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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)

Transfer of streptomycin resistance and changes from methionine and leucine auxotrophy to prototrophy were achieved in Mycobacterium smegmatis by transformation. Recipient cells were more resistant to mitomycin C and methyl methlanesulfonate treatments than were wild-type cells. A high level of calcium ions was essential for transformation, especially during DNA adsorption, whereas the presence of magnesium ions and the exposure of recipient cells to mild doses of UV light enhanced recombination frequencies. Transformants were not isolated when recipient cell-DNA mixtures were first treated with deoxyribonuclease. Recipient cells at various stages of growth showed similar transformabilities. Transformation was successful only when recipient cells were incubated on rich agar medium after mixture with DNA. Exposure of recipient cells to Pronase before treatment with donor DNA did not affect transformation, suggesting the absence of a protein competence factor. Throughout the present experiments, cotransformation frequencies were very low and unselected-marker segregation patterns were independent, indicating that the methionine, leucine, and streptomycin markers are not closely linked in M. smegmatis.
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PMID:Physiological factors involved in the transformation of Mycobacterium smegmatis. 64 Oct 8

Clostridium difficile can be grown readily in Reinforced Clostridial Medium (RCM) containing 0-1-0-4% of o-, m- or p-cresol, or phenol. We recommend 0-2% of phenol or p-cresol in RCM for the isolation of this organism. The characteristic "cornfield" growth in RCM in 25-ml Universal containers is described. Glucose, fructose, galactose, mannose, raffinose, aesculin and mannitol are fermented with production of acid and gas; maltose, sucrose, glycogen, soluble starch and sorbitol are fermented with production of acid only. Lactose and rice starch are not fermented by any strain, and DL-methionine is not attacked. Nitrate is reduced to nitrite. Hydrogen sulphide and indole are not produced. Gelatin is attacked by all strains, but in some cases prolonged incubation is required. Hyaluronidase is produced, but not deoxyribonuclease. A lethal toxin appears to be produced. Strains possess shared and strain-specific antigens.
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PMID:Clostridium difficile: isolation and characteristics. 93 46

A type I restriction enzyme from Haemophilus influenzae, Hind I, which requires adenosine 5' -triphosphate and 5-adenosyl methionine, was studied for its activity on transfecting and transforming deoxyribonculeic acid (DNA). The enzyme reduced the size of unmodified bacteriophage S2 DNA from 37 X 10(6) daltons to approximately 10 X 10(6) daltons, but did not affect modified S2 DNA. Unmodified transforming DNA was attacked in vitro by Hind I; however, relatively low levels of inactivation were obtained for single markers, and linked transformants were inactivated as a function of the distance between markers. In contrast, unmodified bacterial DNA was not inactivated in vivo for either single or linked markers by the Hind I restriction system, probably because the segments generated by Hind I were still capable of being integrated in vivo. The lack of preferential inactivation of markers by the enzyme suggests that it makes random breaks in the DNA.
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PMID:Biological properties of a Haemophilus influenzae restriction enzyme, Hind I. 108 99

Cell-free peptide synthesis by extracts from vegetative cells and spores of Bacillus subtilis was analyzed and compared. The initial rate of phenylalanine incorporation in a polyuridylate-directed system was found to be in a similar range for the two extracts. However, spore extracts frequently incorporated less total phenylalanine as did the vegetative cell system. Optimal conditions for amino acid incorporation by spore extracts were found to be similar to those of vegetative cell extracts. Polyphenylalanine synthesis was stimulated by preincubation of both extracts prior to the addition of polyuridylic acid (poly U) and labeled phenylalanine. Both systems showed a dependence on an energy-generating system and were inhibited by chloramphenicol and puromycin. Ribonuclease, but not deoxyribonuclease, inhibited the reaction significantly. The presence of methionine transfer ribonucleic acid (tRNA(F)) and methionyl-tRNA(F) transformylase was demonstrated in spore extracts. An analysis of several aminoacyl-tRNAs in spores revealed that the relative amounts of these tRNAs were similar to those found in vegetative cells. Only lysine tRNA was found to be present in relatively greater amounts in spores. These results indicate that dormant spores of B. subtilis contain the machinery for the translation of genetic information.
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PMID:Peptide synthesis by extracts from Bacillus subtilis spores. 498 76

