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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)
Apurinic/apyrimidinic
endonuclease
(AP endo, HAP1) recognizes abasic sites in ds DNA and makes a single nick in the backbone 5' to the abasic site. In this report we examine the roles of three conserved
tyrosine
residues in close proximity to the active site. We show that
Tyr
(128) and
Tyr
(269), which interact upstream and downstream of the abasic site, respectively, are involved in recognition and binding of abasic site-containing double stranded DNA. However, the two residues are not equivalent, as their effects are differentiated by changes in salt concentration. In sharp contrast,
Tyr
(171) is directly involved in catalysis as well as binding. Y171F, Y171H, and Y171A all show decreased catalytic efficiencies 25,000-50,000-fold from the WT enzyme. Both imidazole and basic pH markedly stimulate the WT enzyme. Imidazole stimulates
Tyr
(171) mutant enzymes when
tyrosine
is also present but basic pH eliminates remaining mutant activity. These results underscore the importance of tyrosines in AP endo catalysis. They render the current hypotheses regarding enzyme action unlikely and allow us to consider the possibility that the phenolate of
Tyr
(171) is the nucleophile that attacks the scissile phosphate.
...
PMID:Novel role of tyrosine in catalysis by human AP endonuclease 1. 1538 Jan
TFIIH is a multiprotein complex that plays a central role in both transcription and DNA repair. The subunit p62 is a structural component of the TFIIH core that is known to interact with VP16, p53, Eralpha, and E2F1 in the context of activated transcription, as well as with the
endonuclease
XPG in DNA repair. We used limited proteolysis experiments coupled to mass spectrometry to define structural domains within the conserved N-terminal part of the molecule. The first domain identified resulted from spontaneous proteolysis and corresponds to residues 1-108. The second domain encompasses residues 186-240, and biophysical characterization by fluorescence studies and NMR analysis indicated that it is at least partially folded and thus may correspond to a structural entity. This module contains a region of high sequence conservation with an invariant FWxxPhiPhi motif (Phi representing either
tyrosine
or phenylalanine), which was also found in other protein families and could play a key role as a protein-protein recognition module within TFIIH. The approach used in this study is general and can be straightforwardly applied to other multidomain proteins and/or multiprotein assemblies.
...
PMID:Domain architecture of the p62 subunit from the human transcription/repair factor TFIIH deduced by limited proteolysis and mass spectrometry analysis. 1553 47
Type II restriction enzymes are homodimeric systems that bind four to eight base pair palindromic recognition sequences of DNA and catalyze metal ion-dependent phosphodiester cleavage. While Mg(II) is required for cleavage in these enzymes, in some systems Ca(II) promotes avid substrate binding and sequence discrimination. These properties make them useful model systems for understanding the roles of alkaline earth metal ions in nucleic acid processing. We have previously shown that two Ca(II) ions stimulate DNA binding by PvuII
endonuclease
and that the trivalent lanthanide ions Tb(III) and Eu(III) support subnanomolar DNA binding in this system. Here we capitalize on this behavior, employing a unique combination of luminescence spectroscopy and DNA binding assays to characterize Ln(III) binding behavior by this enzyme. Upon excitation of
tyrosine
residues, the emissions of both Tb(III) and Eu(III) are enhanced severalfold. This enhancement is reduced by the addition of a large excess of Ca(II), indicating that these ions bind in the active site. Poor enhancements and affinities in the presence of the active site variant E68A indicate that Glu68 is an important Ln(III) ligand, similar to that observed with Ca(II), Mg(II), and Mn(II). At low micromolar Eu(III) concentrations in the presence of enzyme (10-20 microM), Eu(III) excitation (7)F(0) --> (5)D(0) spectra yield one dominant peak at 579.2 nm. A second, smaller peak at 579.4 nm is apparent at high Eu(III) concentrations (150 microM). Titration data for both Tb(III) and Eu(III) fit well to a two-site model featuring a strong site (K(d) = 1-3 microM) and a much weaker site (K(d) approximately 100-200 microM). Experiments with the E68A variant indicate that the Glu68 side chain is not required for the binding of this second Ln(III) equivalent; however, the dramatic increase in DNA binding affinity around 100 microM Ln(III) for the wild-type enzyme and metal-enhanced substrate affinity for E68A are consistent with functional relevance for this weaker site. This discrimination of sites should make it possible to use lanthanide substitution and lanthanide spectroscopy to probe individual metal ion binding sites, thus adding an important tool to the study of restriction enzyme structure and function.
...
