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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)
We have used the intrinsic
tryptophan
fluorescence of the EcoRV restriction
endonuclease
to monitor changes in protein conformation during binding and cleavage of a duplex oligodeoxynucleotide substrate. Appropriate conditions for single-turnover reactions were first determined by steady-state kinetics. When single turnovers were monitored by stopped-flow fluorescence, the mixing together of EcoRV, oligonucleotide and MgCl2 resulted in a rapid increase in
tryptophan
fluorescence followed by a slow decrease. Further analysis by order-of-mixing and quench experiments showed that the transient increase in fluorescence was due to a conformational change coupled to DNA binding, while the subsequent decay was concomitant with phosphodiester hydrolysis. The rate of the latter step varied with the concentration of Mg2+ ions, but another Mg(2+)-dependent transition was observed upon the addition of MgCl2 to a preformed enzyme-DNA complex. These results lead to a reaction scheme in which one Mg2+ binds to the active site prior to phosphodiester hydrolysis but a second Mg2+ is then needed to carry out the hydrolytic reaction. This scheme is correlated to the crystal structures of the EcoRV
endonuclease
and its complexes with DNA and Mg2+ ions.
...
PMID:Rapid reaction analysis of the catalytic cycle of the EcoRV restriction endonuclease. 781 66
Retroviruses are commonly considered to be restricted to vertebrates. However, the genome of many eukaryotes contains mobile sequences known as retrotransposons with long terminal repeats (
LTR
retrotransposons) or viral retrotransposons, showing similarities with integrated proviruses of retroviruses, such as Ty elements in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, copia-like elements in Drosophila, and endogenous proviruses in vertebrates. The gypsy element of Drosophila melanogaster has LTRs and contains three open reading frames, one of which encodes potential products similar to gag-specific protease, reverse transcriptase, and
endonuclease
. It is more similar to typical retroviruses than to
LTR
retrotransposons. We report here experiments showing that gypsy can be transmitted by microinjecting egg plasma from embryos of a strain containing actively transposing gypsy elements into embryos of a strain originally devoid of transposing elements. Horizontal transfer is also observed when individuals of the "empty" stock are raised on medium containing ground pupae of the stock possessing transposing elements. These results suggest that gypsy is an infectious retrovirus and provide evidence that retroviruses also occur in invertebrates.
...
PMID:Retroviruses in invertebrates: the gypsy retrotransposon is apparently an infectious retrovirus of Drosophila melanogaster. 810 3
A repeated DNA sequence used for epidemiological studies of the human opportunistic pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus has been characterized. It is a retroelement of 6914 bp in length, bounded by long terminal repeats of 282 bp, with sequence and features characteristic of retroviruses and retrotransposons. A 5 bp duplication site was found at its borders. This element, designated Afut1, encodes amino acid sequences homologous to the reverse transcriptase, RNase H and
endonuclease
encoded by the pol genes of retroelements. Comparison of the peptidic sequences with other putative polypeptides of fungal
LTR
retrotransposons showed that Afut1 is a member of the gypsy group. This is the first report of a transposable element in A.fumigatus. Afut1 is a defective element: the putative coding domains contain multiple stop codons due exclusively to transitions from C:G to T:A.
...
