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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:3.1.30.2 (
endonuclease
)
18,621
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The state of genes microinjected into mouse embryos was followed from the one-cell to the blastocyst stage using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Microinjected DNA was detected in all one-, two-, and four-cell injected embryos and in 44% of morula and 26% of blastocysts. Head-to-tail ligation of microinjected genes, a common feature of stably integrated transgene arrays, was detected in all embryos after injection of microinjected genes and occurred irrespective of the structure at the ends of the injected genes. Sensitivity of microinjected DNA to a methylation-dependent restriction
endonuclease
Dpn I was lost in all embryos by the two-cell stage (24 hr), indicating a change in DNA methylation, independent of transgene integration.
Dissociation
of blastomeres prior to compaction revealed a mosaic distribution of the microinjected DNA within the embryo and supports the notion that injected genes form a limited number of arrays, which segregate independently until they integrate into the genome or are degraded.
...
PMID:Fate of microinjected genes in preimplantation mouse embryos. 147 74
Alkaline phosphatase was the first zinc enzyme to be discovered in which three closely spaced metal ions (two Zn ions and one Mg ion) are present at the active center. Zn ions at all three sites also produce a maximally active enzyme. These metal ions have center-to-center distances of 3.9 A (Zn1-Zn2), 4.9 A (Zn2-Mg3), and 7.1 A (Zn1-Mg3). Despite the close packing of these metal centers, only one bridging ligand, the carboxyl of Asp51, bridges Zn2 and Mg3. A crystal structure at 2.0-A resolution of the noncovalent phosphate complex, E.P, formed with the active center shows that two phosphate oxygens form a phosphate bridge between Zn1 and Zn2, while the two other phosphate oxygens form hydrogen bonds with the guanidium group of Arg166. This places Ser102, the residue known to be phosphorylated during phosphate hydrolysis, in the required apical position to initiate a nucleophilic attack on the phosphorous. Extrapolation of the E.P structure to the enzyme-substrate complex, E.ROPO4(2-), leads to the conclusion that Zn1 must coordinate the ester oxygen, thus activating the leaving group in the phosphorylation of Ser102. Likewise, Zn2 appears to coordinate the ester oxygen of the seryl phosphate and activate the leaving group during the hydrolysis of the phosphoseryl intermediate. Both of these findings suggest that there may be a significant dissociative character to each of the two displacements at phosphorous catalyzed by alkaline phosphatase. A water molecule (or hydroxide) coordinated to Zn1 following formation of the phosphoseryl intermediate appears to be the nucleophile in the second step of the mechanism.
Dissociation
of the product phosphate from the E.P intermediate is the slowest, 35 s-1, and therefore the rate-limiting, step of the mechanism at alkaline pH. Since the determination of the initial crystal structure of alkaline phosphatase, two other crystal structures of enzymes involved in phosphate ester hydrolysis have been completed that show a triad of closely spaced zinc ions present at their active centers. These enzymes are phospholipase C from Bacillus cereus (structure at 1.5-A resolution) (43) and P1 nuclease from Penicillium citrinum (structure at 2.8-A resolution) (74). Both enzymes hydrolyze phosphodiesters. Substrates for phospholipase C are phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylcholine, while P1 nuclease is an
endonuclease
hydrolyzing single stranded ribo- and deoxyribonucleotides. P1 nuclease also has activity as a phosphomonoesterase against 3'-terminal phosphates of nucleotides. The Zn ions in both enzymes form almost identical trinuclear sites.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Structure and mechanism of alkaline phosphatase. 152 73
The roles of the two tandemly arranged putative ATP binding sites of Escherichia coli UvrA in UvrABC
endonuclease
-mediated excision repair were analyzed by site-directed mutagenesis and biochemical characterization of the representative mutant proteins. Evidence is presented that UvrA has two functional ATPase sites which coincide with the putative ATP binding motifs predicted from its amino acid sequence. The individual ATPase sites can independently hydrolyze ATP. The C-terminal ATPase site has a higher affinity for ATP than the N-terminal site. The invariable lysine residues at the ends of the glycine-rich loops of the consensus Walker type "A" motifs are indispensable for ATP hydrolysis. However, the mutations at these lysine residues do not significantly affect ATP binding. UvrA, with bound ATP, forms the most favored conformation for DNA binding. The initial binding of UvrA to DNA is chiefly at the undamaged sites. In contrast to the wild type UvrA, the ATPase site mutants bind equally to damaged and undamaged sites.
Dissociation
of tightly bound nucleoprotein complexes from the undamaged sites requires hydrolysis of ATP by the C-terminal ATPase site of UvrA. Thus, both ATP binding and hydrolysis are required for the damage recognition step enabling UvrA to discriminate between damaged and undamaged sites on DNA.
...
