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1.
Conlan LH  Dupureur CM 《Biochemistry》2002,41(50):14848-14855
Restriction enzymes serve as important model systems for understanding the role of metal ions in phosphodiester hydrolysis. To this end, a number of laboratories have reported dramatic differences between the metal ion-dependent and metal ion-independent DNA binding behaviors of these systems. In an effort to illuminate the underlying mechanistic details which give rise to these differences, we have quantitatively dissected these equilibrium behaviors into component association and dissociation rates for the representative PvuII endonuclease and use these data to assess the stoichiometry of metal ion involvement in the binding process. The dependence of PvuII cognate DNA on Ca(II) concentration binding appears to be cooperative, exhibiting half-saturation at 0.6 mM metal ion and yielding an n(H) of 3.5 +/- 0.2 per enzyme homodimer. Using both nitrocellulose filter binding and fluorescence assays, we observe that the cognate DNA dissociation rate (k(-)(1) or k(off)) is very slow (10(-)(3) s(-)(1)) and exhibits a shallow dependence on metal ion concentration. DNA trap cleavage experiments with Mg(II) confirm the general irreversibility of DNA binding relative to cleavage, even at low metal ion concentrations. More dramatically, the association rate (k(1) or k(on)) also appears to be cooperative, increasing more than 100-fold between 0.2 and 10 mM Ca(II), with an optimum value of 2.7 x 10(7) M(-)(1) s (-)(1). Hill analysis of the metal ion dependence of k(on) indicates an n(H) of 3.6 +/- 0.2 per enzyme dimer. This value is consistent with the involvement in DNA association of two metal ions per subunit active site, a result which lends new strength to arguments for two-metal ion mechanisms in restriction enzymes.  相似文献   

2.
TaqI is a metal-dependent endonuclease that recognizes T(downward arrow)CGA, with the arrow indicating the cleavage site. Mutations at K158 render the enzyme inactive and mutations at K157 significantly reduce DNA cleavage activity (W. Cao and F. Barany (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 33002-33010). Aspartate, glutamate, and histidine substitutions were made at K158 in the wild-type and K157S mutant TaqI endonuclease to understand the functional organization of the active site. None of the mutants was active with Mg(2+), but the DNA cleavage activities were partly rescued by Mn2+ for K157S-K158E and K157S-K158H mutants. The rescuing effects were observed with Mn2+ but not with other divalent cations. K157S-K158E required higher Mn2+ concentrations than the wild-type enzyme for DNA cleavage activity, suggesting that a Mn2+ ion is weakly bound at the 158 position. The need to neutralize K157 to recover the catalytic activity of K158E and K158H indicates that K158 and K157 may interact functionally. In analogy with EcoRV, Ca2+ stimulated Mn2+-mediated cleavage for the wild-type TaqI, suggesting the existence of at least two metal ions at the catalytic center. A catalytic mechanism involving two metal ions and the K157-K158 pair is proposed for TaqI endonuclease.  相似文献   

3.
The recombinant plasmid pGEM4Z-ras DNA which was methylated on dam and dcm sites outside the PvuII recognition sequence was digested with restriction endonuclease PvuII, and one of the three PvuII sites was about 16-fold less efficient to cleave than either of the other two. On the contrary, the three PvuII sites were cleaved at about the same rate on the unmethylated DNA molecule. The results show that the cleavage inhibition of the methylated DNA on the certain PvuII site was caused by methylation outside the PvuII recognition sequence. Maybe a adjacent methylated dam site *A was responsible for the less efficient cleavage. This observation suggests that methylation outside the recognition sequence may be considered a new factor in the kinetic experiment of restriction endonuclease.  相似文献   