PMID:Lanthanide spectroscopic studies of the dinuclear and Mg(II)-dependent PvuII restriction endonuclease. 1556 21
RNA interference (RNAi) is a conserved sequence-specific gene regulatory mechanism mediated by the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC), which is composed of a single-stranded guide RNA and an Argonaute protein. The PIWI domain, a highly conserved motif within Argonaute, has been shown to adopt an RNase H fold critical for the
endonuclease
cleavage activity of RISC. Here we report the crystal structure of Archaeoglobus fulgidus Piwi protein bound to double-stranded RNA, thereby identifying the binding pocket for guide-strand 5'-end recognition and providing insight into guide-strand-mediated messenger RNA target recognition. The phosphorylated 5' end of the guide RNA is anchored within a highly conserved basic pocket, supplemented by the carboxy-terminal carboxylate and a bound divalent cation. The first nucleotide from the 5' end of the guide RNA is unpaired and stacks over a conserved
tyrosine
residue, whereas successive nucleotides form a four-base-pair RNA duplex. Mutation of the corresponding amino acids that contact the 5' phosphate in human Ago2 resulted in attenuated mRNA cleavage activity. Our structure of the Piwi-RNA complex, and that determined elsewhere, provide direct support for the 5' region of the guide RNA serving as a nucleation site for pairing with target mRNA and for a fixed distance separating the RISC-mediated mRNA cleavage site from the anchored 5' end of the guide RNA.
...
PMID:Structural basis for 5'-end-specific recognition of guide RNA by the A. fulgidus Piwi protein. 1580 Jun 29
Four conserved amino acids of type IB topoisomerases (Arg130, Lys167, Arg223, and His265 in vaccinia topoisomerase) catalyze the attack by
tyrosine
on the scissile phosphodiester to form a DNA-(3'-phosphotyrosyl)-enzyme intermediate. The mechanism entails general acid catalysis (by Lys167 and Arg130) and transition-state stabilization (via contact of His265 with the pro-Sp oxygen). Here we query the function of Arg223, which accelerates transesterification by a factor of 10(5). The requirement for Arg223 is alleviated by a neutral Sp methylphosphonate (MeP) linkage at the cleavage site. Arg223 is not required for the 30,000-fold activation of the latent
endonuclease
activity of topoisomerase by the Sp MeP. The rate of autohydrolysis by the DNA-(3'-MeP)-topoisomerase intermediate approaches 10% of the rate of religation to a 5'-OH DNA strand. These findings underscore the importance of transition-state electrostatics in determining the composition of the active site and dictating the balance between strand transferase and hydrolase functions.
...
PMID:Mechanistic plasticity of DNA topoisomerase IB: phosphate electrostatics dictate the need for a catalytic arginine. 1583 88
The generalized process of mRNA decay involves deadenylation followed by release from translating polysomes, decapping, and exonuclease decay of the mRNA body. In contrast the mRNA
endonuclease
PMR1 forms a selective complex with its translating substrate mRNA, where it initiates decay by cleaving within the mRNA body. In stressed cells the phosphorylation of the alpha subunit of eukaryotic initiation factor 2 causes translating mRNAs to accumulate with stalled 48S subunits in large subcellular structures termed stress granules (SGs), wherein mRNAs undergo sorting for reinitiation, storage, or decay. Given the unique relationship between translation and PMR1-mediated mRNA decay, we examined the impact of stress-induced dissociation of polysomes on this process. Arsenite stress disrupts the polysome binding of PMR1 and its substrate mRNA but has no impact on the critical
tyrosine
phosphorylation of PMR1, its association with substrate mRNA, or its association with the functional approximately 680-kDa mRNP complex in which it normally resides on polysomes. We show that arsenite stress drives PMR1 into an RNase-resistant complex with TIA-1, and we identify a distinct domain in the N terminus of PMR1 that facilitates its interaction with TIA-1. Finally, we show that arsenite promotes the delayed association of PMR1 with SGs under conditions which cause tristetraprolin and butyrate response factor 1, proteins that facilitate exonucleolytic mRNA, to exit SGs.
...
PMID:Polysome-bound endonuclease PMR1 is targeted to stress granules via stress-specific binding to TIA-1. 1698 78
In this study, we demonstrated that the methyltransferase activity associated with Dam was essential for attenuation of Aeromonas hydrophila virulence. We mutated aspartic acid and
tyrosine
residues to alanine within the conserved DPPY catalytic motif of Dam and transformed the pBAD/damD/A, pBAD/damY/A, and pBAD/damAhSSU (with the native dam gene) recombinant plasmids into the Escherichia coli GM33 (dam-deficient) strain. Genomic DNA (gDNA) isolated from either of the E. coli GM33 strains harboring the pBAD vector with the mutated dam gene was resistant to DpnI digestion and sensitive to DpnII restriction
endonuclease
cutting. These findings were contrary to those with the gDNA of E. coli GM33 strain containing the pBAD/damAhSSU plasmid, indicating nonmethylation of E. coli gDNA with mutated Dam. Overproduction of mutated Dam in A. hydrophila resulted in bacterial motility, hemolytic and cytotoxic activities associated with the cytotoxic enterotoxin (Act), and protease activity similar to that of the wild-type (WT) bacterium, which harbored the pBAD vector and served as a control strain. On the contrary, overproduction of native Dam resulted in decreased bacterial motility, increased Act-associated biological effects, and increased protease activity. Lactone production, an indicator of quorum sensing, was increased when the native dam gene was overexpressed, with its levels returning to that of the control strain when the dam gene was mutated. These effects of Dam appeared to be mediated through a regulatory glucose-inhibited division A protein. Infection of mice with the mutated Dam-overproducing strains resulted in mortality rates similar to those for the control strain, with 100% of the animals dying within 2 to 3 days with two 50% lethal doses (LD50s) of the WT bacterium. Importantly, immunization of mice with a native-Dam-overproducing strain at the same LD50 did not result in any lethality and provided protection to animals after subsequent challenge with a lethal dose of the control strain.
