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1.
Homologies in the active site regions of lactate dehydrogenases   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The persistence of viral DNA in BHK-21 cells abortively infected with human adenovirus type 12 has been investigated using reassociation kinetics. No indication of an increase in the amount of viral DNA per cell has been found. On the contrary, the amount of intracellular viral DNA sequences decreases rapidly after infection. Thus, free adenovirus type 12 DNA does not replicate in BHK-21 cells. The influence of the multiplicity of infection on the amount of persisting adenovirus type 12 DNA has also been explored. The viral DNA sequences persisting in four lines of hamster cells transformed in vitro by adenovirus type 12 at various multiplicities of infection have been quantitated and mapped by reassociation kinetics experiments using restriction endonuclease fragments of 3H-labeled adenovirus type 12 DNA. All the EcoRI restriction nuclease fragments of the adenovirus type 12 genome are represented in each of the four cell lines. Individual fragments of the viral genome are represented in multiple copies in non-equimolar amounts.  相似文献   

2.
New site-specific endonucleases BecAI and BecAII have been detected in Brevibacterium species A. Endonuclease BecAII free from contaminating nonspecific endonucleases, exonucleases, and phosphatases was isolated by column chromatography on phosphocellulose, heparin sepharose, and DNA cellulose. It recognizes and cleaves the 5'-GG decreases CC-3' sequence and is a true isoschizomer of HaeIII restriction enzyme. The other restriction endonuclease, BecAI, cleaves Ad2 DNA at least by 2 sites but not the DNA of phage lambda, T7, SV40, phiX174, and plasmides pBR322 and pUC19. The substrate specificity of BecAI indicates its appurtenance to the super rare restriction endonucleases.  相似文献   

3.
An efficient method for constructing a recombinant adenovirus (Ad) vector, based on an in vitro ligation, has been developed. To insert the foreign gene into an adenoviral DNA, we introduced three unique restriction sites, I-CeuI, SwaI, and PI-SceI, into the E1 deletion site of the vector plasmid, which contains a complete E1, E3-deleted adenovirus type 5 genome. I-CeuI and PI-SceI are intron-encoded endonucleases with a sequence specificity of at least 9-10 and 11 bp, respectively. A shuttle plasmid, pHM3, containing multiple cloning sites between the I-CeuI and PI-SceI sites, was constructed. After the gene of interest was inserted into this shuttle plasmid, the plasmid for E1-deleted adenovirus vector could be easily prepared by in vitro ligation using the I-CeuI and PI-SceI sites. SwaI digestion of the ligation products prevented the production of a plasmid containing a parental adenovirus genome (null vector). After transformation into E. coli, more than 90% of the transformants had the correct insert. To make the vector, a PacI-digested, linearized plasmid was transfected into 293 cells, resulting in a homogeneous population of recombinant virus. The large number and strategic location of the unique restriction sites will not only increase the rapidity of production of new first-generation vectors for gene transfer but will allow for rapid further improvements in the vector DNA backbone.  相似文献   

4.
Cleavage sites of nine bacterial restriction endonucleases were mapped in the DNA of adenovirus type 3 (Ad3) and Ad7, representative serotypes of the "weakly oncogenic" subgroup B human adenoviruses. Of 94 sites mapped, 82 were common to both serotypes, in accord with the high overall sequence homology of DNA among members of the same subgroups. Of the sites in Ad3 and Ad7 DNA, fewer than 20% corresponded to mapped restriction sites in the DNA of Ad2 or Ad5. The latter serotypes represent the "nononcogenic" subgroup C, having only 10 to 20% overall sequence homology with the DNA of subgroup B adenoviruses. Hybridization mapping of viral mRNA from Ad7-infected cells resulted in a complex physical map that was nearly identical to the map of early and late gene clusters in Ad2 DNA. Thus the DNA sequences of human adenoviruses of subgroups B and C have significantly diverged in the course of viral evolution, but the complex organization of the adenovirus genome has been rigidly conserved.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Lampbrush chromosomes from oocytes of Notophthalmus viridescens were dispersed in media containing restriction endonucleases isolated from Haemophilus and E. coli. These endonucleases cleave duplex DNAs at specific palindromic sequences of nucleotides, and several sensitive sites occur per micron of DNA. The overwhelming majority of the lateral loops of lampbrush chromosomes are extensively fragmented by these endonucleases, but an occasional pair of loops is refractory. A notable example of loops showing this refractory property are the giant loops on chromosome II in the presence of Hae. These loops, whose DNA-containing axes are several hundred micra long, are sensitive to other nucleases such as EcoB, endonuclease I and pancreatic DNase I; their refractory behavior towards Hae therefore indicates that the sequence sensitive to this particular endonuclease is systematically absent. This anomalous property can be comprehended if it be assumed that the axial DNA of the giant loops consists of tandem repeats of a sequence which happens not to include the sensitive site.  相似文献   