PMID:Afut1, a retrotransposon-like element from Aspergillus fumigatus. 862 74
Recently, a missense mutation replacing
tryptophan
with arginine at codon 64 of the beta 3-adrenergic receptor gene was shown to be associated with insulin resistance in nondiabetic subjects and to an earlier onset of NIDDM in Pima Indians. We studied whether the codon 64 amino acid polymorphism of the beta 3-adrenergic receptor gene in a cohort of young healthy Danes was associated with high birth weight, accelerated weight gain during childhood and adolescence, present obesity, or impaired insulin sensitivity. The protocol included 380 unrelated white subjects in whom insulin sensitivity and secretion were measured during a combined intravenous glucose and tolbutamide tolerance test. A number of biochemical and anthropometric characteristics were determined for each subject. The subjects were genotyped for the codon 64 polymorphism by applying polymerase chain reaction restriction fragment-length polymorphism screening with the use of
endonuclease
BstN1. The allelic frequency of the mutated allele was 7% (95% CI: 5-10%), and it was similar in obese and nonobese subjects. The beta 3-adrenergic receptor gene variant was not related to birth weight or weight gain during childhood or adolescence. In its heterozygous form, the gene variant was not associated with an altered insulin sensitivity index (SI) or other features of the insulin resistance syndrome (BMI, blood pressure, fasting serum lipid levels, or fasting serum fibrinolytic variables). Three homozygous carriers of the polymorphism were identified, and each had a significantly higher BMI (27.4 +/- 1.3 vs. 23.5 +/- 3.7 kg/m2 [mean +/- SD]; P = 0.032), lower SI [4.9 +/- 2.9 vs. 15.4 +/- 9.0 10(-5) x (min x pmol/l)-1; P = 0.013], and higher fasting serum C-peptide (730 +/- 155 vs. 471 +/- 158 pmol/l; P = 0.016) than the wild-type carriers. The homozygous carriers also had significantly higher levels of fasting serum triglyceride (P = 0.042) and serum LDL cholesterol (P = 0.013). When adjustments were made for age, sex, BMI, and VO2max in a multiple regression analysis, a significantly negative association was found between homozygosity for the codon 64 variant and the SI (P = 0.009). We conclude that in young healthy Danes, the homozygous form but not the heterozygous form of the codon 64 amino acid polymorphism of the beta 3-adrenergic receptor may be associated with obesity and, independent of BMI, with a low SI. Since only three homozygous carriers were identified among 380 subjects, the results must be interpreted with caution, and studies of larger population samples are needed.
...
PMID:Insulin sensitivity and body weight changes in young white carriers of the codon 64 amino acid polymorphism of the beta 3-adrenergic receptor gene. 869 Jan 60
We have used random mutagenesis to identify putative active-site residues in the C-terminal cytotoxic
endonuclease
domain of the bacterial toxin colicin E9. Six single-site mutations in the DNase domain were isolated which destroyed the toxic action of the colicin. DNA sequencing identified the mutations as Gly460Asp, Arg544Gly, Glu548Gly, Thr571Ile, His575Tyr and His579Tyr. All six wild-type residues are highly conserved in the DNase domains of both the E group colicins and the closely related pyocins. Site-directed mutagenesis was then used to substitute the wild-type amino acid residue at each of these positions for an alanine residue in order to distinguish important from unimportant sites. Two of the six alanine-mutant colicins (Gly460Ala and His579Ala) exhibited significant in vivo activity, unlike the original mutation of these residues, and were therefore not characterised further. The Thr571Ala mutant colicin, although not inactive, was significantly less active than the control. The other three alanine mutants (Arg544Ala, Glu548Ala and His575Ala remained completely inactive in the in vivo tests. Each 15 kDa alanine-mutant DNase domain was overexpressed and purified using a tandem-expression strategy which relies on the enzyme being able to bind to the natural inhibitor, Im9.
Tryptophan
emission spectra of the alanine mutants showed significant alterations in the emission maxima of all but the His575Ala mutant, suggesting changes in the tertiary structure of these mutant proteins. Activity measurements, using the spectrophotometric Kunitz assay, indicated that the Thr571Ala mutant was partially active as an
endonuclease
but the remaining alanine mutants were all completely inactive. All four mutant proteins, however, retained their ability to bind DNA in a gel shift assay, suggesting the mutations affect catalytic rather than substrate-binding residues. Searching the sequence databases for possible homology to other DNA-binding proteins revealed a significant match between residues 464 to 487 of the E9 DNase domain and helix IV of the POU domain of eukaryotic transcription factors.
...
PMID:Identification of putative active-site residues in the DNase domain of colicin E9 by random mutagenesis. 870 51
Human L1 elements are highly abundant poly(A) (non-
LTR
) retrotransposons whose second open reading frame (ORF2) encodes a reverse transcriptase (RT). We have identified an
endonuclease
(EN) domain at the L1 ORF2 N-terminus that is highly conserved among poly(A) retrotransposons and resembles the apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonucleases. Purified L1 EN protein (L1 ENp) makes 5'-PO4, 3'-OH nicks in supercoiled plasmids, shows no preference for AP sites, and preferentially cleaves sequences resembling L1 in vivo target sequences. Mutations in conserved amino acid residues of L1 EN abolish its nicking activity and eliminate L1 retrotransposition. We propose that L1 EN cleaves the target site for L1 insertion and primes reverse transcription.
...
