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1.
Apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonucleases are key enzymes involved in the repair of abasic sites and DNA strand breaks. Pathogenic bacteria Mycobacterium tuberculosis contains two AP endonucleases: MtbXthA and MtbNfo members of the exonuclease III and endonuclease IV families, which are exemplified by Escherichia coli Xth and Nfo, respectively. It has been shown that both MtbXthA and MtbNfo contain AP endonuclease and 3′  5′ exonuclease activities. However, it remains unclear whether these enzymes hold 3′-repair phosphodiesterase and nucleotide incision repair (NIR) activities. Here, we report that both mycobacterial enzymes have 3′-repair phosphodiesterase and 3′-phosphatase, and MtbNfo contains in addition a very weak NIR activity. Interestingly, depending on pH, both enzymes require different concentrations of divalent cations: 0.5 mM MnCl2 at pH 7.6 and 10 mM at pH 6.5. MtbXthA requires a low ionic strength and 37°C, while MtbNfo requires high ionic strength (200 mM KCl) and has a temperature optimum at 60 °C. Point mutation analysis showed that D180 and N182 in MtbXthA and H206 and E129 in MtbNfo are critical for enzymes activities. The steady-state kinetic parameters indicate that MtbXthA removes 3′-blocking sugar-phosphate and 3′-phosphate moieties at DNA strand breaks with an extremely high efficiency (kcat/KM = 440 and 1280  μM-1∙min−1, respectively), while MtbNfo exhibits much lower 3′-repair activities (kcat/KM = 0.26 and 0.65 μM-1∙min−1, respectively). Surprisingly, both MtbXthA and MtbNfo exhibited very weak AP site cleavage activities, with kinetic parameters 100- and 300-fold lower, respectively, as compared with the results reported previously. Expression of MtbXthA and MtbNfo reduced the sensitivity of AP endonuclease-deficient E. coli xth nfo strain to methylmethanesulfonate and H2O2 to various degrees. Taken together, these data establish the DNA substrate specificity of M. tuberculosis AP endonucleases and suggest their possible role in the repair of oxidative DNA damage generated by endogenous and host- imposed factors.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Studies on the enzymology of apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonucleases from procaryotic and eucaryotic organisms are reviewed. Emphasis will be placed on the enzymes from Escherichia coli from which a considerable portion of our knowledge has been derived. Recent studies on similar enzymes from eucaryotes will be discussed as well. In addition, we will discuss the chemical and physical properties of AP sites and review studies on peptides and acridine derivatives which incise DNA at AP sites.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The Bacillus subtilis enzymes ExoA and Nfo (originally termed YqfS) are endonucleases that can repair apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites and strand breaks in DNA. We have analyzed how the lack of ExoA and Nfo affects the resistance of growing cells and dormant spores of B. subtilis to a variety of treatments, some of which generate AP sites and DNA strand breaks. The lack of ExoA and Nfo sensitized spores (termed alpha-beta-) lacking the majority of their DNA-protective alpha/beta-type small, acid-soluble spore proteins (SASP) to wet heat. However, the lack of these enzymes had no effect on the wet-heat resistance of spores that retained alpha/beta-type SASP. The lack of either ExoA or Nfo sensitized wild-type spores to dry heat, but loss of both proteins was necessary to sensitize alpha-beta- spores to dry heat. The lack of ExoA and Nfo also sensitized alpha-beta-, but not wild-type, spores to desiccation. In contrast, loss of ExoA and Nfo did not sensitize growing cells or wild-type or alpha-beta- spores to hydrogen peroxide or t-butylhydroperoxide. Loss of ExoA and Nfo also did not increase the spontaneous mutation frequency of growing cells. exoA expression took place not only in growing cells, but also in the forespore compartment of the sporulating cell. These results, together with those from previous work, suggest that ExoA and Nfo are additional factors that protect B. subtilis spores from DNA damage accumulated during spore dormancy.  相似文献   

