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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)
Chilo iridescent virus (CIV), the type species of the genus Iridovirus within the family Iridoviridae, is highly pathogenic for larvae of important pest insects. The virions contain a single linear double-stranded DNA molecule (209 kbp) that is circularly permuted and terminally redundant. The nucleotide sequence of the viral genome between the genome coordinates 0.101 and 0.391 (60,170 bp) was determined by automated cycle sequencing. This particular region of the CIV genome contains 112 open reading frames (ORFs) with coding capacities for 50 to 1186 amino acids. The alignment of the deduced amino acid sequences with well-characterized proteins stored in protein databases led to the identification of several genes with significant homologies, such as the largest subunit of the DNA-dependent RNA polymerase, large subunit of the ribonucleoside-diphosphate reductase,
endonuclease
, protein-tyrosine phosphatase,
helicase
, global transactivator, two apoptosis inhibitor homologs, antibiotic peptide homolog, and others. The highest homologies were detected between putative viral gene products of CIV and the corresponding viral proteins of lymphocystis disease virus of fish (LCDV), which belongs to the genus Lymphocystivirus within the iridovirus family.
...
PMID:The DNA sequence of Chilo iridescent virus between the genome coordinates 0.101 and 0.391; similarities in coding strategy between insect and vertebrate iridoviruses. 948 89
A multi-site nested reverse transcription and polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) followed by restriction
endonuclease
analysis (REA) was developed to identify hepatitis E virus (HEV) in clinical specimens. Four sets of primers were selected to amplify regions in the HEV genome supposed to encode the
helicase
, polymerase, and parts of the viral capsid protein. Digestion of the nested PCR products with HinfI, HaeII, AvaII, BglI, KpnI, SmaI, or EcoRI generated readily recognizable profiles that confirm the HEV sequences and/or distinguish the unique Mexico genotype (our positive control) from all other isolates (Asian genotype). In addition, the hydroxyapatite (HA) adsorption method was compared to other adsorption and extraction methods widely used to purify viral RNA from clinical specimens for RT-PCR. All methods presented the same sensitivity of recovery of HEV RNA, but only the adsorption methods efficiently removed fecal enzymatic inhibitors. The HA method gave the best results and was the most economic in terms of time, cost, manipulations and reagents. The method was validated by screening a small number of serum and fecal specimens available from patients with acute non-A,B,C hepatitis in Nepal. HEV RNA was identified in half (5/11) of the fecal specimens obtained from patients with evidence of recent HEV infection, but in none of the 14 patients without a serological marker for hepatitis E.
...
PMID:Identification of hepatitis E virus in clinical specimens: amplification of hydroxyapatite-purified virus RNA and restriction endonuclease analysis. 950 51
The genomic variability of hepatitis E virus (HEV) was examined by restriction
endonuclease
analysis (REA) of four genomic cDNA copies comprising a 499 bp segment of the putative polymerase gene, a 264 bp segment of the
helicase
gene, and two, 680 bp and 448 bp, segments of the capsid gene. Analysis of the deduced restriction sites of all 27 HEV sequences currently available in the GenBank, and digestion of reverse-transcribed and nested PCR amplified segments obtained from six Nepali isolates were used to devise and test a REA genotyping assay. The assay allowed easy discrimination between the Mexico and Asian genotypes, and the classification of the Asian genotypes into three, or perhaps four subgenotypes. In addition, endonucleases identifiers of individual isolate or clusters of isolates were found. This assay permits rapid identification of a large number of HEV isolates directly from clinical specimens for studies on the molecular epidemiology and evolution of HEV.
...