4.
We have determined the crystal structure of the PvuII endonuclease in the presence of Mg(2+). According to the structural data, divalent metal ion binding in the PvuII subunits is highly asymmetric. The PvuII-Mg(2+) complex has two distinct metal ion binding sites, one in each monomer. One site is formed by the catalytic residues Asp58 and Glu68, and has extensive similarities to a catalytically important site found in all structurally examined restriction endonucleases. The other binding site is located in the other monomer, in the immediate vicinity of the hydroxyl group of Tyr94; it has no analogy to metal ion binding sites found so far in restriction endonucleases. To assign the number of metal ions involved and to better understand the role of Mg(2+) binding to Tyr94 for the function of PvuII, we have exchanged Tyr94 by Phe and characterized the metal ion dependence of DNA cleavage of wild-type PvuII and the Y94F variant. Wild-type PvuII cleaves both strands of the DNA in a concerted reaction. Mg(2+) binding, as measured by the Mg(2+) dependence of DNA cleavage, occurs with a Hill coefficient of 4, meaning that at least two metal ions are bound to each subunit in a cooperative fashion upon formation of the active complex. Quenched-flow experiments show that DNA cleavage occurs about tenfold faster if Mg(2+) is pre-incubated with enzyme or DNA than if preformed enzyme-DNA complexes are mixed with Mg(2+). These results show that Mg(2+) cannot easily enter the active center of the preformed enzyme-DNA complex, but that for fast cleavage the metal ions must already be bound to the apoenzyme and carried with the enzyme into the enzyme-DNA complex. The Y94F variant, in contrast to wild-type PvuII, does not cleave DNA in a concerted manner and metal ion binding occurs with a Hill coefficient of 1. These results indicate that removal of the Mg(2+) binding site at Tyr94 completely disrupts the cooperativity in DNA cleavage. Moreover, in quenched-flow experiments Y94F cleaves DNA about ten times more slowly than wild-type PvuII, regardless of the order of mixing. From these results we conclude that wild-type PvuII cleaves DNA in a fast and concerted reaction, because the Mg(2+) required for catalysis are already bound at the enzyme, one of them at Tyr94. We suggest that this Mg(2+) is shifted to the active center during binding of a specific DNA substrate. These results, for the first time, shed light on the pathway by which metal ions as essential cofactors enter the catalytic center of restriction endonucleases.  相似文献   

5.
The kinetics of the cleavage of superhelical plasmid DNA (pBR322) by the restriction endonuclease, BamHI, have been analyzed in terms a compartmental model consistent with the chemistry first proposed by Rubin and Modrich (Rubin, R. A., and Modrich, P. (1978) Nucleic Acids Res. 5, 2991-2997) for analysis of the kinetics of the restriction endonuclease, EcoRI. The model was defined in terms of two compartments representing DNA substrate (bound and free), two compartments representing nicked intermediate (bound and free), one compartment representing linear product, and one compartment for free enzyme. A simultaneous analysis of concentration changes over time of the three DNA forms (superhelical, nicked, and linear) at six different enzyme concentrations was undertaken employing this compartmental model using SAAM (Simulation Analysis And Modeling) software. Results showed that rate constants characterizing the association of enzyme with superhelical DNA (6.0 x 10(5) M-1 s-1) and nicked DNA (2.8 x 10(5) M-1 s-1) were similar in magnitude and rate constants characterizing cleavage of the first (1.2 x 10(-2) s-1) and second phosphodiester bonds (3.1 x 10(-2) s-1) were also similar. The analysis yields a kinetically determined equilibrium constant of 12.9 nM for the dissociation of nicked intermediate from the enzyme. The rate constant describing the release of the nicked intermediate from the enzyme has a value of 3.7 x 10(-3) s-1. By comparing the value of this release rate constant to the value of the constant describing the second cleavage event, it can be determined that only 10% of the nicked intermediate bound to the enzyme is released as free nicked DNA and that 90% of the nicked intermediate is processed to the linear form without being released. Hence, most of the DNA is cleaved as the result of a single enzyme-DNA recognition event. No steady state assumptions were made in the analysis. The approach was to directly solve the differential equations which described the kinetic processes using an interactive method. This study demonstrates the usefulness of this approach for the analysis of kinetics of protein-DNA interactions for the restriction endonucleases.  相似文献   

