/mol with Ca2+ and 3.9 kcal/mol with Mg2+, perhaps reflecting metal-specific conformational changes in the ground-state ternary complexes. The enhancement of binding specificity provided by divalent metal ions is likely to be general to many restriction endonucleases and other metal-dependent nucleic acid-modifying enzymes. These results strongly suggest that measurements of DNA binding affinities for EcoRV, and likely for many other restriction endonucleases, should be performed in the presence of divalent metal ions.  相似文献   

6.
Many group I introns encode endonucleases that promote intron homing by initiating a double-stranded break-mediated homologous recombination event. In this work we describe intron homing in Bacillus subtilis phages SPO1 and SP82. The introns encode the DNA endonucleases I-HmuI and I-HmuII, respectively, which belong to the H-N-H endonuclease family and possess nicking activity in vitro. Coinfections of B. subtilis with intron-minus and intron-plus phages indicate that I-HmuI and I-HmuII are required for homing of the SPO1 and SP82 introns, respectively. The homing process is a gene conversion event that does not require the major B. subtilis recombination pathways, suggesting that the necessary functions are provided by phage-encoded factors. Our results provide the first examples of H-N-H endonuclease-mediated intron homing and the first demonstration of intron homing initiated by a nicking endonuclease.  相似文献   

7.
Using a recent version of the SICHO algorithm for in silico protein folding, we made a blind prediction of the tertiary structure of the N-terminal, independently folded, catalytic domain (CD) of the I-TevI homing endonuclease, a representative of the GIY-YIG superfamily of homing endonucleases. The secondary structure of the I-TevI CD has been determined using NMR spectroscopy, but computational sequence analysis failed to detect any protein of known tertiary structure related to the GIY-YIG nucleases (Kowalski et al., Nucleic Acids Res., 1999, 27, 2115-2125). To provide further insight into the structure-function relationships of all GIY-YIG superfamily members, including the recently described subfamily of type II restriction enzymes (Bujnicki et al., Trends Biochem. Sci., 2000, 26, 9-11), we incorporated the experimentally determined and predicted secondary and tertiary restraints in a reduced (side chain only) protein model, which was minimized by Monte Carlo dynamics and simulated annealing. The subsequently elaborated full atomic model of the I-TevI CD allows the available experimental data to be put into a structural context and suggests that the GIY-YIG domain may dimerize in order to bring together the conserved residues of the active site.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Here we describe the discovery of a group I intron in the DNA polymerase gene of Bacillus thuringiensis phage Bastille. Although the intron insertion site is identical to that of the Bacillus subtilis phages SPO1 and SP82 introns, the Bastille intron differs from them substantially in primary and secondary structure. Like the SPO1 and SP82 introns, the Bastille intron encodes a nicking DNA endonuclease of the H-N-H family, I-BasI, with a cleavage site identical to that of the SPO1-encoded enzyme I-HmuI. Unlike I-HmuI, which nicks both intron-minus and intron-plus DNA, I-BasI cleaves only intron-minus alleles, which is a characteristic of typical homing endonucleases. Interestingly, the C-terminal portions of these H-N-H phage endonucleases contain a conserved sequence motif, the intron-encoded endonuclease repeat motif (IENR1) that also has been found in endonucleases of the GIY-YIG family, and which likely comprises a small DNA-binding module with a globular ββααβ fold, suggestive of module shuffling between different homing endonuclease families.  相似文献   

10.
11.
19 F NMR spectroscopy have been applied to evaluate metal ion binding by the representative PvuII endonuclease in the absence of substrate. In separate experiments, ITC data demonstrate that PvuII endonuclease binds 2.16 Mn(II) ions and 2.05 Ca(II) metal ions in each monomer active site with K d values of  ≈ 1 mM. While neither calorimetry nor protein NMR spectroscopy is directly sensitive to Mg(II) binding to the enzyme, Mn(II) competes with Mg(II) for common sites(s) on PvuII endonuclease. Substitution of the conserved active site carboxylate Glu68 with Ala resulted in a loss of affinity for both equivalents of both Ca(II) and Mn(II). Interestingly, the active site mutant D58A retained an affinity for Mn(II) with K d  ≈ 2 mM. Mn(II) paramagnetic broadening in 19F spectra of wild-type and mutant 3-fluorotyrosine PvuII endonucleases are consistent with ITC results. Chemical shift analysis of 3-fluorotyrosine mutant enzymes is consistent with a perturbed conformation for D58A. Therefore, free PvuII endonuclease binds metal ions, and metal ion binding can precede DNA binding. Further, while Glu68 is critical to metal ion binding, Asp58 does not appear to be critical to the binding of at least one metal ion and appears to also have a role in structure. These findings provide impetus for exploring the roles of multiple metal ions in the structure and function of this representative endonuclease. Received: 30 March 1999 / Accepted: 28 September 1999  相似文献   