7.
8.
A site-specific endonuclease SscL1 I preparation has been isolated and purified to near homogeneity from the strain Staphylococcus sp. L1 without admixtures of other nuclease activity. DNA cleavage proceeds according to the scheme: 5'-G down arrow ANTC-3' 3'-CTNA up arrow G-5', and thus the isolated enzyme is an isoschizomer of restriction endonuclease HinfI and belongs to the second class of restriction endonucleases. SscL1 I works over a broad range of temperature and pH. The enzyme is characterized by high stability during storage.  相似文献   

9.
10.
From human KB cells productively infected with adenovirus type 12, mRNA and stable nuclear RNA were isolated late (42 h) after infection. Using restriction endonuclease fragments of adenovirus type 12 DNA, mRNA and stable nuclear RNA sequences were mapped on the viral genome. Late after infection, preferentially the r (= rightward) strand is transcribed into stable nuclear RNA, whereas the l (= leftward) strand is expressed only to a minor extent. Adenovirus type 12-specific mRNA originates from the following sections on the viral genome: 0 to 0.11, 0.18 to 0.20, 0.27 to 0.49, 0.56 to 0.63, 0.68 to 0.84, and 0.89 to 0.92 fractional length units on the r strand and 0.11 to 0.16, 0.22 to 0.27, 0.50 to 0.54, 0.62 to 0.66, 0.855 to 0.865, and 0.93 to 1.0 fractional length units on the l strand. Self-complementary viral RNA isolated at 42 h postinfection anneals to 70 to 80% of each strand of the viral genome.  相似文献   

11.
Different species of the amoebo-flagellate Naegleria harbor optional group I introns in the nuclear ribosomal DNA that contain open reading frames. Intron proteins from Naegleria jamiesoni, Naegleria andersoni, and Naegleria italica (named I-NjaI, I-NanI and I-NitI, respectively) were expressed in Escherichia coli and found to be isoschizomeric homing endonucleases that specifically recognize and cleave intron-lacking homologous alleles of ribosomal DNA. The I-NjaI endonuclease was affinity purified, characterized in more detail, and found to generate five-nucleotide 3' staggered ends at the intron insertion site which differs from the ends generated by all other known homing endonucleases. The recognition site was delimited and found to cover an approximately 19 base-pair partially symmetric sequence spanning both the cleavage site and the intron insertion site. The palindromic feature was supported by mutational analysis of the target DNA. All single-site substitutions within the recognition sequence were cleaved by the purified I-NjaI endonuclease, but at different efficiencies. The center of symmetry and cleavage was found to be completely degenerate in specificity, which resembles that of the subclass IIW bacterial restriction enzymes.  相似文献   

12.
Activity of type II restriction endonuclease is affected by many common factors including buffer composition and sequences flanking the recognition site (Brabec et al., Eur.J. Biochem. 216, 183, 1993). The successful development of Optical Mapping (Schwartz et al., Science, 262, 110, 1993; Meng et al., Nature Genet. 9, 432, 1995; Wang and Schwartz, PNAS, 1995 Cai et al., PNAS, 92, 5164, 1995) relied on optimization of light microscope-based imaging of fluorescently labeled DNA molecules during restriction endonuclease digestion. Little was known about the effects of commonly used DNA-fluorochromes on restriction endonuclease activity. Thus, we developed an enzyme activity assay using lambda bacteriophage DNA or adenovirus-2 DNA to evaluate the effects of five DNA binding fluorochromes (4'-6-daimidine-2-phenylindole (DAPI), ethidium bromide (EtdBr), ethidium bromide homodimer (EthD-1), bis-benzimide (H33258) and benzothiazolium-4-quinolinium dimer (TOTO-1)) on the enzymatic activities of eleven type II restriction endonucleases (Asc I, Csp I, Dra I, EcoR I, Hha I, Hind III, Not I, Rsr II, Sfi I, SgrA I and Sma I). We found that the minor groove binding fluorochrome, DAPI, did not measurably inhibit activity of this group, with the exception of Dra I. Similarly, another minor groove binding fluorochrome H33258 inhibited Dra I and Not I (slightly). The three intercalating fluorochromes EtdBr, EthD-1 and TOTO-1, however, variably inhibited the other enzymes. Since Beta-mercaptoethanol (Beta-ME) is used to discourage photodamage of stained DNA molecules, we also assessed its effect on restriction endonuclease activity. Interestingly, Dra I, Hind III, Sfi I and Sma I retained full activities at high concentration of Beta-ME (5%), but Asc I, Csp I, Not I, Rsr II and SgrA I showed varying sensitivities to the Beta-ME. Isoschizomers Csp I and Rsr II behaved differently to both fluorochromes and Beta-ME. The results presented here should provide a basis for further development of new Optical Mapping-based techniques requiring fluorescence labeling of other actively imaged enzymatic reactions.  相似文献   

