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Enzyme
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Query: EC:3.1.25.1 (
deoxyribonuclease
)
1,471
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.
...
PMID:A nucleoside triphosphate-dependent deoxyribonuclease from Bacillus laterosporus. Purification and characterization of the enzyme. 0 Mar 73
A DNAase (
deoxyribonuclease
) was isolated from culture supernatants of sporulating Bacillus subtilis 168. The purified enzyme migrated as a single band during polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. The enzyme differs from other DNAases of B. subtilis in molecular weight, metal-ion requirement and mode of action. The enzyme was inactive in the absence of metal ions, and exhibited optimum activity with 10 mM-
Mn2+
, although Mg2+, Cd2+ and Co2+ could also permit some activity. The pH optimum for the enzyme was pH 7.5, and it degraded linear-duplex DNA or closed-circular-duplex DNA to acid-soluble material. There was little or no activity on single-stranded DNA or rRNA. Sucrose-gradient analysis of the products of DNAase action on bacteriophage T7 DNA showed that endonucleolytic cleavage had occurred by the introduction of single-strand breaks in both strands of the duplex. The molecular weight of the enzyme was determined, by gel filtration on Sephadex G-75, to be 12000.
...
PMID:Purification and properties of a manganese-stimulated deoxyribonuclease produced during sporulation of Bacillus subtilis. 2 39
Highly purified preparations of RNA-directed DNA polymerase from avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV) contain a
Mn2+
-activated endonuclease activity capable of nicking supercoiled DNA. This endonuclease activity co-sediments in glycerol gradients with the alphabeta form of AMV DNA polymerase, and co-chromatographs with DNA polymerase activity on DEAE-cellulose, phosphocellulose, and heparin-Sepharose. It is also present in AMV alphabeta-DNA polymerase purified by electrophoresis through nondenaturing polyacrylamide gels and subsequently chromatographed on poly(C)-agarose. alphabeta-associated endonuclease is co-immunoprecipitated with DNA polymerase activity by antiserum directed against alphabeta holoenzyme. The alpha form of AMV DNA polymerase lacks this activity. In its enzymatic properties, alphabeta-associated endonuclease resembles the
endodeoxyribonuclease
activity associated with the AMV p32 protein, which has been shown to be structurally related to the beta (but not the alpha) subunit of AMV DNA polymerase.
...
PMID:Endonuclease activity of purified RNA-directed DNA polymerase from avian myeloblastosis virus. 8 98
DNA polymerase was purified from Drosophila melanogaster embryos by a combination of phosphocellulose adsorption, Sepharose 6B gel filtration, and DEAE-cellulose chromatography. Three enzyme forms, designated enzymes I, II, and III, were separated by differential elution from DEAE-cellulose and were further purified by glycerol gradient centrifugation. Purification was monitored with two synthetic primer-templates, poly(dA) . (dT)-16 and poly(rA) . (dT)-16. At the final step of purification, enzymes I, II, and III were purified approximately 1700-fold, 2000-fold and 1000-fold, respectively, on the basis of their activities with poly(dA) . (dT)-16. The DNA polymerase eluted heterogeneously as anomalously high-molecular-weight molecules from Sepharose 6B gel filtration columns. On DEAE-cellulose chromatography enzymes I and II eluted as distinct peaks and enzyme III eluted heterogeneously. On glycerol velocity gradients enzyme I sedimented at 5.5-7.3 S, enzyme II sedimented at 7.3-8.3 S, and enzyme III sedimented at 7.3-9.0 S. All enzymes were active with both synthetic primer-templates, except the 9.0 S component of enzyme III, which was inactive with poly(rA) . (dT)-16. Non-denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis did not separate poly(dA) . (dT)-16 activity from poly(rA) . (dT)-16 activity. The DNA polymerase preferred poly(dA) . (dT)-16 (with Mg2+) as a primer-template, although it was also active with poly(rA) . (dT)-16 (with
Mn2+
), and it preferred activated calf thymus DNA to native or heat-denatured calf thymus DNA. All three primer-template activities were inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide. Enzyme activity with activated DNA and poly(dA) . (dT)-16 was inhibited by K+ and activity with poly(rA) . (dT)-16 was stimulated by K+ and by spermidine. The optimum pH for enzyme activity with the synthetic primer-templates was 8.5. The DNA polymerases did not exhibit
deoxyribonuclease
or ATPase activities. The results of this study suggest that the forms of DNA polymerase from Drosophila embryos have physical properties similar to those of DNA polymerase-alpha and enzymatic properties similar to those of all three vertebrate DNA polymerases.
