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Query: EC:3.1.21.3 (deoxyribonuclease)
1,528 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A deoxyribonuclease, which requires nucleoside triphosphate for reaction, has been purified about 150-fold from extracts of Bacillus laterosporus. Potassium phosphate and ethylene glycol stabilize the purified enzyme. The enzyme degrades double-stranded DNA about 100 times faster than heat-denatured DNA in the presence of nucleoside triphosphate. Double-stranded DNA is not degraded to any measurable extent in the absence of ATP, but the enzyme exhibits activity toward denatured DNA in the absence of nucleoside triphosphate, and this activity seems to be an intrinsic property of this enzyme protein. The optimum pH is 8.5 and the maximum activity is obtained in the copresence of Mg2+ (8.0 X 10(-3)M) and Mn2+ (7.0 X 10(-5)M). ATP and dATP are most effective and nucleoside di- or monophosphates are ineffective. ATP is converted to ADP and inorganic phosphate during the reaction and the ratio of the amount of ATP cleaved to that of hydrolyzed phosphodiester bonds of DNA is about 3:1. An inhibitor of the enzyme was observed in bacterial extracts prepared by sonic disruption; the inhibitory substance is produced in the bacteria in the later stages of cell growth. Preliminary results show that the inhibitor emerged near the void volume of a Sephadex G-200 column, and was relatively heat-stable, RNase-resistant, and DNase-sensitive.
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PMID:A nucleoside triphosphate-dependent deoxyribonuclease from Bacillus laterosporus. Purification and characterization of the enzyme. 0 Mar 73

The presence of a nuclear DNA polymerase in mouse sperm from adult testes has been confirmed and the properties of this enzyme further investigated. This activity was shown to be greatly enhanced by treating the spermatozoa with methanol or ethanol before incubation in the reaction medium or by their addition in small amounts to this medium. It was protected against degradation by nuclear proteases by adding soybean trypsin inhibitor and was stimulated by ATP. It was found to be Mg2+ dependent (optimum concentration: 7.5 mM), DNA dependent, and all four deoxynucleoside triphosphates were needed for optimal reaction. The radioactive acid-precipitable product of polymerization was not eliminated by organic solvents, nor by pronase, ribonuclease or by nuclease S1; however, it was converted to a large extent to acid-soluble products by pancreatic deoxyribonuclease. Since it was only partially solubilized by Triton X-100, it therefore did not appear to be preferentially associated with the nuclear membranes. The activity recovered after incubation depended also on the pH (optimum at pH 8.3) and did not work well in a medium for DNA polymerase alpha. The temperature for maximum incorporation of nucleotides was found to be 32 degrees C and, under our conditions, the reaction was linear for 30 min. The DNA polymerase activity was inhibited by low and high concentrations of KCl. It was not lowered by N-ethylmaleimide or p-hydroxymercuribenzoate; urea slightly stimulated the reaction and this stimulation was reversed by subsequent treatment with N-ethylmaleimide. Actinomycin D (40 mug/ml), ethidium bromide (25--50 muM), netropsin (5--50 mug/ml), and spermidine (0.5--2.5 mM) lowered the polymerization of DNA precursors. The nuclear enzyme could shift from the endogenous template to activated exogenous calf thymus DNA, the resulting nuclear radioactivity being reduced. The endogenous DNP template ability was not increased by deoxyribonuclease activation according to the method of Aposhian and Kornberg (J. Biol. Chem. (1962) 237, 519--525) suggesting that the amount of DNA polymerase associated with chromatin was probably limiting the reaction. The DNA polymerase activity detected in mouse sperm nuclei has numerous properties of low molecular weight DNA polymerases (DNA polymerase beta) reported in several eukaryotic organisms.
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PMID:Further characterization of a DNA polymerase activity in mouse sperm nuclei. 1 3