13.
The adenovirus type 12-specific mRNA and the stable nuclear RNA from productively infected KB cells, early postinfection, from abortively infected BHK-21 cells, and from the adenovirus type 12-transformed hamster lines T637 and HA12/7 have been mapped on the genome of adenovirus type 12. The intact separated heavy (H) and light (L) strands of adenovirus type 12 DNA have been used to determine the extent of complementarity of the mRNA or nuclear RNA from different cell lines to each of the strands. More precise map positions have been obtained by the use of the H and L complements of the fragments of adenovirus type 12 DNA which were produced with the EcoRI and BamHI restriction endonucleases. The results of the mapping experiments demonstrate that the mRNA's isolated early from productively and abortively infected and from two lines of transformed cells are derived from the same or similar regions of the adenovirus type 12 genome. The map positions on the adenovirus type 12 genome for the mRNA from the cell lines as indicated correspond to regions located approximately between 0 and 0.1 and 0.74 and 0.88 fractional length units on the L strand and to regions between 0.63 and 0.74 and 0.89 and 1.0 fractional length units on the H strand. The HA12/7 line lacks mRNA complementary to the region between 0.74 and 0.88 fractional length units on the L strand. Similar data are found for the nuclear RNA, except that the regions transcribed are more extensive than those observed in mRNA. The polarity of the H strand has its 3'-end on the right terminus in the EcoRI A fragment, and the L strand has its 3'-end on the left terminus in the EcoRI C fragment. Thus, the H strand is transcribed from right to left (1 = leftward strand); and the L strand is transcribed from left to right (r = rightward strand). The designations H and L refer to the relative heavy and light densities of the two strands in polyuridylic-polyguanylic acid-CsCl density gradients. The EcoRI C-H and D-H complements have been shown to be part of the intact L strand; thus, there is a "reversal in heaviness" on the left terminus of the viral DNA.  相似文献   

14.
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) polymorphism was studied in 21 Jindo dogs inhabiting Jin Island off the Korean peninsula. The polymorphism was analyzed with 10 restriction endonucleases that recognize six base pairs. The sizes of the mtDNA fragments produced by digestion using each endonucleases were separated by agarose gel electrophoresis, and the polymorphisms were detected with Japanese mongrel dog mtDNA as a probe. The mtDNA polymorphism in Jindo dogs was observed with four restriction endonucleases, Apa I, EcoR V, Hinc II, and Sty I. However, no polymorphism was detected with BamH I, Bgl II, EcoR I, Hind III, Pst I, or Xba I. The observed restriction endonuclease morphs were classified into 4 types of distinct cleavage patterns. The average number of nucleotide substitutions per nucleotide site in Jindodogs was estimated to be 0.0086. By UPG phylogenetic analysis, the 4 mtDNA types showed only one cluster. This suggests that Jindo dogs have not diverged from the other cluster up to the present and the species is considerably pure.  相似文献   

15.
Neuronal survival is intricately linked to the maintenance of intact DNA. In contrast, neuronal degeneration following nitric oxide (NO) exposure is dependent, in part, on the degradation of DNA through programmed cell death (PCD). We therefore investigated in primary rat hippocampal neurons the role of endogenous deoxyribonucleases, enzymes responsible for metabolically derived DNA cleavage, during NO-induced neurodegeneration. Twenty-four hours following exposure to the NO generators sodium nitroprusside (300 microM) and SIN-1 (300 microM), neuronal survival was reduced from approximately 88 to 23%. Treatment with aurintricarboxylic acid (1-100 microM), an endonuclease inhibitor, during NO exposure increased neuronal survival from 23 to 80% and decreased DNA fragmentation from 70 to 30% over a 24-h period. Enhancement of endonuclease activity alone with zinc chelation actively decreased neuronal survival from approximately 80% to approximately 34%. DNA digestion assays identified not only two constitutively active endonucleases, an acidic endonuclease (pH 4.0-7.0) and a calcium/magnesium-dependent endonuclease (pH 7.2-8.0), but also a NO-inducible magnesium-dependent endonuclease (pH 8.0). In the absence of endonuclease activity, DNA degradation did not occur during NO application, suggesting that endonuclease activity was a requisite pathway for NO-induced PCD. In addition, NO independently altered intracellular pH in ranges that were physiologically relevant for the activity of the endonucleases responsible for DNA degradation. Our identification and characterization of specific neuronal endonucleases suggest that the constitutive endonucleases may play a role in the initial stages of NO-induced PCD, but the subsequent "downstream" degradation of DNA may ultimately be dependent upon the NO-inducible endonuclease.  相似文献   

