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1.
DNA structure influences sequence specific cleavage by bleomycin.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
We have examined the cleavage of several synthetic DNA sequences by iron(II)-bleomycin. We find that, although bleomycin cuts mixed sequence DNAs with a preference for GC = GT > GA >> GG, it efficiently cleaves regions of (AT)n cutting exclusively at ApT, not TpA. Isolated ApT steps show very little cleavage while blocks of three or more contiguous ATs are cut as efficiently as GpT. This cleavage is specific for (AT)n, since sequences of the type (TAA)n.(TTA)n and (ATT)n.(AAT)n are hardly cut at all. No cleavage is observed at ApC or CpA within sequences of the type (AC)n.(GT)n; regions of An.Tn are also not cut. Although the cobalt-bleomycin complex (which binds to but does not cleave DNA) yields good DNase I footprints at GT and GC sites, no footprints are observed within (AT)n, suggesting that although the cleavage reaction is efficient, the binding affinity is relatively weak. We propose a model in which bleomycin cleavage is determined by local DNA structure, while strong binding requires the presence of a guanine residue.  相似文献   

2.
3.
A novel nuclease activity have been detected at three specific sites in the chromatin of the spacer region flanking the 5'-end of the ribosomal RNA gene from Tetrahymena. The endogenous nuclease does not function catalytically in vitro, but is in analogy with the DNA topoisomerases activated by strong denaturants to cleave DNA at specific sites. The endogenous cleavages have been mapped at positions +50, -650 and -1100 relative to the 5'-end of the pre-35S rRNA. The endogenous cleavage sites are associated with micrococcal nuclease hypersensitive sites and DNase I hypersensitive regions. Thus, a single well-defined micrococcal nuclease hypersensitive site is found approximately 130 bp upstream from each of the endogenous cleavages. Clusters of defined sites, the majority of which fall within the 130 bp regions defined by vicinal micrococcal nuclease and endogenous cleavages, constitute the DNase I hypersensitive regions.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
We have prepared DNA fragments containing the sequences A15CGT15, T15CGA15 and T(AT)8CG(AT)15 cloned within the SmaI site of the pUC19 polylinker. These have been used as substrates in footprinting experiments with DNase I and diethylpyrocarbonate probing the effects of echinomycin, binding to the central CG, on the structure of the surrounding sequences. No clear DNase I footprints are seen with T15CGA15 though alterations in the nuclease susceptibility of surrounding regions suggest that the ligand is binding, albeit weakly at this site. All the other fragments show the expected footprints around the CG site. Regions of An and Tn are rendered much more reactive to DNase I and adenines on the 3'-side of the CG become hyperreactive to diethylpyrocarbonate. Regions of alternating AT show unusual changes in the presence of the ligand. At low concentrations (5 microM) cleavage of TpA is enhanced, whereas at higher concentrations a cleavage pattern with a four base pair repeat is evident. A similar pattern is seen with micrococcal nuclease. Modification by diethylpyrocarbonate is strongest at alternate adenines which are staggered in the 5'-direction across the two strands. We interpret these changes by suggesting secondary drug binding within regions of alternating AT, possibly to the dinucleotide ApT. DNase I footprinting experiments performed at 4 degrees C revealed neither enhancements nor footprints for flanking regions of homopolymeric A and T suggesting that the conformational changes are necessary consequence of drug binding.  相似文献   

6.
Techniques of DNase I and micrococcal nuclease footprinting have been used to compare the binding sites for berenil, netropsin and distamycin on two different DNA fragments. Each ligand binds to the A + T-rich zones which contain clusters of at least four A.T base pairs. Neither guanosine nor cytidine nucleotides appear to be allowed within the A + T-rich runs which constitute the preferred binding sites, although they are sometimes protected from DNase I cleavage in neighbouring regions. Berenil and netropsin share with distamycin the property of causing enhanced rates of cleavage at certain sequences flanking their binding sites. There are significant differences in the concentrations of each ligand required to produce defined patterns of protection, seemingly dependent upon the nature (and possibly the gross base composition) of the piece of DNA being used in the experiment.  相似文献   