6.
Two species of apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonuclease have been purified approximately 400-fold from extracts of Drosophila embryos. AP endonuclease I, which flows through phosphocellulose columns, has an apparent subunit molecular weight of 66,000 as judged by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, whereas AP endonuclease II, which is retained by phosphocellulose, has a subunit molecular weight of 63,000. The molecular weight determinations were made possible in part by the finding that both Drosophila enzymes, along with Escherichia coli endonuclease IV, cross-react with an antibody prepared toward a human AP endonuclease (Kane, C. M., and Linn, S. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 3405-3414). The nature of phosphodiester bond breaks produced by the two partially purified AP endonucleases from Drosophila have been investigated. Nicks introduced into partially depurinated PM2 DNA by Drosophila AP endonuclease I did not support DNA synthesis by E. coli DNA polymerase I, whereas nicks created by AP endonuclease II were able to support DNA synthesis, but at a rate far less than that observed for nicks introduced by E. coli endonuclease IV. The priming activity of DNA incised by either of the Drosophila enzymes can be enhanced, however, by an additional incubation with E. coli endonuclease IV, which is known to cleave depurinated DNA on the 5'-side of an apurinic site. These results suggest that the Drosophila enzymes cleave depurinated DNA on the 3'-side of the apurinic site. This suggestion was strengthened by the observation that the combined action of AP endonuclease II and E. coli endonuclease IV resulted in the removal of [32P]dAMP from partially depyrimidinated [dAMP-5'-32P,uracil-3H]poly(dA-dT). Taken together, these results propose that Drosophila AP endonuclease II produces 3'-deoxyribose and 5'-phosphomonoester nucleotide termini. Conversely, the absolute inability to detect priming activity for DNA cleaved by AP endonuclease I alone suggested a different mechanism, possibly the formation of a deoxyribose-3'-phosphate terminus. When apurinic DNA cleaved by AP endonuclease I was subsequently treated with bacterial alkaline phosphatase, DNA synthesis was now detected at levels similar to that observed for AP endonuclease II alone. Additionally, DNA nicked by AP endonuclease I was susceptible to 5'-end labeling by polynucleotide T4 kinase without prior phosphomonoesterase treatment. These results suggest that AP endonuclease I forms deoxyribose 3'-phosphate and 5'-OH termini upon cleaving depurinated DNA.  相似文献   

7.
Two distinct endonucleases from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, specific for apurinic/apyrimidinic sites (AP-endonucleases A and B), have been extensively purified and characterized. Both are free from unspecific and ultraviolet-specific endonucleases and exonucleases. The two enzymes are monomeric proteins of around 24000 daltons. Both are sensitive to ionic strength and most active in the presence of 150 and 100 mM NaCl for AP-endonucleases A and B, respectively. They are not absolutely dependent on divalent cations, since they are insensitive to EDTA, although AP-endonuclease A is activated by Ca2+ or Mg2+ and AP-endonuclease B by Mg2+ only. ATP inhibits the enzymes. AP-endonuclease A reacts optimally between pH 6 and 8, and AP-endonucleases B at pH 8. AP-endonuclease A is more stable at 60 degree C (half-life of 17 min) than B (half-life of 4 min). AP-endonuclease A is insensitive to N-ethylmaleimide or rho-chloromercuribenzoate. AP-endonuclease B is also insensitive to N-ethylmaleimide, but rho-chloromercuribenzoate inhibits its activity.  相似文献   

8.
Addition of thioglycolate and DEAE-Sephadex chromatography were used to analyze the cleavage of the C(3')-O-P bond 3' to AP (apurinic/apyrimidinic) sites in DNA and to distinguish between a mechanism of hydrolysis (which would allow the nicking enzyme to be called 3' AP endonuclease) or beta-elimination (so that the nicking enzyme should be called AP lyase). For this purpose, DNA labelled in the AP sites was first cleaved by rat-liver AP endonuclease, then with the 3' nicking catalyst in the presence of thioglycolate and the reaction products were analyzed on DEAE-Sephadex: deoxyribose-5-phosphate (indicating a 3' cleavage by hydrolysis) and the thioglycolate:unsaturated sugar-5-phosphate adduct (indicating a cleavage by beta-elimination) are well separated allowing to eventually easily discard the hypothesis of a hydrolytic process and the appellation of 3' AP endonuclease. We have shown that addition of thioglycolate to the unsaturated sugar resulting from nicking the C(3')-O-P bond 3' to AP sites by beta-elimination is an irreversible reaction. We have also shown that the thioglycolate must be present from the beginning of the reaction with the nicking catalyst to prevent the primary 5' product of the beta-elimination reaction from undergoing other modifications that complicate the interpretation of the results.  相似文献   