6.
The crystal structure of the type II restriction endonuclease BglI bound to DNA containing its specific recognition sequence has been determined at 2.2 A resolution. This is the first structure of a restriction endonuclease that recognizes and cleaves an interrupted DNA sequence, producing 3' overhanging ends. BglI is a homodimer that binds its specific DNA sequence with the minor groove facing the protein. Parts of the enzyme reach into both the major and minor grooves to contact the edges of the bases within the recognition half-sites. The arrangement of active site residues is strikingly similar to other restriction endonucleases, but the co-ordination of two calcium ions at the active site gives new insight into the catalytic mechanism. Surprisingly, the core of a BglI subunit displays a striking similarity to subunits of EcoRV and PvuII, but the dimer structure is dramatically different. The BglI-DNA complex demonstrates, for the first time, that a conserved subunit fold can dimerize in more than one way, resulting in different DNA cleavage patterns.  相似文献   

7.
It is well known that type II restriction enzyme activities and specificities can be modulated by altering solution conditions. The addition of co-solvents such as dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), alcohols and polyols can promote star activity, which is the cleavage of non-cognate sequences. While neutral detergents are often used to control protein aggregation, little is known about the effect of neutral detergents on restriction enzyme activities and specificities. We report here that BamHI, BglI, BglII, EcoRI, EcoRV, HindIII, MluI, PvuII, SalI and XhoI restriction endonucleases are remarkably tolerant of high concentrations of neutral detergents Triton X-100, CHAPS and octyl glucoside. In most cases, lambda DNA cleavage rates were comparable to those observed in the absence of detergent. Indeed, the specific activities of SalI and XhoI were appreciably increased in the presence of Triton X-100. For all enzymes active in the presence of detergents, sequence specificity toward lambda DNA was not compromised. Assays of star cleavage of pUC18 by EcoRI, PvuII and BamHI endonucleases in equimolar concentrations of Triton X-100 and sucrose revealed reduced star activity in the detergent relative to the sucrose co-solvent. Interestingly, under star activity-promoting conditions, PvuII endonuclease displayed greater fidelity in Triton X-100 than in conventional buffer. Taken altogether, these results suggest that in some cases, neutral detergents can be used to manipulate restriction endonuclease reaction rates and specificities.  相似文献   

8.
Restriction endonucleases differ in their use of metal cofactors despite having remarkably similar folds for their catalytic regions. To explore this, we have characterized the interaction of endonuclease PvuII with the catalytically incompetent cation Ca(2+). The structure of a glutaraldehyde-crosslinked crystal of the endonuclease PvuII-DNA complex, determined in the presence of Ca(2+) at a pH of approximately 6.5, supports a two-metal mechanism of DNA cleavage by PvuII. The first Ca(2+) position matches that found in all structurally examined endonucleases, while the second position is similar to that of EcoRV but is distinct from that of BamHI and BglI. The location of the second metal in PvuII, unlike that in BamHI/BglI, permits no direct interaction between the second metal and the O3' oxygen leaving group. However, the interactions between the DNA scissile phosphate and the metals, the first metal and the attacking water, and the attacking water and DNA are the same in PvuII as they are in the two-metal models of BamHI and BglI, but are distinct from the proposed three-metal or the two-metal models of EcoRV.  相似文献   

9.
Here we report the co-factor requirements for DNA fragmentation factor (DFF) endonuclease and characterize its cleavage sites on naked DNA and chromatin substrates. The endonuclease exhibits a pH optimum of 7.5, requires Mg(2+), not Ca(2+), and is inhibited by Zn(2+). The enzyme generates blunt ends or ends with 1-base 5'-overhangs possessing 5'-phosphate and 3'-hydroxyl groups and is specific for double- and not single-stranded DNA or RNA. DFF endonuclease has a moderately greater sequence preference than micrococcal nuclease or DNase I, and the sites attacked possess a dyad axis of symmetry with respect to purine and pyrimidine content. Using HeLa cell nuclei or chromatin reconstituted on a 5 S rRNA gene tandem array, we prove that the enzyme attacks chromatin in the internucleosomal linker, generating oligonucleosomal DNA ladders sharper than those created by micrococcal nuclease. Histone H1, high mobility group-1, and topoisomerase II activate DFF endonuclease activity on naked DNA substrates but much less so on chromatin substrates. We conclude that DFF is a useful reagent for chromatin research.  相似文献   