7.
We have studied the DNA sequence binding preference of the antitumour antibiotic nogalamycin by DNase-I footprinting using a variety of DNA fragments. The DNA fragments were obtained by cloning synthetic oligonucleotides into longer DNA fragments and were designed to contain isolated ligand-binding sites surrounded by repetitive sequences such as (A)n.(T)n and (AT)n. Within regions of (A)n.(T)n, clear footprints are observed with low concentrations of nogalamycin (< 5 microM), with apparent binding affinities for tetranucleotide sequences which decrease in the order TGCA > AGCT = ACGT > TCGA. In contrast, within regions of (AT)n, the ligand binds best to AGCT; binding to TCGA and TGCA is no stronger than to alternating AT. Within (ATT)n, the preference is for ACGT > TCGA. Although each of these binding sites contains all four base pairs, there is no apparent consensus sequence, suggesting that the selectivity is affected by local DNA dynamic and structural effects. At higher drug concentrations (> 25 microM), nogalamycin prevents DNAse-I cleavage of (AT)n but shows no interaction with regions of (AC)n.(GT)n. Regions of (A)n.(T)n, which are poorly cut by DNase I, show enhanced rates of cleavage in the presence of low concentrations of nogalamycin, but are protected from cleavage at higher concentrations. We suggest that this arises because drug binding to adjacent regions distorts the DNA to a structure which is more readily cut by the enzyme and which is better able to bind further ligand molecules.  相似文献   

8.
The use of micrococcal nuclease as a probe for drug-binding sites on DNA   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
The cutting pattern produced by micrococcal nuclease on three DNA fragments has been determined in the absence and presence of various DNA-binding drugs. The enzyme itself cuts almost exclusively at pA and pT bonds, showing a greater activity at (A-T)n than in homopolymeric runs of A and T. Each drug produces distinct changes in the cleavage pattern. The protected regions can not be pinpointed with sufficient precision to assess the exact drug-binding sites on account of the sequence selectivity of the enzyme, although where a direct comparison is possible these include most of those seen as DNAase I footprints. The enzyme is most useful for assessing the selectivity of drugs which bind to AT-rich regions. Several drugs protect the DNA from micrococcal nuclease attack in regions which do not contain their acknowledged best binding sites. It appears that micrococcal nuclease is sensitive to the existence of secondary drug-binding sites which are not evident with other footprinting techniques.  相似文献   

9.
We have assessed the ability of nucleosomes to influence the formation of mammalian topoisomerase II-DNA complexes by mapping the sites of cleavage induced by four unrelated topoisomerase II inhibitors in naked versus nucleosome-reconstituted SV40 DNA. DNA fragments were reconstituted with histone octamers from HeLa cells by the histone exchange method. Nucleosome positions were determined by comparing micrococcal nuclease cleavage patterns of nucleosome-reconstituted and naked DNA. Three types of DNA regions were defined: 1) regions with fixed nucleosome positioning; 2) regions lacking regular nucleosome phasing; and 3) a region around the replication origin (from position 5100 to 600) with no detectable nucleosomes. Topoisomerase II cleavage sites were suppressed in nucleosomes and persisted or were enhanced in linker DNA and in the nucleosome-free region around the replication origin. Incubation of reconstituted chromatin with topoisomerase II protected nucleosome-free regions from micrococcal nuclease cleavage without changing the overall micrococcal nuclease cleavage pattern. Thus, the present results indicate that topoisomerase II binds preferentially to nucleosome-free DNA and that the presence of nucleosomes at preferred DNA sequences influences drug-induced DNA breaks by topoisomerase II inhibitors.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of actinomycin on the structure of DNA fragments containing the sequences (AT)5GC(AT)5, (TA)5GC(TA)5, A9GCT9, and T9GCA9, cloned into the SmaI site of pUC19, has been studied by footprinting analysis using a variety of probes known to be sensitive to DNA structure. In each case clear footprints are found around the central GC sites. DNase I cleavage of fragments containing alternating AT shows much greater cutting at ApT than TpA; in the presence of actinomycin, although this preference is retained, there is a large increase in the cutting efficiency at the closest TpA steps. DNase I cleavage in homopolymeric regions of A and T, which is normally very poor, is greatly enhanced by drug binding. With T9GCA9 the enhancements are propagated in both directions, whereas changes are only found to the 5'-side of the GC site in A9GCT9. The results are confirmed by similar experiments with micrococcal nuclease and DNase II. Small increases in sensitivity to diethylpyrocarbonate are found at adenines proximal to GC. Experiments performed at 4 degrees C suggest that conformational changes are a necessary consequence of drug binding.  相似文献   