9.
  • 1.1. Three kinds of apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) DNA endonucleases, APcI, APcII, APcIII were purified from rat liver chromatin.
  • 2.2. Molecular weights of APcI, APcII and APcIII were 30,000, 42,000 and 13,000 Da, which have isoelectric points of 7.2, 6.3 and 6.2, respectively.
  • 3.3. Mg2+ was essential for the activities of these 3 enzymes, and sulfhydryl compounds (βercaptoethanol) had a stimulatory effect on the enzyme activities while N-ethylmaleimide and HgCl2 inhibited the enzyme activity.
  • 4.4. Km values of APcI, APcII and APcIII for AP site of DNA were 0.53, 0.27 and 0.36 μM, respectively, and AMP was the most potent inhibitor to these three enzymes among nucleotides tested.
  相似文献   

10.
11.
[5'-32P]pdT8d(-)dT7, containing an AP (apurinic/apyrimidinic) site in the ninth position, and [d(-)-1',2'-3H, 5'-32P]DNA, containing AP sites labelled with 3H in the 1' and 2' positions of the base-free deoxyribose [d(-)] and with 32P 5' to this deoxyribose, were used to investigate the yields of the beta-elimination and delta-elimination reactions catalysed by spermine, and also the yield of hydrolysis, by the 3'-phosphatase activity of T4 polynucleotide kinase, of the 3'-phosphate resulting from the beta delta-elimination. Phage-phi X174 RF (replicative form)-I DNA containing AP (apurinic) sites has been repaired in five steps: beta-elimination, delta-elimination, hydrolysis of 3'-phosphate, DNA polymerization and ligation. Spermine, in one experiment, and Escherichia coli formamidopyrimidine: DNA glycosylase, in another experiment, were used to catalyse the first and second steps (beta-elimination and delta-elimination). These repair pathways, involving a delta-elimination step, may be operational not only in E. coli repairing its DNA containing a formamido-pyrimidine lesion, but also in mammalian cells repairing their nuclear DNA containing AP sites.  相似文献   

12.
Two distinct endonucleases from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, specific for apurinic/apyrimidinic sites (AP-endonucleases A and B), have been extensively purified and characterized. Both are free from unspecific and ultraviolet-specific endonucleases and exonucleases. The two enzymes are monomeric proteins of around 24 000 daltons. Both are sensitive to ionic strength and most active in the presence of 150 and 100 mM NaCl for AP-endonucleases A and B, respectively. They are not absolutely dependent on divalent cations, since they are insensitive to EDTA, although AP-endonuclease A is activated by Ca2+ or Mg2+ and AP-endonuclease B by Mg2+ only. ATP inhibits the enzymes. AP-endonuclease A reacts optimally between pH 6 and 8, and AP-endonuclease B at pH 8. AP-endonuclease A is more stable at 60°C (half-life of 17 min) than B (half-life of 4 min). AP-endonucleuase A is insensitive to N-ethylmaleimide or ρ-chloromercuribenzoate. AP-endonuclease B is also insensitive to N-ethylmaleimide, but ρ-chloromercuribenzoate inhibits its activity.  相似文献   