Isolated nuclei incubated with [14C]protein hydrolysate are shown to incorporate labelled amino acids into the acid-insoluble fraction. Purified chromatin and the complex of DNA with firmly bound proteins possess similar ability. The optimum pH of the reaction is 6.5-7.0, 2 mM MgCl2 stimulates incorporation, the temperature optimum is 37-40 degrees C. Chloramphenicol depresses incorporation by 70%, puromycin by 40%, cycloheximide does not affect the chromatin activity. Incorporation does not depend on the presence of ATP or GTP, and is substantially inhibited by deoxyribonuclease but not by ribonuclease treatment of chromatin or of the nuclei. Specific activity of firmly bound chromatin non-histone proteins is higher than that of labile bound ones; histones are not labelled. After pronase treatment of proteins radioactivity changes to an acid-soluble state. The molecular weight of isolated labelled polypeptides is about 6000 as shown by gel filtration and the analysis of NH2-terminal amino acids. Labelled polypeptides firmly bound to DNA consist of 7-10 amino acids. Specific activity of proteins firmly bound to DNA increases linearly with the time of incubation of chromatin with [14C]protein hydrolysate, the activity curve of labile bound non-histone proteins has a distinct sygmoid character. The polypeptide-synthesizing activity of rat liver chromatin increases between 9 h and 21 h after partial hepatectomy. Irradiation with 800 rads 30 min before the operation prevents activation of amino acid incorporation. From nine amino acids studied alanine, methionine, lysine, tyrosine and arginine are not incorporated in the system described. Glutamic acid is polymerized most effectively. Glutamine, asparagine and glycine are incorporated 7-8 times less. The data are given indicating that the incorporation is not random when an amino acid mixture is present. Preincubation of chromatin with NAD+ but not with its analogues increases the polypeptide-synthesizing activity of chromatin. The activation is prevented by thymidine and nicotinamide. Storage (18 h at 2-4 degrees C) brings about a complete loss of the polypeptide-synthesizing activity of chromatin. The ability of 'old' chromatin to incorporate amino acids can be restored by preincubating it with NAD+. Storage of chromatin in the presence of 5 mM adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cAMP) does not result in decrease of the polypeptide-synthesizing activity. It is assumed that poly-(ADP-ribose) is the energy source for amino acid activation in the system described.
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PMID:Polypeptide-synthesizing activity of eukaryotic chromatin. Properties, dependence on poly(ADP-ribose) and connection with the cell cycle. 737 37

The UL12 open reading frame of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) encodes a deoxyribonuclease that is frequently referred to as alkaline nuclease (AN) because of its high pH optimum. Recently, an alternate open reading frame designated UL12.5 was identified within the UL12 gene. UL12.5 and UL12 have the same translational stop codon, but the former utilizes an internal methionine codon of the latter gene to initiate translation of a 60-kDa amino-terminal truncated form of AN. Since the role of the UL12.5 protein in the HSV-1 life cycle has not yet been determined, its properties were investigated in this study. Unlike AN, which can be readily solubilized from infected cell lysates, the UL12.5 protein was found to be a highly insoluble species, even when isolated by high-salt detergent lysis. Since many of the structural polypeptides which constitute the HSV-1 virion are similarly insoluble, a potential association of UL12.5 protein with virus particles was examined. By using Western blot analysis, the UL12.5 protein could be readily detected in preparations of intact virions, isolated capsid classes, and even capsids that had been extracted with 2 M guanidine-HCl. In contrast, AN was either missing or present at only low levels in each of these structures. Since the inherent insolubility of the UL12.5 protein prevented its potential deoxyribonuclease activity from being assayed in infected-cell lysates, partially purified fractions of soluble UL12.5 protein were generated by selectively solubilizing either insoluble infected-cell proteins or isolated capsid proteins with urea and renaturing them by stepwise dialysis. Initial analysis of these preparations revealed that they did contain an enzymatic activity that was not present in comparable fractions from cells infected with a UL12.5 null mutant of HSV-1. Additional biochemical characterization revealed that UL12.5 protein was similar to AN with respect to pH optimum, ionic strength, and divalent cation requirements and possessed both exonucleolytic and endonucleolytic functions. The finding that the UL12.5 protein represents a capsid-associated form of AN which exhibits nucleolytic activity suggests that it may play some role in the processing of genomic DNA during encapsidation.
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PMID:The product of the UL12.5 gene of herpes simplex virus type 1 is a capsid-associated nuclease. 906 Jun 64

The BcgI restriction-modification system consists of two subunits, A and B. It is a bifunctional protein complex which can cleave or methylate DNA. The regulation of these competing activities is determined by the DNA substrates and cofactors. BcgI is an active endonuclease and a poor methyltransferase on unmodified DNA substrates. In contrast, BcgI is an active methyltransferase and an inactive endonuclease on hemimethylated DNA substrates. The cleavage and methylation reactions share cofactors. While BcgI requires Mg2+and S -adenosyl methionine (AdoMet) for DNA cleavage, its methylation reaction requires only AdoMet and yet is significantly stimulated by Mg2+. Site-directed mutagenesis was carried out to investigate the relationship between AdoMet binding and BcgI DNA cleavage/methylation activities. Most substitutions of conserved residues forming the AdoMet binding pocket in the A subunit abolished both methylation and cleavage activities, indicating that AdoMet binding is an early common step required for both cleavage and methylation. However, one mutation (Y439A) abolished only the methylation activity, not the DNA cleavage activity. This mutant protein was purified and its methylation, cleavage and AdoMet binding activities were tested in vitro . BcgI-Y439A had no detectable methylation activity, but it retained 40% of the AdoMet binding and DNA cleavage activities.
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PMID:Substrate DNA and cofactor regulate the activities of a multi-functional restriction-modification enzyme, BcgI. 927 91