10.
The restriction endonuclease BstI was purified from 70kg of Bacillus stearothermophilus. The final product is at least 97% pure as judged by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis; this major protein species co-migrates with the enzyme activity on native polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and isoelectric focusing. Pure restriction endonuclease BstI has a subunit mol.wt. of 26,000 and is probably a loosely associated dimer. The enzyme shows maximum activity at pH values between 7 and 9.5, and in the presence of 0.5-2mM-Mg2+. NaCl inhibits the restriction enzyme activity. Restriction endonuclease BstI cleaves DNA in a position identical with that cleaved by endonuclease BamHI (for Bacillus amyloliquefaciens), i.e.: (formula: see text). In the presence of high concentrations of enzyme, DNA cleavage occurs at secondary sites. This side-specificity is enhanced by the addition of glycerol. Preliminary studies indicate that these sites are of the type: (formula: see text).  相似文献   

11.
The internucleosomal cleavage of genomic DNA is a biochemical hallmark of apoptosis. DNase gamma, a Mg2+/Ca2+-dependent endonuclease, has been suggested to be one of the apoptotic endonucleases, but its biochemical characteristic has not been fully elucidated. Here, using recombinant DNase gamma, we showed that DNase gamma is a Mg2+/Ca2+-dependent single-stranded DNA nickase and has a high activity at low ionic strength. Under higher ionic strength, such as physiological buffer conditions, the endonuclease activity of DNase gamma is restricted, but its activity is enhanced in the presence of linker histone H1, which explains DNA cleavage at linker regions of apoptotic nuclei.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
We previously reported a double-stranded endonuclease from HeLa cells, endonuclease R (endo R), which specifically cleaves duplex DNA at sites rich in G.C base pairs. In this report we describe the purification of endo R to near homogeneity by conventional and affinity chromatography. The molecular mass of the active form of endo R is approximately 115-125 kDa. SDS-gel electrophoresis reveals a major protein species of 100 kDa. The enzyme requires Mg2+ as a cofactor and is equally active on closed circular and linear duplex DNA substrates that contain G-rich sequences. A 50% reduction in cleavage activity is observed with Ca2+ ions and no double-stranded cleavage occurs with Zn2+. Use of Mn2+ causes an altered specificity at low concentrations of enzyme or divalent metal ion and nonspecific degradation of the substrate at higher concentrations. Endo R is strongly inhibited by sodium or potassium chloride and exhibits a wide pH optimum of 6.0-9.0. The pI of the enzyme is between 6.5 and 7.0. A 2-fold stimulation is observed with the addition of dGTP or dATP but specific cleavage is inhibited by ATP at an equivalent concentration. Cleavage activity is competitively inhibited 10-fold more efficiently by single-stranded poly(dG)12 than by other DNA competitors. The ends of endo R cleavage products contain 5'-phosphate and 3'-hydroxyl groups, and a significant portion of these products were substrates for T4 DNA ligase. Endo R appears to be a previously uncharacterized mammalian endonuclease.  相似文献   

14.
Zinc-finger nucleases and TALE nucleases are produced by combining a specific DNA-binding module and a non-specific DNA-cleavage module, resulting in nucleases able to cleave DNA at a unique sequence. Here a new approach for creating highly specific nucleases was pursued by fusing a catalytically inactive variant of the homing endonuclease I-SceI, as DNA binding-module, to the type IIP restriction enzyme PvuII, as cleavage module. The fusion enzymes were designed to recognize a composite site comprising the recognition site of PvuII flanked by the recognition site of I-SceI. In order to reduce activity on PvuII sites lacking the flanking I-SceI sites, the enzymes were optimized so that the binding of I-SceI to its sites positions PvuII for cleavage of the composite site. This was achieved by optimization of the linker and by introducing amino acid substitutions in PvuII which decrease its activity or disturb its dimer interface. The most specific variant showed a more than 1000-fold preference for the addressed composite site over an unaddressed PvuII site. These results indicate that using a specific restriction enzyme, such as PvuII, as cleavage module, offers an alternative to the otherwise often used catalytic domain of FokI, which by itself does not contribute to the specificity of the engineered nuclease.  相似文献   