13.
J Pierre  J Laval 《Biochemistry》1980,19(22):5024-5029
Two endonucleases specific for DNA-containing apurinic or apyrimidinic sites (AP-endonucleases A and B) have been isolated from Micrococcus luteus and highly purified. These enzymes have no exonuclease activity. Both AP-endonucleases hydrolyze DNA-containing apurinic or apyrimidinic sites at the 5' end of the lesion, thus generating 3'-hydroxyl and 5'-phosphoryl end groups. DNA-containing pyrimidine dimers, introduced at low doses of UV, are not hydrolyzed, whereas DNA-containing lesions, introduced at high doses of UV or by gamma irradiation are nicked by either AP-endonuclease. During hydrolysis of apurinic DNA, neither of the AP-endonucleases acts as a processive enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
J Pierre  J Laval 《Biochemistry》1980,19(22):5018-5024
Two chromatographically distinct endonucleases from Micrococcus luteus, specific for apurinic and apyrimidinic sites (AP-endonucleases A and B), have been extensively purified and characterized. Both are free from DNA glycosylase, unspecific endonuclease, and phosphatase activities. The two enzymes behave as monomeric proteins of approximately 35000 daltons. In addition to their different chromatographic properties on CM-cellulose, P-cellulose, hydroxylapatite, and DNA--Sepharose, both AP-endonucleases can be distinguished as follows: AP-endonuclease A has an isoelectric point of 4.8, shows a half-life of 4 min at 45 degrees C, reacts optimally at pH 7.5 and has a KM value of 2.3 X 10(-6) M. AP-endonuclease B has a pI of 8.8, is more stable at 45 degrees C (half-life of 10 min), and reacts optimally between pH 6.5 and pH 8.5; its KM value is 3.7 X 10(-6) M.  相似文献   

15.
Sites of base loss in DNA arise spontaneously, are induced by damaging agents or are generated by DNA glycosylases. Repair of these potentially mutagenic or lethal lesions is carried out by apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonucleases. To test current models of AP site recognition, we examined the effects of site-specific DNA structural modifications and an F266A mutation on incision and protein-DNA complex formation by the major human AP endonuclease, Ape. Changing the ring component of the abasic site from a neutral tetrahydrofuran (F) to a positively charged pyrrolidine had only a 4-fold effect on the binding capacity of Ape. A non-polar 4-methylindole base analog opposite F had a <2-fold effect on the incision activity of Ape and the human protein was unable to incise or specifically bind 'bulged' DNA substrates. Mutant Ape F266A protein complexed with F-containing DNA with only a 6-fold reduced affinity relative to wild-type protein. Similar studies are described using Escherichia coli AP endonucleases, exonuclease III and endonuclease IV. The results, in combination with previous findings, indicate that the ring structure of an AP site, the base opposite an AP site, the conformation of AP-DNA prior to protein binding and the F266 residue of Ape are not critical elements in targeted recognition by AP endonucleases.  相似文献   

16.
17.
To study the interaction of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 (PARP1) with apurinic/apyrimidinic sites (AP sites) within clustered damages, DNA duplexes were created that contained an AP site in one strand and one of its analogs situated opposite the AP site in the complementary strand. Residues of 3-hydroxy-2-hydroxymethyltetrahydrofuran (THF), diethylene glycol (DEG), and decane-1,10-diol (DD) were used. It is shown for the first time that apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease 1 (APE1) cleaves the DNA strands at the positions of DEG and DD residues, and this suggests these groups as AP site analogs. Insertion of DEG and DD residues opposite an AP site decreased the rate of AP site hydrolysis by APE1 similarly to the effect of the THF residue, which is a well-known analog of the AP site, and this allowed us to use such AP DNAs to imitate DNA with particular types of clustered damages. PARP1, isolated and in cell extracts, efficiently interacted with AP DNA with analogs of AP sites producing a Schiff base. PARP1 competes with APE1 upon interaction with AP DNAs, decreasing the level of its cross-linking with AP DNA, and inhibits hydrolysis of AP sites within AP DNAs containing DEG and THF residues. Using glutaraldehyde as a linking agent, APE1 is shown to considerably decrease the amount of AP DNA-bound PARP1 dimer, which is the catalytically active form of this enzyme. Autopoly(ADP-ribosyl)ation of PARP1 decreased its inhibitory effect. The possible involvement of PARP1 and its automodification in the regulation of AP site processing within particular clustered damages is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Germination and outgrowth are critical steps for returning Bacillus subtilis spores to life. However, oxidative stress due to full hydration of the spore core during germination and activation of metabolism in spore outgrowth may generate oxidative DNA damage that in many species is processed by apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonucleases. B. subtilis spores possess two AP endonucleases, Nfo and ExoA; the outgrowth of spores lacking both of these enzymes was slowed, and the spores had an elevated mutation frequency, suggesting that these enzymes repair DNA lesions induced by oxidative stress during spore germination and outgrowth. Addition of H2O2 also slowed the outgrowth of nfo exoA spores and increased the mutation frequency, and nfo and exoA mutations slowed the outgrowth of spores deficient in either RecA, nucleotide excision repair (NER), or the DNA-protective α/β-type small acid-soluble spore proteins (SASP). These results suggest that α/β-type SASP protect DNA of germinating spores against damage that can be repaired by Nfo and ExoA, which is generated either spontaneously or promoted by addition of H2O2. The contribution of RecA and Nfo/ExoA was similar to but greater than that of NER in repair of DNA damage generated during spore germination and outgrowth. However, nfo and exoA mutations increased the spontaneous mutation frequencies of outgrown spores lacking uvrA or recA to about the same extent, suggesting that DNA lesions generated during spore germination and outgrowth are processed by Nfo/ExoA in combination with NER and/or RecA. These results suggest that Nfo/ExoA, RecA, the NER system, and α/β-type SASP all contribute to the repair of and/or protection against oxidative damage of DNA in germinating and outgrowing spores.  相似文献   