PMID:Both ATPase sites of Escherichia coli UvrA have functional roles in nucleotide excision repair. 182 49
recA protein forms stable filaments on duplex DNA at low pH. When the pH is shifted above 6.8, recA protein remains stably bound to nicked circular DNA, but not to linear DNA.
Dissociation
of recA protein from linear duplex DNA proceeds to a non-zero endpoint. The kinetics and final extent of dissociation vary with several experimental parameters. The instability on linear DNA is most readily explained by a progressive unidirectional dissociation of recA protein from one end of the filament.
Dissociation
of recA protein from random points in the filament is eliminated as a possible mechanism by several observations: (1) the requirement for a free end; (2) the inverse and linear dependence of the rate of dissociation on DNA length (at constant DNA base-pair concentration); and (3) the kinetics of exposure of a restriction
endonuclease
site in the middle of the DNA. Evidence against another possible mechanism, ATP-mediated translocation of the filament along the DNA, is provided by a novel effect of the non-hydrolyzable ATP analog, ATP gamma S, which generally induces recA protein to bind any DNA tightly and completely inhibits ATP hydrolysis. We find that very low, sub-saturating levels of ATP gamma S completely stabilize the filament, while most of the ATP hydrolysis continues. If these levels of ATP gamma S are introduced after dissociation has commenced, further dissociation is blocked, but re-association does not occur. These observations are inconsistent with movement of recA protein along DNA that is tightly coupled to ATP hydrolysis. The recA nucleoprotein filament is polar and the protein binds the two strands asymmetrically, polymerizing mainly in the 5' to 3' direction on the initiating strand of a single-stranded DNA tailed duplex molecule. A model consistent with these results is presented.
...
PMID:Dissociation pathway for recA nucleoprotein filaments formed on linear duplex DNA. 253 35
Restriction
endonuclease
fragments containing part of the Waxy (Wx) locus have been cloned from strains with insertion mutations at the locus caused by the controlling elements Activator (Ac) and
Dissociation
(Ds). Evidence is presented that the genetically defined Ac element corresponds to a 4.3 kb insertion, while the two Ds elements correspond to 4.1 kb and 2.0 kb insertions, all near the 3' end of the Wx transcription unit. The 4.1 kb Ds is almost completely homologous to the Ac element, differing by a central deletion of less than 0.2 kb. The 2.0 kb Ds element is homologous to the ends of the Ac element. Sequences homologous to the ends of the Ac element are present in many copies in the genomes examined, while there are ten or fewer copies of a sequence with homology to the center of the cloned Ac element. The Ac element at the Wx locus can be distinguished structurally from the other Ac-like sequences in the genome.
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PMID:Isolation of the transposable maize controlling elements Ac and Ds. 631 25
Effects of different end sequences on stability, circular dichroism spectra (CD), and enzyme binding properties were investigated for six 22-base pair, non-self-complementary duplex DNA oligomers. The center sequences of these deoxyoligonucleotides have 8-14 base pairs in common and are flanked on both sides by sequences differing in context and A-T content. Temperature-induced melting transitions monitored by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and ultraviolet absorbance were measured for the six duplexes in buffered 115 mM Na(+) solutions. Values of the melting transition enthalpy, DeltaH(cal), and entropy, DeltaS(cal), were obtained directly from DSC experiments. Melting transition parameters, DeltaH(vH) and DeltaS(vH), were also estimated from van't Hoff analysis of optical melting curves collected as a function of DNA concentration, assuming a two-state melting transition. Melting free energies (20 degrees C) of the six DNAs evaluated from DSC experiments ranged from -18.7 to -32.7 kcal/mol. van't Hoff estimates of the free energies ranged from -18.5 to -48.0 kcal/mol. With either method, the trends in free energy as a function of sequence were identical. Equilibrium binding by BamHI restriction
endonuclease
to the 22-base pair DNAs was also investigated. The central eight base pairs of all six molecules, 5'-A-GGATCC-A-3', contained a BamHI recognition sequence bounded by A-T base pairs. Magnesium free binding assays were performed by titering BamHI against a constant concentration of each of the deoxyoligonucleotide substrates and analyzing reaction products by gel retardation. Binding isotherms of the total amount of bound DNA versus protein concentration were constructed which provided semiquantitative estimates of the equilibrium dissociation constants for dissociation of BamHI from the six DNA oligomers.
Dissociation
constants ranged from 0.5 x 10(-)(9) to 12.0 x 10(-)(9) M with corresponding binding free energies of -12.5 to -10.6 (+/-0. 1) kcal/mol. An inverse relationship is found when binding and stability are compared.
...
PMID:Thermodynamic, spectroscopic, and equilibrium binding studies of DNA sequence context effects in six 22-base pair deoxyoligonucleotides. 1046 Jan 77