15.
The T4 phage td intron-encoded endonuclease (I-Tev I) cleaves the intron-deleted td gene (td delta I) 23 nucleotides upstream of the intron insertion site on the noncoding strand and 25 nucleotides upstream of this site on the coding strand, to generate a 2-base hydroxyl overhang in the 3' end of each DNA strand. I-Tev I-157, a truncated form in which slightly more than one third (88 residues) of the endonuclease is deleted, was purified to homogeneity and shown to possess endonuclease activity similar to that of I-TEV I, the full-length enzyme (245 residues). The minimal length of the td delta I gene that was cleaved by I-Tev I and I-Tev I-157 has been determined to be exactly 39 basepairs, from -27 (upstream in exon1) to +12 (downstream in exon2) relative to the intron insertion site. Similar to the full-length endonuclease, I-Tev I-157 cuts the intronless thymidylate synthase genes from such diverse organisms as Escherichia coli, Lactobacillus casei and the human. The position and nature of the in vitro endonucleolytic cut in these genes are homologous to those in td delta I. Point mutational analysis of the td delta I substrate based on the deduced consensus nucleotide sequence has revealed a very low degree of specificity on either side of the cleavage site, for both the full-length and truncated I-TEV I.  相似文献   

16.
Specific cleavage of large DNA molecules at few sites, necessary for the analysis of genomic DNA or for targeting individual genes in complex genomes, requires endonucleases of extremely high specificity. Restriction endonucleases (REase) that recognize DNA sequences of 4-8 bp are not sufficiently specific for this purpose. In principle, the specificity of REases can be extended by fusion to sequence recognition modules, e.g. specific DNA-binding domains or triple-helix forming oligonucleotides (TFO). We have chosen to extend the specificity of REases using TFOs, given the combinatorial flexibility this fusion offers in addressing a short, yet precisely recognized restriction site next to a defined triple-helix forming site (TFS). We demonstrate here that the single chain variant of PvuII (scPvuII) covalently coupled via the bifunctional cross-linker N-(gamma-maleimidobutryloxy) succinimide ester to a TFO (5'-NH2-[CH2](6 or 12)-MPMPMPMPMPPPPPPT-3', with M being 5-methyl-2'-deoxycytidine and P being 5-[1-propynyl]-2'-deoxyuridine), cleaves DNA specifically at the recognition site of PvuII (CAGCTG) if located in a distance of approximately one helical turn to a TFS (underlined) complementary to the TFO ('addressed' site: 5'-TTTTTTTCTCTCTCTCN(approximately 10)CAGCTG-3'), leaving 'unaddressed' PvuII sites intact. The preference for cleavage of an 'addressed' compared to an 'unaddressed' site is >1000-fold, if the cleavage reaction is initiated by addition of Mg2+ ions after preincubation of scPvuII-TFO and substrate in the absence of Mg2+ ions to allow triple-helix formation before DNA cleavage. Single base pair substitutions in the TFS prevent addressed DNA cleavage by scPvuII-TFO.  相似文献   