19.
J A McKenzie  P R Strauss 《Biochemistry》2001,40(44):13254-13261
Apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease (AP endo) is a key enzyme in oxidative damage DNA repair. The enzyme, which repairs abasic sites, makes a single nick 5' to the phosphodeoxyribose, leaving a free 3'-hydroxyl. We recently described single turnover kinetics for human recombinant AP endo acting on an oligonucleotide with a single abasic site. We hypothesized that the structural changes induced by the presence of a second abasic site might provide insight into how AP endo recognizes the first abasic site. Here we performed steady state and single turnover experiments using bistranded abasic site substrates, with the second site located on the complementary strand to the one being followed and either opposite to the first or displaced in the 5' direction. All sites on the complementary strand were within half a helical turn of the first. The catalytic efficiency was reduced 80 to 96% and the Kd for substrate binding and dissociation was elevated 40- to 125-fold. The smaller changes occurred when the second site was opposite the first site or displaced by four nucleotides. In addition, if the second abasic site was directly across the helix or displaced by 1 or 3 nucleotides from the first abasic site, cleavage of the first abasic site was subject to apparent substrate inhibition, which did not occur if the second abasic site was displaced by four nucleotides from the first. While a substrate containing a nick without a phosphodeoxyribose on the contralateral strand abasic site did not inhibit nicking of the first strand, a substrate with a nicked abasic site on the contralateral strand was an even stronger inhibitor of enzyme action than an oligonucleotide containing the corresponding abasic site on each strand. Consequently, the inhibitory effect of the second abasic site is probably the result of prior cleavage of the abasic site on the contralateral strand with resulting distortions to the DNA helix that interfere with enzyme binding and/or cleavage.  相似文献   

20.
DNA strand breaks with damaged 3' termini are potentially toxic lesions caused by free radicals. The purified yeast diesterase that removes small nucleotide fragments from such 3' termini in oxidized DNA has been further characterized with respect to its substrate specificity. In addition to the 3'-phosphoglycolaldehyde esters used to monitor the activity during purification, the enzyme efficiently hydrolyzed a variety of other 3'-esters in DNA. These included 3'-phosphates, 3'-(2,3-didehydro-2,3-dideoxyribose phosphates), and the 3'-blocking damages formed in vivo in Escherichia coli by H2O2 or in vitro by DNA treatment with bleomycin. This same transition metal-dependent enzyme also constitutes the major yeast endonuclease for apurinic/apyrimidinic sites in DNA, hydrolyzing these damages to yield normal 3'-hydroxyl nucleotides and 5'-phosphoryl base-free sugar termini (a Type II apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease). Yeast 3'-phosphoglycolaldehyde diesterase therefore appears to be involved in two distinct pathways of DNA repair: initiation of the repair of oxidative strand breaks in DNA and the restoration of sites of base loss caused by many types of DNA-damaging agents.  相似文献   

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