12.
13.
Divalent cations can provide an effective means of modulating the behavior of nucleic acid binding proteins. As a result, there is strong interest in understanding the role of metal ions in the function of both nucleic acid binding proteins and their enzymes. We have applied complementary fluorescence spectroscopic and nitrocellulose filter binding assays to quantitate the role of metal ions in mediating DNA binding and sequence specificity by the representative PvuII endonuclease. At pH 7.5 in the presence of the catalytically nonsupportive Ca(II), this enzyme binds the PvuII target sequence with a K(d) of 50 pM. Under strict metal-free conditions, the enzyme exhibits a K(d) of only 300 nM for the cognate sequence, an affinity which is weak relative to those measured for other systems in the absence of metal ions. This represents a 6000-fold increase in PvuII affinity for cognate DNA upon the addition of Ca(II). The pH dependences of both metal ion-dependent and metal ion-independent DNA binding are remarkably shallow throughout the physiological range; other characterized restriction enzymes exhibit more pronounced pH dependences of DNA binding even in the absence of metal ions. Similar measurements with noncognate sequences indicate that divalent metal ions are not important to nonspecific DNA binding; K(d) values are approximately equal to 200 nM throughout the physiological pH range, a behavior shared with other endonucleases. While some of these results extend somewhat the range of expected behavior for restriction enzymes, these results indicate that PvuII endonuclease shares with other characterized systems a mechanism by which cognate affinity and sequence discrimination are most effectively achieved in the presence of divalent metal ions.  相似文献   

14.
Mutations altering the cleavage specificity of a homing endonuclease   总被引:10,自引:9,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The homing endonuclease I-CreI recognizes and cleaves a particular 22 bp DNA sequence. The crystal structure of I-CreI bound to homing site DNA has previously been determined, leading to a number of predictions about specific protein–DNA contacts. We test these predictions by analyzing a set of endonuclease mutants and a complementary set of homing site mutants. We find evidence that all structurally predicted I-CreI/DNA contacts contribute to DNA recognition and show that these contacts differ greatly in terms of their relative importance. We also describe the isolation of a collection of altered specificity I-CreI derivatives. The in vitro DNA-binding and cleavage properties of two such endonucleases demonstrate that our genetic approach is effective in identifying homing endonucleases that recognize and cleave novel target sequences.  相似文献   

15.
Guan C  Kumar S 《Nucleic acids research》2005,33(19):6225-6234
A stable heterodimeric protein containing a single correctly folded catalytic domain (SCD) of T7 endonuclease I was produced by means of a trans-splicing intein system. As predicted by a model presented earlier, purified SCD protein acts a non-specific nicking endonuclease on normal linear DNA. The SCD retains some ability to recognize and cleave a deviated DNA double-helix near a nick or a strand-crossing site. Thus, we infer that the non-specific and nicked-site cleavage activities observed for the native T7 endonuclease I (as distinct from the resolution activity) are due to uncoordinated actions of the catalytic domains. The positively charged C-terminus of T7 Endo I is essential for the enzymatic activity of SCD, as it is for the native enzyme. We propose that the preference of the native enzyme for the resolution reaction is achieved by cooperativity in the binding of its two catalytic domains when presented with two of the arms across a four-way junction or cruciform structure.  相似文献   