The class-IIS restriction endonuclease, R.MmeI, was isolated from Methylophilus methylotrophus. It was originally described as a monomeric enzyme, with the native Mr 105000+/-7000, which did not cleave DNA efficiently [Boyd et al. (1986) Nucleic Acids Res. 14, 5255-5274; Tucholski et al. (1995) Gene 157, 87-92]. However, it was discovered that R.MmeI endonucleolytic activity is enhanced by S-adenosyl-l-methionine (AdoMet) and sinefungin, an analogue of AdoMet. Surprisingly, the purified R.MmeI endonuclease was found to have a second enzymatic activity, namely methylation of the adenine residue to N6-methyladenine in the top strand of the MmeI-recognition sequence, 5'-TCCR*AC-3' (*A=meA. The R.MmeI methylating activity requires AdoMet and is increased in the presence of several divalent cations, 20-fold by Mg2+ or Ca2+, and less by Mn2+, Zn2+ and Co2+; however, methylation is inhibited entirely by sinefungin, at concentrations above 9microM. The latter observation shows that the enhancing effect of AdoMet or sinefungin on the DNA cleavage was not related to the process of DNA methylation. Furthermore, a second component of the MmeI restriction-modification system, a M.MmeI methyltransferase, was isolated and purified. The M.MmeI protein was found to have an Mr of 48000+/-2000 (under denaturing conditions) and to methylate both adenine residues (*A) in the MmeI-recognition sequence 5'-TCCR*AC-3'/3'-*AGGYTG-5'. Methylation of the top strand does not inhibit the DNA cleavage by R.MmeI, whereas methylation of both DNA strands blocks the cleavage process.
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PMID:Two intertwined methylation activities of the MmeI restriction-modification class-IIS system from Methylophilus methylotrophus. 985 52

Structural studies of the proteins of the BstVI restriction-modification system of Bacillus stearothermophilus V were carried out using intrinsic fluorescence techniques. The exposure and environments of their tryptophanyl residues were determined using collisional quenchers. Quenching of BstVI endonuclease by iodide suggested a heterogeneous class of tryptophan residues, while the results obtained with M.BstVI methylase were consistent with a rather exposed tryptophan population. A comparison of the quenching efficiencies at 20 degrees C and 55 or 60 degrees C showed that their structures are more flexible and open at the temperature at which they exhibit maximal activity. The endonuclease reached its active conformation only after 1 h of incubation at 60 degrees C. Fluorescence changes were observed upon Mn2+ and Mg2+ binding, with Kd values in the range 3-5 microM. The binding of S-adenosyl-L-methionine to the methylase produced conformational changes, which were consistent with binding to a single site of Kd 550 and 680 microM at 20 degrees C and 55 degrees C, respectively. Quenching experiments with iodide showed that the presence of S-adenosyl-L-methionine leads to different conformational states at 20 degrees C and 55 degrees C. These results were interpreted in terms of differences in the structural characteristics of these restriction-modification proteins as well as in terms of differences in the conformational states that these enzymes exhibit at 20 degrees C and at the temperature at which they are most active.
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PMID:Structural studies of the BstVI restriction-modification proteins by fluorescence spectroscopy. 1042 88

EcoP15I DNA methyltransferase, a member of the type III restriction-modification system, binds to the sequence 5'-CAGCAG-3' transferring a methyl group from S-adenosyl-l-methionine to the second adenine base. We have investigated protein-DNA interactions in the methylase-DNA complex by three methods. Determination of equilibrium dissociation constants indicated that the enzyme had higher affinity for DNA containing mismatches at the target base within the recognition sequence. Potassium permanganate footprinting studies revealed that there was a hyper-reactive permanganate cleavage site coincident with adenine that is the target base for methylation. More importantly, to detect DNA conformational alterations within the enzyme-DNA complexes, we have used a fluorescence-based assay. When EcoP15I DNA methyltransferase bound to DNA containing 2-aminopurine substitutions within the cognate sequence, an eight to tenfold fluorescent enhancement resulting from enzymatic flipping of the target adenine base was observed. Furthermore, fluorescence spectroscopy analysis showed that the changes attributable to structural distortion were specific for only the bases within the recognition sequence. More importantly, we observed that both the adenine bases in the recognition site appear to be structurally distorted to the same extent. While the target adenine base is probably flipped out of the DNA duplex, our results also suggest that fluorescent enhancements could be derived from protein-DNA interactions other than base flipping. Taken together, our results support the proposed base flipping mechanism for adenine methyltransferases.
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PMID:Binding of EcoP15I DNA methyltransferase to DNA reveals a large structural distortion within the recognition sequence. 1078 23


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