PMID:Genotyping of hepatitis E virus in clinical specimens by restriction endonuclease analysis. 950 14
Adeno-associated virus (AAV) is a human parvovirus of the genus Dependovirus. AAV replication is largely restricted to cells which are coinfected with a helper virus. In the absence of a helper virus, the AAV genome can integrate into a specific chromosomal site where it remains latent until reactivated by superinfection of the host cell with an appropriate helper virus. Replication functions of AAV have been mapped to the Rep68 and Rep78 gene products. Rep proteins demonstrate DNA binding,
endonuclease
, and
helicase
activities and are involved in regulation of transcription from both AAV and heterologous promoters. AAV has been associated with suppression of oncogenicity in a range of viral and nonviral tumors. In this study we sought to identify and study cellular protein targets of AAV Rep, in order to develop a better understanding of the various activities of Rep. We used the yeast two-hybrid system to identify HeLa cell proteins that interact with AAV type 2 Rep78. We isolated several strongly interacting clones which were subsequently identified as PRKX (previously named PKX1), a recently described homolog of the protein kinase A (PKA) catalytic subunit (PKAc). The interaction was confirmed in vitro by using pMal-Rep pull-down assays. The region of Rep78 which interacts was mapped to a C-terminal zinc finger-like domain; Rep68, which lacks this domain, did not interact with PRKX. PRKX demonstrated autophosphorylation and kinase activity towards histone H1 and a PKA oligopeptide target. Autophosphorylation was inhibited by interaction with Rep78. In transfection assays, a PRKX expression vector was shown to be capable of activating CREB-dependent transcription. This activation was suppressed by Rep78 but not by Rep68. Since PRKX is a close homolog of PKAc, we investigated whether Rep78 could interact directly with PKAc. pMal-Rep78 was found to associate with purified PKAc and inhibited its kinase activity. Cotransfection experiments demonstrated that Rep78 could block the activation of CREB by a PKAc expression vector. These experiments suggest that AAV may perturb normal cyclic AMP response pathways in infected cells.
...
PMID:Adeno-associated virus Rep78 protein interacts with protein kinase A and its homolog PRKX and inhibits CREB-dependent transcriptional activation. 973 29
To gain further insights into the biological functions of Dna2, previously known as a cellular replicative
helicase
in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we examined biochemical properties of the recombinant Dna2 protein purified to homogeneity. Besides the single-stranded (ss) DNA-dependent ATPase activity as reported previously, we were able to demonstrate that ssDNA-specific
endonuclease
activity is intrinsically associated with Dna2. Moreover, Dna2 was capable of degrading duplex DNA in an ATP-dependent fashion. ATP and dATP, the only nucleotides hydrolyzed by Dna2, served to stimulate Dna2 to utilize duplex DNA, indicating their hydrolysis is required. Dna2 was able to unwind short duplex only under the condition where the
endonuclease
activity was minimized. This finding implies that Dna2 unwinds only partially the 3'-end of duplex DNA and generates a stretch of ssDNA of limited length, which is subsequently cleaved by the ssDNA-specific
endonuclease
activity. A point mutation at the conserved ATP-binding site of Dna2 inactivated concurrently ssDNA-dependent ATPase, ATP-dependent nuclease, and
helicase
activities, indicating that they all reside in Dna2 itself. By virtue of its nucleolytic activities, the Dna2 protein may function in the maintenance of chromosomal integrity, such as repair or other related process, rather than in propagation of cellular replication forks.
...
PMID:Dna2 of Saccharomyces cerevisiae possesses a single-stranded DNA-specific endonuclease activity that is able to act on double-stranded DNA in the presence of ATP. 975 35
The recombinational hot spot chi modulates the nuclease and
helicase
activities of the RecBCD enzyme, leading to generation of an early DNA intermediate for homologous recombination. Here we identify the subunit location of the nuclease active site in RecBCD. The isolated RecB protein cleaves circular single-stranded M13 phage DNA, but RecB1-929, comprising only the 100 kDa N-terminal domain of RecB, does not. We reported previously that the reconstituted RecB1-929CD enzyme also is not a nuclease, suggesting that the C-terminal 30 kDa domain of RecB is a non-specific ssDNA
endonuclease
. However, we were unable to detect nuclease activity with the subtilisin-generated C-terminal 30 kDa fragment of RecB. Since the subtilisin-generated fragment did not bind to a ssDNA-agarose column, we designed a chimeric enzyme by attaching the C-terminal 30 kDa domain of RecB to the gene 32 protein of T4 phage, a ssDNA binding protein that does not have strand scission ability. In addition, Asp427 in the chimeric enzyme (Asp1080 in RecB), a residue that is conserved among several RecB homologs, was substituted to alanine (the D427A mutant). The wild-type chimeric enzyme cleaves the M13 DNA and the D427A mutation abolishes the
endonuclease
activity of the chimeric enzyme but does not affect its DNA binding ability. This finding indicates an unusual bipartite nature in the structural organization of RecB, in which the DNA-binding function is located in the N-terminal 100 kDa domain and the nuclease catalytic domain is located in the C-terminal 30 kDa domain. The purified RecBD1080ACD mutant is a processive
helicase
but not a nuclease, demonstrating that RecBCD has a single nuclease active site in the C-terminal 30 kDa domain of RecB.
