Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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 nucleotide sequence recognized and cleaved by the restriction endonuclease MboI is 5' GATC and is identical to the central tetranucleotide of the restriction sites of BamHI and BglII. Experiments on the restriction of DNA from Escherichia coli dam and dam+ confirm the notion that GATC sequences are adenosyl-methylated by the dam function of E. coli and thereby are made refractory to cleavage by MboI. On the basis of this observation the degree of dam methylation of various DNAs was examined by cleavage with MboI and other restriction endonucleases. In plasmid DNA essentially all of the GATC sequences are methylated by the dam function. The DNA of phage lambda is only partially methylated, extended methylation is observed in the DNA of a substitution mutant of lambda, lambda gal8bio256, and in the lambda derived plasmid, lambdadv93, which is completely methylated. In contrast, phage T7 DNA is not methylated by dam. A suppression of dam methylation of T7 DNA appears to act only in cis dam. A suppression of dam methylation of T7 DNA appears to act only in cis since plasmid DNA replicated in a T7-infected cell is completely methylated. The results are discussed with respect to the participation of the dam methylase in different replication systems.
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PMID:The effect of differential methylation by Escherichia coli of plasmid DNA and phage T7 and lambda DNA on the cleavage by restriction endonuclease MboI from Moraxella bovis. 37 59

The efficiency of bacteriophages CP-54 and CP-55 plating on Bacillus thuringiensis var. kumantoensis H18 (Kum) is decreased about 10-fold as compared with the efficiency of plating on Bacillus thuringiensis var. galleriae H5 (Gal). Bacteriophages having propagated for one cycle in Kum cells might be further grown in this strain without growth restriction. Two site-specific restriction enzymes isolated from Bacillus thuringiensis var. kumantoensis were designated BtkI and BtkII. The endonuclease BtkI recognises the same nucleotide sequence CGCG in DNA as recognised by the restriction endonuclease FnuDII; BtkII recognises the same nucleotide sequence GATC as the endonuclease Sau3A.
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PMID:[Site-specific restrictases from Bacillus thuringiensis var. Kumantoensis]. 132 Jan 99

StsI endonuclease (R.StsI), a type IIs restriction endonuclease found in Streptococcus sanguis 54, recognizes the same sequence as FokI but cleaves at different positions. A DNA fragment that carried the genes for R.StsI and StsI methylase (M.StsI) was cloned from the chromosomal DNA of S.sanguis 54, and its nucleotide sequence was analyzed. The endonuclease gene was 1,806 bp long, corresponding to a protein of 602 amino acid residues (M(r) = 68,388), and the methylase gene was 1,959 bp long, corresponding to a protein of 653 amino acid residues (M(r) = 76,064). The assignment of the endonuclease gene was confirmed by analysis of the N-terminal amino acid sequence. Genes for the two proteins were in a tail-to-tail orientation, separated by a 131-nucleotide intercistronic region. The predicted amino acid sequences between the StsI system and the FokI system showed a 49% identity between the methylases and a 30% identity between the endonucleases. The sequence comparison of M.StsI with various methylases showed that the N-terminal half of M.StsI matches M.NIaIII, and the C-terminal half matches adenine methylases that recognize GATC and GATATC.
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PMID:Cloning and sequence analysis of the StsI restriction-modification gene: presence of homology to FokI restriction-modification enzymes. 138 4