...
PMID:Mutations within the catalytic motif of DNA adenine methyltransferase (Dam) of Aeromonas hydrophila cause the virulence of the Dam-overproducing strain to revert to that of the wild-type phenotype. 1698 54
The Argonaute family member Ago1 is required for formation of pericentric heterochromatin and small interfering RNA (siRNA)-mediated post-transcriptional gene silencing in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. In addition, we have recently demonstrated that Ago1 function is required for enactment of cell cycle checkpoints (Carmichael, J. B., Provost, P., Ekwall, K., and Hobman, T. C. (2004) Mol. Biol. Cell 15, 1425-1435). Here, we provide evidence that the amino terminus of Ago1 binds to proteins that function in cell cycle regulation including 14-3-3 proteins. Interestingly, the amino terminus of human Ago2, the
endonuclease
that cleaves siRNA-targeted mRNAs, was also demonstrated to bind 14-3-3 proteins. Overexpression of the Ago1 amino terminus in yeast resulted in cell cycle delay at the G(2)/M boundary. Further investigation revealed that nuclear import of the mitosis-inducing phosphatase Cdc25 is inhibited by overexpression of the Ago1 amino terminus. Under these conditions, we found that the cyclin-dependent kinase Cdc2 is constitutively phosphorylated on
tyrosine
15, thereby reducing the activity of this kinase, a situation that delays entry into mitosis. We hypothesize that 14-3-3 proteins are required for Argonaute protein functions in cell cycle and/or gene-silencing pathways.
...
PMID:Interactions between the RNA interference effector protein Ago1 and 14-3-3 proteins: consequences for cell cycle progression. 1704 60
AP
endonuclease
(AP endo), a key enzyme in repair of abasic sites in DNA, makes a single nick 5' to the phosphodeoxyribose of an abasic site (AP-site). We recently proposed a novel mechanism, whereby the enzyme uses a key
tyrosine
(
Tyr
(171)) to directly attack the scissile phosphate of the AP-site. We showed that loss of the tyrosyl hydroxyl from
Tyr
(171) resulted in dramatic diminution in enzymatic efficiency. Here we extend the previous work to compare binding/recognition of AP endo to oligomeric DNA with and without an AP-site by wild type enzyme and several
tyrosine
mutants including
Tyr
(128),
Tyr
(171) and
Tyr
(269). We used single turnover and electrophoretic mobility shift assays. As expected, binding to DNA with an AP-site is more efficient than binding to DNA without one. Unlike catalytic cleavage by AP endo, which requires both hydroxyl and aromatic moieties of
Tyr
(171), the ability to bind DNA efficiently without an AP-site is independent of an aromatic moiety at position 171. However, the ability to discriminate efficiently between DNA with and without an AP-site requires
tyrosine
at position 171. Thus, AP endo requires a
tyrosine
at the active site for the properties that enable it to behave as an efficient, processive
endonuclease
.
...
PMID:Role of active site tyrosines in dynamic aspects of DNA binding by AP endonuclease. 1721 68
The hydrolysis of phosphodiester bonds by nucleases is critical to nucleic acid processing. Many nucleases utilize metal ion cofactors, and for a number of these enzymes two active-site metal ions have been detected. Testing proposed mechanistic roles for individual bound metal ions has been hampered by the similarity between the sites and cooperative behavior. In the homodimeric PvuII restriction
endonuclease
, the metal ion dependence of DNA binding is sigmoidal and consistent with two classes of coupled metal ion binding sites. We reasoned that a conservative active-site mutation would perturb the ligand field sufficiently to observe the titration of individual metal ion binding sites without significantly disturbing enzyme function. Indeed, mutation of a
Tyr
residue 5.5 A from both metal ions in the enzyme-substrate crystal structure (Y94F) renders the metal ion dependence of DNA binding biphasic: two classes of metal ion binding sites become distinct in the presence of DNA. The perturbation in metal ion coordination is supported by 1H-15N heteronuclear single quantum coherence spectra of enzyme-Ca(II) and enzyme-Ca(II)-DNA complexes. Metal ion binding by free Y94F is basically unperturbed: through multiple experiments with different metal ions, the data are consistent with two alkaline earth metal ion binding sites per subunit of low millimolar affinity, behavior which is very similar to that of the wild type. The results presented here indicate a role for the hydroxyl group of Tyr94 in the coupling of metal ion binding sites in the presence of DNA. Its removal causes the affinities for the two metal ion binding sites to be resolved in the presence of substrate. Such tuning of metal ion affinities will be invaluable to efforts to ascertain the contributions of individual bound metal ions to metallonuclease function.
...
PMID:Uncoupling metallonuclease metal ion binding sites via nudge mutagenesis. 1730 14
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