...
PMID:Identification of the nuclease active site in the multifunctional RecBCD enzyme by creation of a chimeric enzyme. 979 Aug 41
The adeno-associated virus (AAV) nonstructural proteins Rep68 and Rep78 are site-specific DNA binding proteins, ATP-dependent site-specific endonucleases, helicases, and ATPases. These biochemical activities are required for viral DNA replication and control of viral gene expression. In this study, we characterized the biochemical properties of the
helicase
and ATPase activities of homogeneously pure Rep68. The enzyme exists as a monomer in solution at the concentrations used in this study (<380 nM), as judged by its mobility in sucrose density gradients. Using a primed single-stranded (ss) circular M13 substrate, the
helicase
activity had an optimum pH of 7 to 7.5, an optimum temperature of 45 degreesC, and an optimal divalent-cation concentration of 5 mM MgCl2. Several nucleoside triphosphates could serve as cofactors for Rep68
helicase
activity, and the order of preference was ATP = GTP > CTP = dATP > UTP > dGTP. The Km values for ATP in both the DNA helicase reaction and the site-specific trs
endonuclease
reaction were essentially the same, approximately 180 microM. Both reactions were sigmoidal with respect to ATP concentration, suggesting that a dimer or higher-order multimer of Rep68 is necessary for both DNA helicase activity and terminal resolution site (trs) nicking activity. Furthermore, when the enzyme itself was titrated in the trs
endonuclease
and ATPase reactions, both activities were second order with respect to enzyme concentration. This suggests that a dimer of Rep68 is the active form for both the ATPase and nicking activities. In contrast, DNA helicase activity was linear with respect to enzyme concentration. When bound to ssDNA, the enzyme unwound the DNA in the 3'-to-5' direction. DNA unwinding occurred at a rate of approximately 345 bp per min per monomeric enzyme molecule. The ATP turnover rate was approximately 30 to 50 ATP molecules per min per enzyme molecule. Surprisingly, the presence of DNA was not required for ATPase activity. We estimated that Rep translocates processively for more than 1,300 bases before dissociating from its substrate in the absence of any accessory proteins. DNA helicase activity was not significantly stimulated by substrates that have the structure of a replication fork and contain either a 5' or 3' tail. Rep68 binds only to ssDNA, as judged by inhibition of the DNA helicase reaction with ss or double-stranded (ds) DNA. Consistent with this observation, no
helicase
activity was detected on blunt-ended ds oligonucleotide substrates unless they also contained an ss 3' tail. However, if a blunt-ended ds oligonucleotide contained the 22-bp Rep binding element sequence, Rep68 was capable of unwinding the substrate. This means that Rep68 can function both as a conventional
helicase
for strand displacement synthesis and as a terminal-repeat-unwinding protein which catalyzes the conversion of a duplex end to a hairpin primer. Thus, the properties of the Rep DNA helicase activity suggest that Rep is involved in all three of the key steps in AAV DNA replication: terminal resolution, reinitiation, and strand displacement.
...
PMID:Biochemical characterization of adeno-associated virus rep68 DNA helicase and ATPase activities. 988 64
The Rep78 and Rep68 proteins of adeno-associated virus type 2 (AAV) are multifunctional proteins which are required for viral replication, regulation of AAV promoters, and preferential integration of the AAV genome into a region of human chromosome 19. These proteins bind the hairpin structures formed by the AAV inverted terminal repeat (ITR) origins of replication, make site- and strand-specific
endonuclease
cuts within the AAV ITRs, and display nucleoside triphosphate-dependent
helicase
activities. Additionally, several mutant Rep proteins display negative dominance in
helicase
and/or
endonuclease
assays when they are mixed with wild-type Rep78 or Rep68, suggesting that multimerization may be required for the
helicase
and
endonuclease
functions. Using overlap extension PCR mutagenesis, we introduced mutations within clusters of charged residues throughout the Rep68 moiety of a maltose binding protein-Rep68 fusion protein (MBP-Rep68Delta) expressed in Escherichia coli cells. Several mutations disrupted the
endonuclease
and
helicase
activities; however, only one amino-terminal-charge cluster mutant protein (D40A-D42A-D44A) completely lost AAV hairpin DNA binding activity. Charge cluster mutations within two other regions abolished both
endonuclease
and
helicase
activities. One region contains a predicted alpha-helical structure (amino acids 371 to 393), and the other contains a putative 3,4 heptad repeat (coiled-coil) structure (amino acids 441 to 483). The defects displayed by these mutant proteins correlated with a weaker association with wild-type Rep68 protein, as measured in coimmunoprecipitation assays. These experiments suggest that these regions of the Rep molecule are involved in Rep oligomerization events critical for both
helicase
and
endonuclease
activities.