PMID:Human L1 retrotransposon encodes a conserved endonuclease required for retrotransposition. 894 17
The Escherichia coli exonuclease III (AP
endonuclease
VI) is a DNA-repair enzyme that hydrolyzes the phosphodiester bond 5' to an abasic site in DNA. To study how the enzyme recognizes the abasic site, we used oligonucleotides containing a synthetic abasic site at any desired position in the sequence. We prepared oligonucleotides containing an abasic residue such as 2'-deoxyribosylformamide, 2'-deoxyribose, 1',2'-dideoxy ribofuranose or propanediol. Duplex oligonucleotides containing an abasic residue used in this study were cleaved on the 5' side of the abasic site by exonuclease III in spite of the varieties of the bases opposite and adjacent to the abasic site. In addition, we observed that the enzyme cleaved single-stranded oligonucleotides containing an abasic site on the 5' side of the abasic site. These findings suggest that the enzyme may principally recognize the DNA-pocket formed at an abasic site. The indole ring of the
tryptophan
212 residue of the exonuclease III is probably intercalated to the abasic site. The
tryptophan
in the vicinity of the catalytic site is conserved in the type II AP
endonuclease
from various organisms.
...
PMID:Cleavage of single- and double-stranded DNAs containing an abasic residue by Escherichia coli exonuclease III (AP endonuclease VI). 894 51
A genomic bank from Brevibacterium divaricatum has been prepared using lambda EMBL3 as a vector. The genomic bank's titers are 2.2 x 10(6) pfu/micrograms. Through screening by plaque hybridization, a 9.6 kb NcoI fragment which contains the entire trp operon has been isolated. Polymerase chain reaction amplification and restriction
endonuclease
analysis of PCR fragments indicated that there is homology between the coryneform bacteria; however, some genetic diversity among the species still exists. By complementation tests using subcloning of the 9.6 kb NcoI fragments and various E. coli
tryptophan
auxotrophs, this fragment was found to contain a gene cluster composed of trpE, trpD, trpC, trpB and trpA in this order. This revealed that the
tryptophan
biosynthesis genes in B. divaricatum may be an operon.
...
PMID:Cloning of the tryptophan operon of Brevibacterium divaricatum and its expression in E. coli. 895 24
Repetitive sequences with oligo A tails were observed in Dra1 fragments of Bombyx mori genomic DNA. The full sequence of the element, an abundant non-
LTR
retrotransposon of B. mori, was determined by assembling inner restriction fragments. This element, designated L1Bm, contained two ORFs encoding a gag-like protein and reverse transcriptase (RT), respectively. An
endonuclease
domain was identified at the N-terminus of the RT sequence. The homology search of the amino acid sequences revealed that L1Bm belongs evolutionally to the same family as various other non-
LTR
retrotransposons of Drosophila and Mosquito. On the other hand, L1Bm resembles the L1 element of human genome in its high copy number and its frequent truncation at the 5'-side. Some units of the histone gene repeat in B. mori possess complete L1Bm elements in a 3'-flanking region of H2b.
...
PMID:A major non-LTR retrotransposon of Bombyx mori, L1Bm. 930 19
Acute intermittent porphyria (AIP) is an inherited disorder characterized by a deficiency of hydroxymethylbilane synthase (EC 4.3.1.8.; HMBS), the third enzyme in the heme biosynthetic pathway. To date, 113 different HMBS gene mutations have been reported in the world. However, there were a few reports of the gene mutations in the Japanese AIP patients. We studied the gene mutation in two unrelated AIP families in the San-in district, a local area of Western Japan. The overlapping 6 fragments of the HMBS gene, amplified by the reverse transcript-polymerase chain reaction, were analyzed by the single-strand conformation polymorphism with silver staining technique. The abnormal fragment from a member of one family was sequenced to detect the C to T substitution at 517 nucleic acid position of cDNA, which led to a missense mutation of arginine to
tryptophan
exchange at an amino acid level (R173W). This mutation located in exon 10 created a new site of the MSP 1 restriction
endonuclease
and was screened by the amplified fragment of exon 10 from genomic DNA with the MSP 1 digestion. The mutation was detected totally in three members of the family and interestingly also in two patients of an unrelated family. This mutation has been reported widely in the world independently, such as in a Swedish, a Canadian, a Finnish, and a French family, but is the first in Japanese patients. The screening method for this mutation is useful for diagnosis in Japanese AIP patients.
...
PMID:Mutation in the exon 10 (R173W) of the hydroxymethylbilane synthase gene in two unrelated Japanese families with acute intermittent porphyria. 952 50
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