A prodcedure was developed for the purification of the ATP-dependent deoxyribonuclease of Bacillus subtilis 168. It comprises ammonium sulphate fractionation, Sephadex gel filtration, DEAE-cellulose chromatography and gel electrophoresis on a discontinuous polyacrylamide gradient. The enzyme has been obtained in a homogeneous state. Its molecular weight was estimated to be 270000 by disc electrophoresis. Dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed the presence of five nonidentical subunits of the following molecular weights: 81000, 70000, 62000, 52500 and 42500. These values give 308000 as the molecular weight of the native enzyme. The pH optimum of the purified enzyme is 9.6. The optimal concentrations of Mg2+ and ATP for exonuclease activity on native B. subtilis DNA were determined. ATP-requirement for hydrolysis of single-stranded DNA is less strigent. The enzyme also possesses high DNA-dependent ATPase activity. The purification procedure was applied to extracts of a mutant devoid of activity for this enzyme (strain GSY 1290). A protein was isolated which is very similar to the active DNAase as regards electrophoretic mobility, reaction with specific antisera and size of four of the subunits. One subunit is missing (Mr 70000) and is replaced by a smaller polypeptide (Mr 565000). The latter results suggest that the mutant is affected in the genetic locus coding for the 70000-Mr subunit.
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PMID:Isolation, subunit structure and properties of the ATP-dependent deoxyribonuclease of Bacillus subtilis. State of the protein in a mutant devoid of activity. 1 60

A deoxyribonuclease has been purified more than 2000-fold from the green algae, Chlamydomonas reinhardii. The enzyme is most active on denatured DNA. Optimum activity is at pH 8.5, in 80 mM Tris-HCl buffer and 2 mM CaCl2. Other divalent cations can replace Ca2+ with varying lower efficiency. EDTA and inorganic phosphate are strongly inhibitory, while ATP and high concentrations of 2-mercaptoethanol are slightly inhibitory. The molecular weight is approximately 35 000, the Stokes radius is 2.7 nm, and the sedimentation coefficient 2.8 S. It is a single polypeptide chain, and the frictional ratio of 1.27 suggests it is only slightly asymetrical. The isoelectric point is 9.5. This enzyme has been termed exonuclease 1.
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PMID:A deoxyribonuclease from Chlamydomonas reinhardii. 1. Purification and properties. 1 43

An adenosine triphosphate-stimulated deoxyribonuclease was purified to about 4200 fold from Bacillus cereus. The enzyme activity of the crude extract increased by a factor of about 5 after dialysis. One of the low molecular weight inhibitors of the crude extract was found to be inorganic phosphate. During enzyme purification two nucleases were identified. One of them was specific to denatured DNA and the other one degraded both denatured DNA and native DNA. The activity towards native DNA could be increased several times by ATP. Through all steps of purification the ATP-independent DNase always accompanied the ATP-dependent one and the ratio of their activity was found to be constant. The ATP-dependent DNase also possessed ATPase activity stimulated both by native and denatured DNA. The fact that ATPase was stimulated by DNA and went together with ATP-dependent DNase during purification suggests that these functions belong to the same enzyme complex. Maximal activity of ATPase had broader pH, Mg2+ and ATP concentration ranges than that of DNase. Cooperation of the two functions may be limited only to a narrow range of ATP concentration. Km for ATPase was 1.6x10-4 M ATP.
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PMID:An adenosine triphosphate dependent deoxyribonuclease with adenosine triphosphatase, activity from Bacillus cereus. 4 71

A class of revertants of Bacillus subtilis mutant rec H, which completely restored the ability to transformation but without restoring the activity of ATP-dependent deoxyribonuclease, is isolated and studied. Reversions are located in the same chromosome region as the original mutation. The detection of such revertants points out the existence of more than one recombination pathway for Bac. subtilis transformation.
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PMID:[One of the classes of revertants of a rec H Bacillus subtilis mutant]. 9 71