Escherichia coli MutH possesses an extremely weak d(GATC) endonuclease that responds to the state of methylation of the sequence (Welsh, K. M., Lu, A.-L., Clark, S., and Modrich, P. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 15624-15629). MutH endonuclease is activated in a reaction that requires MutS, MutL, ATP, and Mg2+ and depends upon the presence of a mismatch within the DNA. The degree of activation correlates with the efficiency with which a particular mismatch is subject to methyl-directed repair (G-T greater than G-G greater than A-C greater than C-C), and activated MutH responds to the state of DNA adenine methylation. Incision of an unmethylated strand occurs immediately 5' to a d(GATC) sequence, leaving 5' phosphate and 3' hydroxy termini (pN decreases pGpAp-TpC). Unmethylated d(GATC) sites are subject to double strand cleavage by activated MutH, an effect that may account for the killing of dam- mutants by 2-aminopurine. The mechanism of activation apparently requires ATP hydrolysis since adenosine-5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) not only fails to support the reaction but also inhibits activation promoted by ATP. The process has no obligate polarity as d(GATC) site incision by the activated nuclease can occur either 3' or 5' to the mismatch on an unmethylated strand. However, activation is sensitive to DNA topology. Circular heteroduplexes are better substrates than linear molecules, and activity of DNAs of the latter class depends on placement of the mismatch and d(GATC) site within the molecule. MutH activation is supported by a 6-kilobase linear heteroduplex in which the mismatch and d(GATC) site are centrally located and separated by 1 kilobase, but a related molecule, in which the two sites are located near opposite ends of the DNA, is essentially inactive as substrate. We conclude that MutH activation represents the initiation stage of methyl-directed repair and suggest that interaction of a mismatch and a d(GATC) site is provoked by MutS binding to a mispair, with subsequent ATP-dependent translocation of one or more Mut proteins along the helix leading to cleavage at a d(GATC) sequence on either side of the mismatch.
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PMID:Initiation of methyl-directed mismatch repair. 160 80

We have been investigating the structure, dynamics, and ligand-binding properties of the interface that exists between a right-handed conformation and a left-handed conformation (i.e., a B-Z junction) in synthetic DNA oligomers. Since exo- and endonuclease activity is known to be sensitive to the conformation of the template DNA, we have designed and synthesized a DNA oligonucleotide of 20 base pairs (designated as BZ-III) with an MboI recognition site (GATC) at the location of a potential B-Z junction. The activity of the MboI enzyme toward this molecule and DNA oligomers that contain multiple MboI sites located at B-Z junctions was monitored in the absence and presence of the Z-conformation-inducing reagent cobalt hexaammine. In all cases, the activity of the enzyme was enhanced in the presence of cobalt hexaammine. The activity of MboI toward BZ-III, in the presence and absence of cobalt hexaammine, was also examined when the DNA oligomer is also in the presence of the DNA binding drugs actinomycin D, ametantrone, or ethidium bromide. In all cases, the activity of the enzyme was inhibited in the presence of drug. The results suggest that B-Z junctions are structurally unique and that this uniqueness may alter nuclease activity at sites in or near the junction.
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PMID:Enhanced reactivity of a B-Z junction for cleavage by the restriction enzyme MboI. 193 82

We examined a series of extrachromosomal DNA substrates for V(D)J recombination under replicating and nonreplicating conditions. Complete and partial replications were examined by monitoring the loss of prokaryote-specific adenine methylation at 14 to 22 MboI-DpnI restriction sites (GATC) on the substrates. Some of these sites are within 2 bases of the signal sequence ends. We found that neither coding joint nor signal joint formation requires substrate replication. After ruling out replication as a substrate requirement, we determined whether replication had any effect on the efficiency of V(D)J recombination. Quantitation of V(D)J recombination efficiency on nonreplicating substrates requires some method of monitoring the entry of substrate molecules into the cells. We devised such a method by monitoring DNA repair of substrates into which we had substituted deoxyuridine for 10 to 20% of the thymidine nucleotides in the DNA. The substrates which enter the lymphoid cells were repaired efficiently in vivo by the eukaryotic uracil DNA repair system. Upon plasmid harvest, we distinguished repaired (entered) from unrepaired (not entered) plasmids by cleaving unrepaired molecules with uracil DNA glycoylase and Escherichia coli endonuclease IV in vitro. This method of monitoring DNA entry does not appear to underestimate or overestimate the amount of DNA entry. By using this method, we found no significant quantitative effect of DNA replication on V(D)J recombination efficiency.
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PMID:V(D)J recombination: evidence that a replicative mechanism is not required. 207 2