11.
Sequence-selective binding of phleomycin to DNA.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
The binding of phleomycin and bleomycin to DNA has been investigated by studying their effects on cleavage by DNAase I and micrococcal nuclease. In the presence of cobalt, cleavage of DNA by the antibiotics is suppressed, yet they still provide protection from nuclease attack in regions surrounding the drug cleavage sites. We conclude that cleavage by phleomycin occurs at bonds around which the antibiotic is already selectively bound.  相似文献   

12.
13.
We have studied the interaction of the GC-specific, minor groove-binding ligand, mithramycin, with cloned DNA inserts containing isolated GC and CG sites flanked by regions of (AT)n and An · Tn using DNase I and hydroxyl radical footprinting. We find that mithramycin binds to GC better than CG and that AGCT is a better site than TGCA. Sites flanked by (AT)n appear to be bound better than those surrounded by An · Tn. Although no footprints are produced at T9GCA9 and T15CGA15, DNase I cleavage is enhanced with the GC sites suggesting that there is some interaction with the ligand. Mithramycin also alters the DNase I cleavage of (GA)n · (CT)n.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Hepatoma tissue culture (HTC) cell nuclei were digested with either DNase I or micrococcal nuclease and the nucleohistone digestion products fractionated by gel electrophoresis or exclusion chromatography. Under appropriate conditions, gel electrophoresis demonstrates that for both nucleases, only cleavages within the nucleosome spacer regions and not within the nucleosome core lead to freely migrating nucleohistone particles. These particles consist of nucleosome cores, nucleosomes and nucleosome oligomers. Following DNase I digestion and fractionation by exclusion chromatography, analysis of the histones indicates a direct relationship between increased spacer region susceptibility to nuclease and increased nucleosomal histone acetylation. Evidently digestion sites outside the regions of DNA protected by core histones can reflect the degree of acetylation of core histones. Such a relationship is not found when micrococcal nuclease is used to digest the samples.  相似文献   

16.
Orf20 of the conjugative transposon Tn916 was purified as a chimeric protein fused to maltose binding protein (MBP-Orf20). The chimeric protein possessed endonucleolytic activity, cleaving both strands of the Tn916 origin of conjugal transfer (oriT) at several distinct sites and favoring GT dinucleotides. Incubation of the oriT DNA with purified Tn916 integrase (Int) and MBP-Orf20 resulted in strand- and sequence-specific cleavage of oriT at a TGGT motif in the transferred strand. This motif lies immediately adjacent to a sequence in oriT previously shown to be protected from DNase I cleavage by Int. The endonucleolytic cleavages produced by Orf20 generated a 3' OH group that could be radiolabeled by dideoxy ATP and terminal transferase. The production of a 3' OH group distinguished these Orf20-dependent cleavage events from those catalyzed by Int at the ends of Tn916. Thus, Orf20 functions as the relaxase of Tn916, nicking oriT as the first step in conjugal DNA transfer. Remarkably for a tyrosine recombinase, Tn916 Int acts as a specificity factor in the reaction, conferring both strand and sequence specificities on the endonucleolytic cleavage activity of Orf20.  相似文献   

17.
Nuclease sensitivity of active chromatin.   总被引:5,自引:2,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
The active regions of chicken erythrocyte nuclei were labeled using the standard DNase I directed nick translation reaction. These nuclei were then used to study the characteristics and, in particular, the nuclease sensitivity of active genes. Although DNase I specifically attacks active genes, micrococcal nuclease solubilizes these regions to about the same degree as the total DNA. On the other hand micrococcal nuclease does selectively cut the internucleosomal regions of active genes resulting in the appearance of mononucleosomal fraction which is enriched in active gene DNA. A small percentage of the active chromatin is also released from the nucleus by low speed centrifugation following micrococcal nuclease treatment. The factors which make active genes sensitive to DNase I were shown to reside on individual nucleosomes from these regions. This was established by showing that isolated active mononucleosomes were preferentially sensitive to DNase I digestion. Although the high mobility group proteins are essential for the maintenance of DNase I sensitivity in active regions, these proteins are not necessary for the formation of the conformation which makes these genes preferentially accessible to micrococcal nuclease. The techniques employed in this paper enable one to study the chromatin structure of the entire population of actively expressed genes. Previous studies have elucidated the structure of a few special highly prevalent genes such as ovalbumin and hemoglobin. The results of this paper show that this special conformation is a general feature of all active genes irregardless of the extent of expression.  相似文献   