...
PMID:Three forms of DNA polymerase from Drosophila melanogaster embryos. Purification and properties. 9 4
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.
...
PMID:An adenosine triphosphate-dependent deoxyribonuclease from Alcaligenes faecalis. 14 25
The
deoxyribonuclease
induced in KB cells by herpes simplex virus (HSV) type 1 and type 2 has been purified. Both enzymes are able to completely degrade single- and double-stranded DNA yielding 5'-monophosphonucleotides as the sole products. A divalent cation, either Mg2+ or
Mn2+
, is an absolute requirement for catalysis and a reducing agent is necessary for enzyme stability. The maximum rate of reaction is achieved with 5 mM MgCl2 for both HSV-1 and HSV-2 DNase. The optimum concentration for
Mn2+
is 0.1 to 0.2 mM and no exonuclease activity is observed when the concentration of
Mn2+
is greater than 1 mM. The rate of reaction at the optimal Mg2+ concentration is 3- to 5-fold greater than that at the optimal
Mn2+
concentration. In the presence of Mg2+, the enzymes are inhibited upon the addition of
Mn2+
, Ca2+, and Zn2+. The enzymatic reaction is also inhibited by spermine and spermidine, but not by putrescine. Crude and purified HSV-1 and HSV-2 DNase can degrade both HSV-1 and HSV-2 DNA, but native HSV-1 DNA is hydrolyzed at only 22% of the rate and HSV-2 DNA at only 32% of the rate of Escherichia coli DNA. Although HSV-1 and HSV-2 DNase were similar, minor differences were observed in most other properties such as pH optimum, inhibition by high ionic strength, activation energy, and sedimentation coefficient. However, the enzymes differ immunologically.
...
PMID:The deoxyribonuclease induced after infection of KB cells by herpes simplex virus type 1 or type 2. I. Purification and characterization of the enzyme. 20 46
A considerable amount of
Mn2+
-stimulated DNAase (
deoxyribonuclease
) activity is released by Bacillus subtilis 168 during sporulation in a glucose-deficient medium; much smaller amounts are released during starvation for phosphate or nitrogen. Protein synthesis is required. Two forms of evidence are presented that production of the DNAase is associated with events late in stage II of sporulation. 19 Thymidine starvation, which inhibits the biochemical events associated with sporulation, also inhibits release of the DNAase. 2. Several asporogenous mutants blocked at stage II or earlier and unable to produce alkaline phosphatase (a stage-II event) do not produce the enzyme. Mutants blocked towards the end of stage II or later produce both enzymes. During sporulation of the wild-type strain, the DNAase appears about 1 h after alkaline phosphatase. The results suggest that production of the DNAase is controlled by a still-undiscovered stage-II genetic locus.
...
PMID:Extracellular manganese-stimulated deoxyribonuclease as a marker event in sporulation of Bacillus subtilis. 41 78
This report describes the results of our initial enzymological characterization of a homogeneous preparation of DNA polymerase alpha that we have purified from cultured human KB cells. Although the enzyme is most reactive with duplex DNA substrates that contain short gaps (optimally activated) in incubations that require Mg2+, the polymerase possesses the intrinsic capacity to copy the initiated ribohomopolymer template, (A)-n, (dT)-200, at low rates in the presence of
Mn2+
. Because of the preponderance of DNA polymerase alpha in actively multiplying vertebrate cells, it is probable that this low level of activity comprises the majority of the ribopolymer copying activity that can be detected in crude tissue extracts. The presence of contaminating or associated
deoxyribonuclease
activities can be excluded from the purified enzyme to levels of 10(-4) to 10(-7) of the polymerase activity. The mechanism of polymerization on activated DNA under optimum conditions is moderately processive, with 11 +/- 5 nucleotides incorporated per polymerization cycle. The polymerase is unable to work at nicks or at short gaps of approximately 20 to 30 nucleotides in length, and it measures a surprisingly invariant effective template length on optimally activated DNA and on DNA molecules that have been gapped to varying extents with Escherichia coli exonuclease III. In the "Appendix" we present an amplification of the theoretical formulation of Bambara et al. (Bambara, R. A., Uyemura, D., and Choi, T. (1978) J. Biol. Chem. 253, 413--423) that permits the use of DNA polymerases with significant associated 3' leads to 5'-exonuclease activities for the accurate measurement of average template lengths (gap sizes) and titration of usable 3'-hydroxyl primer termini in gapped, duplex DNA substrates.