The EcoRV restriction/modification system consists of two enzymes that recognize the DNA sequence GATATC. The EcoRV restriction endonuclease cleaves DNA at this site, but the DNA of Escherichia coli carrying the EcoRV system is protected from this reaction by the EcoRV methyltransferase. However, in vitro, the EcoRV nuclease also cleaves DNA at most sites that differ from the recognition sequence by one base pair. Though the reaction of the nuclease at these sites is much slower than that at the cognate site, it still appears to be fast enough to cleave the chromosome of the cell into many fragments. The possibility that the EcoRV methyltransferase also protects the noncognate sites on the chromosome was examined. The modification enzyme methylated alternate sites in vivo, but these were not the same as the alternate sites for the nuclease. The excess methylation was found at GATC sequences, which are also the targets for the dam methyltransferase of E. coli, a protein that is homologous to the EcoRV methyltransferase. Methylation at these sites gave virtually no protection against the EcoRV nuclease: even when the EcoRV methyltransferase had been overproduced, the cellular DNA remained sensitive to the EcoRV nuclease at its noncognate sites. The viability of E. coli carrying the EcoRV restriction/modification system was found instead to depend on the activity of DNA ligase. Ligase appears to proofread the EcoRV R/M system in vivo: DNA, cut initially in one strand at a noncognate site for the nuclease, is presumably repaired by ligase before the scission of the second strand.
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PMID:Fidelity of DNA recognition by the EcoRV restriction/modification system in vivo. 217 80

Repair of UV-irradiated plasmid DNA microinjected into frog oocytes was measured by two techniques: transformation of repair-deficient (delta uvrB delta recA delta phr) bacteria, and removal of UV endonuclease-sensitive sites (ESS). Transformation efficiencies relative to unirradiated plasmids were used to estimate the number of lethal lesions; the latter were assumed to be Poisson distributed. These estimates were in good agreement with measurements of ESS. By both criteria, plasmid DNA was efficiently repaired, mostly during the first 2 h, when as many as 2 x 10(10) lethal lesions were removed per oocyte. This rate is about 10(6) times the average for removal of ESS from repair-proficient human cells. Repair was slower but still significant after 2 h, but some lethal lesions usually remained after overnight incubation. Most repair occurred in the absence of light, in marked contrast to differentiated frog cells, previously shown to possess photoreactivating but no excision repair activity. There was no increase in the resistance to DpnI restriction of plasmids (methylated in Escherichia coli at GATC sites) incubated in oocytes; this implies no increase in hemimethylated GATC sites, and hence no semiconservative DNA replication. Plasmid substrates capable of either intramolecular or intermolecular homologous recombination were not recombined, whether UV-irradiated or not. Repair of Lac+ plasmids was accompanied by a significant UV-dependent increase in the frequency of Lac- mutants, corresponding to a repair synthesis error frequency on the order of 10(-4) per nucleotide.
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PMID:Rapid and apparently error-prone excision repair of nonreplicating UV-irradiated plasmids in Xenopus laevis oocytes. 235 15

The restriction endonuclease digestion DNA patterns from Brucella abortus strains 19 and 2308 were examined with 11 restriction enzymes (AvaI, BamHI, BglII, BstEII, DdeI, EcoRI, HindIII, KpnI, PstI, XbaI, and SalI). The DNA electrophoretic banding patterns between the 2 strains were highly similar, using this restriction enzyme analysis. Differences were not discernable between B abortus strains 19 and 2308 in any of the restriction banding patterns examined. Methylation at CCGG or GATC sites was not detectable on the basis of digestion with isoschizomers (HpaII and MspI, and DpnI, Sau3AI and MboI). Homology between B abortus strains 19 and 2308 was assessed, using solution-hybridization techniques followed by S1 nuclease assays. Results of these reassociation experiments indicated 98.6 to 99.3% homology between B abortus strains 19 and 2308 with 13.5 to 18.6% homology between B abortus (strains 19 and 2308) and the E coli HB101 control. We concluded that any DNA differences between the 2 B abortus strains are small and will require analysis at the DNA sequence level.
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PMID:DNA homology of Brucella abortus strains 19 and 2308. 254 40

Three proteins, two DNA methylases and an endonuclease, from the DpnII restriction system of Streptococcus pneumoniae recognize the DNA sequence 5' GATC 3' but have very different amino acid sequences, which make them interesting subjects for structural determination. A purification procedure was developed that conveniently yields milligram amounts of the DpnM methylase. The DpnM protein tends to precipitate at reduced ionic strength, and this property was exploited to yield well-formed bipyramidal crystals. By X-ray diffraction, the crystals of DpnM were found to be orthorhombic, with cell dimensions a = 56.9 A, b = 68.2 A, c = 84.5 A; systematic absences identify the space group as P2(1)2(1)2(1). Diffraction extends beyond 3 A, so the crystals may allow structural determination at atomic resolution.
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PMID:Crystallization of the DpnM methylase from the DpnII restriction system of Streptococcus pneumoniae. 254 74


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