18.
We have analyzed micrococcal nuclease (MNase) DNA cleavage patterns at the sequence level by examining 2.3 X 10(3) base-pairs of data derived from the Drosophila melanogaster 44D larval cuticle locus. Within this region, MNase preferentially cleaved 140 sites. Clusters of these sites appear to generate the preferential MNase eukaryotic DNA cleavage sites seen on agarose gels at roughly 100 to 300 base-pair intervals. These clusters of preferential cleavage sites rarely occur within gene coding regions. The analysis revealed that duplex DNA sequences preferentially cleaved by MNase are generally determined by a single strand sequence: d(A-T)n, where n greater than or equal to 1, flanked by a 5' dC or dG. Cleavage of the other strand is generally staggered 5' by several nucleotides and occurs even if such sequences are absent on that strand. An empirical predictive DNA cleavage model derived from a statistical analysis of the sequence level data was applied to seven eukaryotic gene loci of known sequence. The predicted patterns were in good general agreement with the previously observed eukaryotic gene/spacer cleavage pattern. Statistical analysis also revealed that sites of predicted preferential DNA cleavage occur less frequently in protein coding regions than for randomized sequences of the same length and nucleotide content. Comparison of the MNase cleavage patterns to the sequence-dependent pattern of binding energies between duplex DNA strands indicates that MNase preferentially cleaves sequences with low helix stability.  相似文献   

19.
A Almer  W H?rz 《The EMBO journal》1986,5(10):2681-2687
The chromatin structure of two tandemly linked acid phosphatase genes (PHO5 and PHO3) from Saccharomyces cerevisiae was analyzed under conditions at which the strongly regulated PHO5 gene is repressed. Digestion experiments with DNase I, DNase II, micrococcal nuclease and restriction nucleases reveal the presence of five hypersensitive sites at the PHO5/PHO3 locus, two of them upstream of PHO5 at distances of 920 and 370 bp, one in between the two genes and two downstream of PHO3. Specifically positioned nucleosomes are located next to these hypersensitive sites as shown by indirect end-labeling experiments. The positions deduced from these experiments could be verified by monitoring the accessibility of various restriction sites to the respective nucleases. Sites within putative linker regions were about 50-60% susceptible, whereas sites located within nucleosome cores were resistant. Hybridizing micrococcal nuclease digests to a probe from in between the two upstream hypersensitive sites leads to an interruption of an otherwise regular nucleosomal DNA pattern. This shows directly that these hypersensitive sites represent gaps within ordered nucleosomal arrays.  相似文献   

20.
C Wu  P M Bingham  K J Livak  R Holmgren  S C Elgin 《Cell》1979,16(4):797-806
When the chromatin of Drosophila is examined by digestion with DNAase I or micrococcal nuclease, no general structural organization above the level of the nucleosome is revealed by the cleavage pattern. In contrast, the DNAase I cleavage pattern of specific regions of the Drosophila chromosome shows discrete bands with sizes ranging from a few kilobase pairs (kb) to more than 20 kb. Visualization of such higher order bands was achieved by the use of the Southern blotting technique. The DNAase I-cleaved fragments were transferred onto a nitrocellulose sheet after size fractionation by gel electrophoresis. Hybridization was then carried out with radioactively labeled cloned fragments of DNA from D. melanogaster. For the five different chromosomal regions examined, each gives a unique pattern of higher order bands on the autoradiogram; the patterns are different for different regions. Restriction enzyme cleavage of the fragments generated indicates that the preferential DNAase I cleavage sites in chromatin are position-specific. The chromosomal regions bounded by preferential DNAase I cleavage sites are referred to as supranucleosomal or higher order domains for purposes of discussion and analysis. The micrococcal nuclease cleavage pattern of chromatin at specific loci was also examined. In the one case studied in detail, this nuclease also cleaves at position-specific sites.  相似文献   

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