...
PMID:Enzymological characterization of DNA polymerase alpha. Basic catalytic properties processivity, and gap utilization of the homogeneous enzyme from human KB cells. 44 99
An
endodeoxyribonuclease
has been purified 750-fold from human KB cells. The purified endonuclease requires Mg2+ for maximum activity:
Mn2+
was less than half as active and Ca2+ inhibited the reaction. The optimum pH is 8.8 in Tris-HCl and the optimum buffer concentration is 10 mM. KCl (and NaCl), --SH-reacting reagents, and tRNA strongly inhibit the reaction. An apparent molecular weight of 54,000 was determined by sedimentation in a glycerol gradient. The purified endonuclease cleaved native, double-stranded adenovirus 2 DNA, and the reaction proceeded stepwise during the initial stage of degradation by cleavage of the DNA substrate in half, then in half again, etc. At longer digestion times, single strand scissions were detected. RNA was not a substrate for the enzyme. Poly(dG) . poly(dC) was susceptible but poly(dA) . poly(dT) was resistant to degradation. Hydrolysis of adenovirus 2 DNA yielded double-stranded polynucleotides containing 5'-phosphoryl and 3'-hydroxyl termini with short, single-stranded regions presumably at the ends. More than 50% of the product of a limit digest had a chain length greater than 35 to 40 nucleotides. Analysis of the 5' and 3' end groups of the digestion products indicated a preference for the site of the enzymatic cleavage; thymidylic acid residues were present at the 5' end and deoxyguanosine residues at the 3' end, each with a frequency of 40 to 50%.
...
PMID:An endodeoxyribonuclease of human KB cells. Purification and properties of the enzyme. 64 80
Endo-exonuclease (EE) has been found in both active and inactive, but trypsin-activatable, forms in Aspergillus nidulans. Active EE was present mainly in nuclei, mitochondria, and vacuoles, while trypsin-activatable EE was mainly in the cytosol. The active form accounts for over 90% of the neutral
deoxyribonuclease
activity extracted from mycelia. A single strand (ss) DNA-binding EE associated with a 28 kilodalton (kDa) polypeptide was partially purified and characterized. It was found to closely resemble, in size and enzymological properties, the ss-DNA-binding EE previously purified from Neurospora crassa. Aspergillus nidulans EE was also found to be immunochemically related to the N. crassa EE and, like that enzyme, was probably derived from a polypeptide of 90 kDa or larger through proteolysis during extraction and purification. It had divalent metal ion-dependent (Mg2+,
Mn2+
, or Zn2+) activity on both DNA and RNA, which ultimately produced small 5'-P-terminated oligonucleotides. The nuclease activity was mixed endo- and exo-nucleolytic with ss-DNA as substrate, but largely exonucleolytic with double strand (ds) DNA. Superhelical phi X-174 DNA was nicked by EE to form relaxed circular and then linear ds-DNA, which was rapidly degraded to shorter fragments. Linearized pBR322 DNA was extensively nicked internally under conditions where there was relatively low exonuclease activity, but this nicking required that 5'-P-termini be present on the linear ds-DNA. The levels of active EE found in extracts of two recombination-deficient mutants of A. nidulans, uvsC and uvsE, dit not differ significantly from those in extracts of the wild type.
...
PMID:Endo-exonuclease of Aspergillus nidulans. 216 74
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