...
PMID:Analysis of the effects of charge cluster mutations in adeno-associated virus Rep68 protein in vitro. 997 90
DNA double-strand break (DSB) processing was studied in mouse testicular extracts using a defined DSB created by cleaving supercoiled pUC12 DNA at a unique site as the substrate, and analysing the processed DNA by gel electrophoresis. Our results demonstrated that enzymatic activity in the extracts promoted multimerization of DNA and suppressed its circularization. This was distinctly different from T4 DNA ligase activity in the control and therefore the process must be more complex than simple ligation. Efficiency of this end-to-end joining was ATP and Mg(2+)-dependent and was much higher with cohesive (especially with 5') than with blunt ends. On recleaving, the joining was predominantly faithful, especially for cohesive ends; but a detectable fraction of DNA had undergone end-processed joining causing junctional deletions, mostly with blunt ends. Redigestion of end-joined products from time course experiments established that the end-deleted joining occurred concurrent to the faithful joining. Junctional segments were cloned and their restriction analysis confirmed the presence of large deletions from both the sides. These results suggested the association of an end-processing activity (exonuclease/
helicase
+ flap
endonuclease
) along with the end-joining ligase(s). Suppression of end-edited joining on lowering the reaction temperature to 17 degrees or 14 degrees C, despite efficient faithful joining, indicated that this enzymatic activity is retarded at low temperature. Though the efficiency and fidelity of joining were termini-dependent, the orientation of joining was random. Lack of preference for homologous ends (H:H or T:T), as well as efficient joining of heterologous DNA (pUC12/pBR322) having two different blunt termini, showed that the end joining could occur independent of extensive/terminal homology. Retention of radioactivity on end joining of (alpha-32P)dCTP end-filled cohesive termini, and lack of their junctional cleavability, apparently due to restriction site duplication, suggested direct double strand ligation. Thus it is demonstrated that mouse male germ cells possess an efficient DNA end-joining activity, involving either a major pathway of precise joining, or a minor end-deleted joining, and it seems to be achieved by a multienzymatic complex as suggested also for somatic cells by others. These results show that mammalian male germ cells that are proficient in homologous recombination utilize nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ) mechanism for DSB processing and therefore NHEJ is a conserved, universal pathway for the vital function of DSB repair.
...
PMID:Mouse testicular extracts process DNA double-strand breaks efficiently by DNA end-to-end joining. 1004 74
Type I DNA restriction enzymes are large, molecular machines possessing DNA methyltransferase, ATPase, DNA translocase and
endonuclease
activities. The ATPase, DNA translocase and
endonuclease
activities are specified by the restriction (R) subunit of the enzyme. We demonstrate that the R subunit of the Eco KI type I restriction enzyme comprises several different functional domains. An N-terminal domain contains an amino acid motif identical with that forming the catalytic site in simple restriction endonucleases, and changes within this motif lead to a loss of nuclease activity and abolish the restriction reaction. The central part of the R subunit contains amino acid sequences characteristic of DNA helicases. We demonstrate, using limited proteolysis of this subunit, that the
helicase
motifs are contained in two domains. Secondary structure prediction of these domains suggests a structure that is the same as the catalytic domains of DNA helicases of known structure. The C-terminal region of the R subunit can be removed by elastase treatment leaving a large fragment, stable in the presence of ATP, which can no longer bind to the other subunits of Eco KI suggesting that this domain is required for protein assembly. Considering these results and previous models of the methyltransferase part of these enzymes, a structural and operational model of a type I DNA restriction enzyme is presented.
...
PMID:On the structure and operation of type I DNA restriction enzymes. 1039 Mar 54
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