16.
Nuclei isolated from human cells productively infected with adenovirus 2 have been shown to synthesize four low molecular weight RNA species which hybridize efficiently to viral DNA. One species corresponds to the 5.5S or VA RNA (Ohe, Weissman, and Cooke, 1969), and is designated V156. The other three species are novel and have been designated V200, V140, V130, since they are approximately 200, 140, and 130 nucleotides in length, respectively. These viral RNAs retain their distinct electrophoretic properties after denaturation with formamide. RNA species with electrophoretic mobilities similar to those of the V200, V156, and V140 RNAs have been found in the cytoplasmic fraction of cells at late times after adenovirus infection. In isolated nuclei, the V200, V156, V140, and V130 RNAs are all synthesized by DNA-dependent RNA polymerase III, since synthesis is sensitive to high but not to low concentrations of alpha-amanitin. The synthesis of these low molecular weight RNAs continues for a prolonged period of time in isolated nuclei, suggesting that reinitiation occurs. Adenovirus 2 DNA fragments obtained by digestion with restriction endonucleases Eco RI and Sma I were used to map the location of the DNA sequences which encode the RNAs. All the low molecular weight RNAs hybridized to a region of the genome between o.18 and 0.38 fractional lengths from the left end of the adenovirus genome, suggesting that the respective DNA sequences are clustered. Other nonviral low molecular weight RNAs are synthesized in nuclei isolated from infected cells. These include the cellular 5S rRNA species which was minitored by its hybridization to purified 5S DNA from Xenopus laevis.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The inhibition of restriction endonuclease cleavage by a series of bisquaternary ammonium derivatives (BQA-derivatives) which bind to the minor groove of DNA has been studied. The derivatives considered included six sequence-selective binders (SN 6570, SN 6999, SN 6050, SN 6132, SN 6131 and SN 18071) and four non-specific binders (SN 6113, SN 5754, SN 6324 and SN 4094) and can be distinguished by their activity on restriction endonucleases. Digestion experiments with pUC19 DNA were monitored electrophoretically using the transition of the covalently closed circular (ccc) DNA into the linear double stranded (lds) one. Only the sequence-specific binders inhibit the cleavage activity of restriction endonucleases EcoRI, SspI and DraI with four and six dAdT-base pairs within their restriction sites, while the activity of SalI and BamHI with less than four dAdT-sequences was unaffected. In contrast, the non-specific binding ligands were incapable of suppressing enzyme digestion. The inhibition of the restriction endonuclease PvuII indicates that ligand binding in close vicinity to the cleavage sites is also involved in the enzyme inhibition. The dAdT-content in proximity to the palindromic sequences of three DraI cutting sites in pUC19 DNA explains why the derivative SN 6053 protects these sequences in different manners. Gel shift experiments indicated that BQA-derivatives inhibit the DNA-enzyme complex formation if the ligand was added to the DNA before the enzyme. In contrast, complex formation between DNA and enzyme remained unchanged when the enzyme was added first.  相似文献   

19.
A new Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. lactis bacteriophage, JCL 1032, was characterized. JCL 1032 had a small, elongated prolate head, and a long non-contractile tail with cross-bars. The restriction map of JCL 1032 genome was constructed with five endonucleases. The genome was 45.8 kb in size, and it had cohesive ends (cos). Molecular masses of the phage structural proteins were also determined. JCL 1032 showed DNA homology with morphologically dissimilar, isometric-headed phages of Lb. delbrueckii (subsp. lactis and subsp. bulgaricus) when analyzed by Southern hybridization. Although in general JCL 1032 was only distantly related to isometric-headed phages, there were also a few short highly homologous (minimal homology 84%) DNA regions.  相似文献   

20.
Homing endonucleases are a diverse collection of proteins that are encoded by genes with mobile, self-splicing introns. They have also been identified in self-splicing inteins (protein introns). These enzymes promote the movement of the DNA sequences that encode them from one chromosome location to another; they do this by making a site-specific double-strand break at a target site in an allele that lacks the corresponding mobile intron. The target sites recognized by these small endonucleases are generally long (14-44 base pairs). Four families of homing endonucleases have been identified, including the LAGLIDADG, the His-Cys box, the GIY-YIG and the H-N-H endonucleases. The first identified His-Cys box homing endonuclease was I-PpoI from the slime mould Physarum polycephalum. Its gene resides in one of only a few nuclear introns known to exhibit genetic mobility. Here we report the structure of the I-PpoI homing endonuclease bound to homing-site DNA determined to 1.8 A resolution. I-PpoI displays an elongated fold of dimensions 25 x 35 x 80 A, with mixed alpha/beta topology. Each I-PpoI monomer contains three antiparallel beta-sheets flanked by two long alpha-helices and a long carboxy-terminal tail, and is stabilized by two bound zinc ions 15 A apart. The enzyme possesses a new zinc-bound fold and endonuclease active site. The structure has been determined in both uncleaved substrate and cleaved product complexes.  相似文献   

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