16.
As part of an effort to inhibit S100B, structures of pentamidine (Pnt) bound to Ca2+-loaded and Zn2+,Ca2+-loaded S100B were determined by X-ray crystallography at 2.15 Å (Rfree = 0.266) and 1.85 Å (Rfree = 0.243) resolution, respectively. These data were compared to X-ray structures solved in the absence of Pnt, including Ca2+-loaded S100B and Zn2+,Ca2+-loaded S100B determined here (1.88 Å; Rfree = 0.267). In the presence and absence of Zn2+, electron density corresponding to two Pnt molecules per S100B subunit was mapped for both drug-bound structures. One Pnt binding site (site 1) was adjacent to a p53 peptide binding site on S100B (± Zn2+), and the second Pnt molecule was mapped to the dimer interface (site 2; ± Zn2+) and in a pocket near residues that define the Zn2+ binding site on S100B. In addition, a conformational change in S100B was observed upon the addition of Zn2+ to Ca2+-S100B, which changed the conformation and orientation of Pnt bound to sites 1 and 2 of Pnt-Zn2+,Ca2+-S100B when compared to Pnt-Ca2+-S100B. That Pnt can adapt to this Zn2+-dependent conformational change was unexpected and provides a new mode for S100B inhibition by this drug. These data will be useful for developing novel inhibitors of both Ca2+- and Ca2+,Zn2+-bound S100B.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Endonuclease genes encoded in invasive introns are themselves supposed to be mobile elements which, during evolution, have colonized pre-existing introns converting them into invasive elements. This hypothesis is supported by numerous data concerning the LAGLI-DADG subclass of intronic endonucleases. Less is known about the GIY-YIG ORFs which constitute another family of endonucleases. In this paper we describe the presence of one optional GIY-YIG ORF in the second intron of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene in the fungus Podospora curvicolla. We show that this GIY-YIG ORF is efficiently transferred from an ORF-containing intron to an ORF-less allele. We also show that the products of both the GIY-YIG ORF and the non-canonical LAGLI-DADG-GIY-YIG ORF, which is generated by its integration, have endonuclease activities which recognize and cut the insertion site of the optional sequence. This constitutes the first direct evidence for potential mobility of an intronic GIY-YIG endonuclease. We discuss the role that such a mobile sequence could have played during evolution.  相似文献   

19.
Th1 and Th2 effector CD4+ T cells orchestrate distinct counterregulatory biological responses. To deliver effective tissue Th1- and Th2-type responses, Th1 and Th2 cell recruitment into tissue must be differentially regulated. We show that tissue-derived STAT1 controls the trafficking of adoptively transferred, Ag-specific, wild-type Th1 cells into the lung. Trafficking of Th1 and Th2 cells is differentially regulated as STAT6, which regulates Th2 cell trafficking, had no effect on the trafficking of Th1 cells and STAT1 deficiency did not alter Th2 cell trafficking. We demonstrate that STAT1 control of Th1 cell trafficking is not mediated through T-bet. STAT1 controls the recruitment of Th1 cells through the induction of CXCL9, CXCL10, CXCL11, and CXCL16, whose expression levels in the lung were markedly decreased in STAT1-/- mice. CXCL10 replacement partially restored Th1 cell trafficking in STAT1-deficient mice in vivo, and deficiency in CXCR3, the receptor for CXCL9, CXCL10, and CXCL11, impaired the trafficking of adoptively transferred Th1 cells in wild-type mice. Our work identifies that STAT1 in peripheral tissue regulates the homing of Ag-specific Th1 cells through the induction of a distinct subset of chemokines and establishes that Th1 and Th2 cell trafficking is differentially controlled in vivo by STAT1 and STAT6, respectively.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of divalent metal ions on the activity of a mutant histidinol phosphate phosphatase has been studied. The enzyme was isolated from strain TA387, a mutant of Salmonella typhimurium with a nonsense lesion near the midpoint of the bifunctional hisB gene. Mn2+, Mg2+, Co2+, and Zn2+ shift the optimal pH of phosphatase activity to 6.5 while Be2+ and Ca2+ have no effect on the shape of the pH profile. In the absence of divalent metal ions, the pH optimum is 7.5. Four Me2+ ions, Mn2+, Co2+, Zn2+, and Fe2+ decreased the Km of histidinol phosphate at pH 6.5 from 5.5 mm (without Me2+) to 0.14 mm. Ni2+ and Be2+ increased the Km to 22.2 and 25.0 mm, respectively, and Ca2+ and Mg2+ had an intermediate effect. Changes in maximal velocity were substantially less, only about 2-fold changes being observed. It was shown that the maximal velocity at optimal pH was the same in the absence and presence of Mn2+. Kinetic analysis indicated that there was a rapid equilibrium-ordered addition of Mn2+ to the enzyme before the addition of the substrate, histidinol phosphate. A kimn2+ of 4.3 μm was calculated for the metal ion activation at both pH 6.5 and 7.5. Addition of ethyl-enediaminetetracetate (EDTA) strongly inhibited the phosphatase; inhibition could be reversed by addition of several Me2+ ions, Mg2+ being the most efficient followed by Mn2+. Prolonged incubation with EDTA led to irreversible inactivation.  相似文献   

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