17.
A homogeneous preparation of venom phosphodiesterase from Crotalus adamanteus possesses an intrinsic endonuclease activity, specific for superhelical (form I) and single-stranded DNA. The phosphodiesterase degrades single-stranded T7 DNA by endonucleolytic cleavages. Duplex T7 DNA is hydrolyzed by the liberation of acid-soluble products simultaneously from the 3' and 5' termini but without demonstrable internal scissions in duplex regions. Since venom phosphodiesterase is known to hydrolyze oligonucleotides stepwise from the 3' termini, the cleavage at the 5' end of duplex T7 DNA is ascribed to an endonuclease activity. Form I PM2 DNA is nicked to yield first relaxed circles and then linear DNA which is subsequently hydrolyzed only from the chain termini. The linear duplex DNA intermediates consist of a discrete series of fragments (11 are usually resolved on agarose gels) with initial molecular weights ranging from 6.3 x 10(6) (the intact PM2 DNA size) to approximately 1 x 10(6). The cleavage of the form I molecule must, therefore, occur at a limited number of unique sites. The enzyme also cleaves nonsuperhelical, covalently closed circular PM2 DNA but at a 10(4) times slower rate. Both the endonuclease activity on form I DNA and the known exonuclease activity co-migrate on polyacrtkanude gels, are optimally active at pH 9, are stimulated by small concentrations of Mg2+, and are similarly inactivated by heat, reducing agents, and EDTA.  相似文献   

18.
Schierling B  Wende W  Pingoud A 《FEBS letters》2012,586(12):1736-1741
The restriction endonuclease PvuII has been introduced as a sequence-specific cleavage module in highly-specific nucleases for gene targeting. Here, a structural reorganization of the single-chain variant of PvuII (scPvuII) was performed by circular permutation as a proof-of-concept in order to find out whether the relocated, new termini next to structural elements important for DNA recognition and catalysis could be used for the fusion with other regulatory protein domains. Three circularly permuted variants of scPvuII were obtained that all maintain the specific endonucleolytic activity of scPvuII.  相似文献   

19.
Mannino SJ  Jenkins CL  Raines RT 《Biochemistry》1999,38(49):16178-16186
Homing endonucleases are distinguished by their ability to catalyze the cleavage of double-stranded DNA with extremely high specificity. I-PpoI endonuclease, a homing endonuclease from the slime mold Physarum polycephalum, is a small enzyme (2 x 20 kDa) of known three-dimensional structure that catalyzes the cleavage of a long target DNA sequence (15 base pairs). Here, a detailed chemical mechanism for catalysis of DNA cleavage by I-PpoI endonuclease is proposed and tested by creating six variants in which active-site residues are replaced with alanine. The side chains of three residues (Arg61, His98, and Asn119) are found to be important for efficient catalysis of DNA cleavage. This finding is consistent with the proposed mechanism in which His98 abstracts a proton from an attacking water molecule bound by an adjacent phosphoryl oxygen, Arg61 and Asn119 stabilize the pentavalent transition state, and Asn119 also binds to the essential divalent metal cation (e.g., Mg(2+) ion), which interacts with the 3'-oxygen leaving group. Because Mg(2+) is required for cleavage of a substrate with a good leaving group (p-nitrophenolate), Mg(2+) likely stabilizes the pentavalent transition state. The pH-dependence of k(cat) for catalysis by I-PpoI reveals a macroscopic pK(a) of 8.4 for titratable groups that modulate product release. I-PpoI appears to be unique among known restriction endonucleases and homing endonucleases in its use of a histidine residue to activate the attacking water molecule for in-line displacement of the 3'-leaving group.  相似文献   

20.
Alteration of the specificity of PvuII restriction endonuclease.   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The restriction endonuclease PvuII which cleaves the sequence CAGCTG, at the position indicated by the arrow, was found to decrease its substrate specificity in the presence of organic solvents. Thirty-three sites, that we have named PvuII sites, were identified on the nucleotide sequence of pBR322 DNA. The new recognition sequences cleaved in pBR322 DNA, at the positions indicated by the arrows, were shown to be AAGCTG, GAGCTG, CNGCTG, CANCTG, CAGNTG, CAGCNG, CAGCTC and CAGCTT. (TAGCTG and the complementary sequence CAGCTA are not present in pBR322 DNA). From these recognition sequences, we deduced that PvuII activity recognizes and cleaves degenerate sequences which differ from the standard PvuII sequence CAGCTG at only one of the recognition site. Any substitution can occur at any one of the six positions in the hexanucleotide sequence. The optimum incubation medium for PvuII activity was found to be: 10-50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.5, 12-15 mM MgCl2, 50 mM NaCl, 10% ethanol + 10% dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO).  相似文献   

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