Infection by bacteriophage T4 has previously been shown to cause a rapid inhibition of the host recBC DNase, an ATP-dependent DNase that is required for genetic recombination in Escherichia coli. We report here the partial purification of a protein ("T4 rec inhibitor") from extracts of T4-infected cells and some characteristics of the in vitro inhibition reaction with purified inhibitor and recBC nuclease. This inhibitory activity could not be purified from extracts of uninfected E. coli. Both the ATP-dependent exonuclease and DNA-dependent ATPase activities of recBC DNase are inhibited by T4 rec inhibitor. Experiments suggest that the inhibitor interacts with the nuclease in a stoichiometric manner. The biological significance of this inhibition is discussed with respect to control reactions in phage-infected cells.
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PMID:Postinfection control by bacteriophage T4 of Escherichia coli recBC nuclease activity. 13 May 1

The ATP-dependent DNase from Hemophilus influenzae digests double-stranded linear DNA molecules exonucleolytically while hydrolyzing large amounts of ATP to ADP. Various cross-linked linear duplex DNA molecules are partially resistant to the exonuclease action. Vaccinia DNA, containing natural terminal cross-links (probably in the form of terminal single-stranded loops), is much more slowly degraded than comparable "open-ended" DNA molecules, and ATP is consumed at a proportionately lower rate. It is postulated that the vaccinia DNA molecules undergo slow terminal cleavage by the single strand specific endonuclease activity of the enzyme, and are then rapidly degraded by the double strand exonuclease activity. Phage T7 DNA, containing an average of 100 4',5'8-trimethylpsoralen cross-links/molecule at random internal sites, is digested only to the extent of 2 to 3%. However, ATP hydrolysis continues at a linear rate long after DNA digestion has ceased. A stable enzyme-DNA complex is formed as demonstrated by co-sedimentation of DNA and ATPase activity in sucrose gradients. The hypothesis is advanced that the enzyme digests exonucleolytically to the first cross-link at each end of the DNA molecules where further movement is prevented. The enzyme then remains bound at the cross-links and functions continuously as an ATPase.
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PMID:Action of ATP-dependent DNase from Hemophilus influenzae on cross-linked DNA molecules. 13 99

A deoxyribonuclease was purified approx. 800-fold from crude extracts of the bacterium Alcaligenes faecalis. The enzyme requires ATP and Mn2+; ATP could be replaced by any other ribo- or deoxyribo-nucleoside triphosphate, and Mn2+ could be replaced by Mg2+ in 0.1 M-Tris/HCl, pH 8.0 at 37 degrees C. The enzyme could degrade linear duplex or denaturated DNA, but was inactive with closed-circular duplex DNA from bacteriophase PM-2. In the course of nucleolytic activity, ATP was hydrolysed. We have measured deoxyribonuclease and adenoxine triphosphatase activity in the presence of various salts, and found that the amount of ATP hydrolysis associated with a given amount of deoxyribonuclease activity was decreased in the presence of tetraethylammonium ions. Since these ions decrease the stability of the DNA helix, we conclude that one function of the ATP hydrolysis is to unwind the DNA.
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PMID:An adenosine triphosphate-dependent deoxyribonuclease from Alcaligenes faecalis. 14 25

Two restriction-modification systems, S1 and S2, are present in Staphylococcus aureus RN450 (S. Iordanescu and M. Surdeanu, J. Gen. Microbiol., 96:277-281, 1976). System S2 affects phage multiplication after both infection and transfection. Unmodified plasmid and chromosomal DNAs are also not expressed following transduction and transformation into a restrictive host. Restricted phages are, however, capable of conferring phage-mediated competence, although the state of competence does not affect the restriction-modification system. The restricting activity of system S2 is inactivated by heat treatment of the cells. An enzymatic activity that restricts unmodified phage DNA in the presence of ATP, Mg2+, and S-adenosylmethionine was recovered from cell-free extracts of a strain RN450 derivative.
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PMID:Biological characteristics of a type I restriction-modification system in Staphylococcus aureus. 14 65


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