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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)
Using oligonucleotide synthesis, we demonstrate a rapid and efficient method for the construction of DNA duplexes containing defined DNA lesions at specific positions. These DNA lesions include apyrimidinic sites, reduced apyrimidinic sites, and base-damage analogues consisting of O-methyl- or O-benzylhydroxylamine-modified apyrimidinic sites. A 49 base pair DNA duplex containing these lesions was specifically incised by the UvrABC nuclease complex. The incision sites occurred predominantly at the eighth phosphodiester bond 5' and the fifth phosphodiester bond 3' to the lesion. Multiple incisions were observed 3' to the lesion. The extent of DNA incisions was base-damage analogues greater than reduced apyrimidinic sites greater than apyrimidinic sites. Introduction of 3' or 5' nicks at the site of a base-damage analogue by treatment of these substrates with either
endonuclease III
or
endonuclease
IV reduced, but did not abolish, subsequent incision by the UvrABC complex, whereas introduction of a 3' nick at an abasic site increased the incision efficiency of the UvrABC complex. These data demonstrate a convergence of base and nucleotide excision repair pathways in the removal of specific base damages.
...
PMID:Damage repertoire of the Escherichia coli UvrABC nuclease complex includes abasic sites, base-damage analogues, and lesions containing adjacent 5' or 3' nicks. 220 4
Ultraviolet irradiation of poly(dG-dC) and poly(dA-dU) in solution produces pyrimidine hydrates that are repaired by bacterial and mammalian DNA glycosylases [Boorstein et al. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 6164-6170]. Escherichia coli
endonuclease III
was used to quantitate the formation and stability of these hydrates in the double-stranded alternating copolymers poly(dG-dC) and poly(dA-dU). When poly(dG-dC) was irradiated with 100 kJ/m2 of 254-nm light at pH 8.0, 2.2% of the cytosine residues were converted to cytosine hydrate (6-hydroxy-5,6-dihydrocytosine) while 0.09% were converted to uracil hydrate (6-hydroxy-5,6-dihydrouracil). To measure the stability of these products, poly(dG-dC) was incubated in solution for up to 24 h after UV irradiation. Cytosine hydrate was stable at 4 degrees C and decayed at 25, 37, and 55 degrees C with half-lives of 75, 25, and 6 h. Uracil hydrate produced in irradiated poly(dA-dU) was stable at 4 degrees C and at 25 degrees C and decayed with a half-life of 6 h at 37 degrees C and less than 0.5 h at 55 degrees C. Uracil hydrate and uracil were also formed in irradiated poly(dG-dC). These experiments demonstrate that UV-induced cytosine hydrate may persist in DNA for prolonged time periods and also undergo deamination to uracil hydrate, which in turn undergoes dehydration to yield uracil. The formation and stability of these photoproducts in DNA may have promoted the evolutionary development of the repair enzyme
endonuclease III
and analogous DNA glycosylase/
endonuclease
activities of higher organisms, as well as the development of uracil-DNA glycosylase.
...
PMID:Formation and stability of repairable pyrimidine photohydrates in DNA. 227 56
Mitochondrial forms of uracil DNA glycosylase and UV
endonuclease
have been purified and characterized from the mouse plasmacytoma cell line, MPC-11. As in other cell types, the mitochondrial uracil DNA glycosylase has properties very similar to those of the nuclear enzyme, although in this case the mitochondrial activity was also distinguishable by extreme sensitivity to dilution. Three mitochondrial UV
endonuclease
activities are also similar to nuclear enzymes; however, the relative amounts of these enzyme activities in the mitochondria is significantly different from that in the nucleus. In particular, mitochondria contain a much higher proportion of an activity analogous to UV
endonuclease III
. Nuclear UV
endonuclease III
activity is absent from XP group D fibroblasts and XP group D lymphoblasts have reduced, but detectable levels of the mitochondrial form of this enzyme. This residual activity differs in its properties from the normal mitochondrial form of UV
endonuclease III
, however. The presence of these enzyme activities which function in base excision repair suggests that such DNA repair occurs in mitochondria. Alternatively, these enzymes might act to mark damaged mitochondrial genomes for subsequent degradation.
...
PMID:Mammalian mitochondrial endonuclease activities specific for ultraviolet-irradiated DNA. 231 45
The mechanism of action of a DNA repair
endonuclease
isolated from calf thymus was determined. The calf thymus
endonuclease
possesses a substrate specificity nearly identical with that of Escherichia coli
endonuclease III
following DNA damage by high doses of UV light, osmium tetroxide, and other oxidizing agents. The calf thymus enzyme incises damaged DNA at sites of pyrimidines. A cytosine photoproduct was found to be the primary monobasic UV adduct. The calf thymus
endonuclease
and E. coli endonuclease III were found to possess similar, but not identical, DNA incision mechanisms. The mechanism of action of the calf thymus
endonuclease
was deduced by analysis of the 3' and 5' termini of the enzyme-generated DNA scission products with DNA sequencing methodologies and HPLC analysis of the material released by the enzyme following DNA damage. The calf thymus
endonuclease
removes UV light and osmium tetroxide damaged bases via an N-glycosylase activity followed by a 3' apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP)
endonuclease
activity. The calf thymus
endonuclease
also possesses a novel 5' AP
endonuclease
activity not possessed by
endonuclease III
. The product of this three-step mechanism is a nucleoside-free site flanked by 3'-and 5'-terminal phosphate groups. These results indicate the conservation of both substrate specificity and mechanism of action in the enzymatic removal of oxidative base damage between prokaryotes and eukaryotes. We propose the name redoxy endonucleases for this group of enzymes.
...
PMID:Mechanism of action of a mammalian DNA repair endonuclease. 242 22
A cloned gene, designated nfo, caused overproduction of an EDTA-resistant
endonuclease
specific for apurinic-apyrimidinic sites in DNA. The sedimentation coefficient of the enzyme was similar to that of
endonuclease
IV. An insertion mutation was constructed in vitro and transferred from a plasmid to the Escherichia coli chromosome. nfo mutants had an increased sensitivity to the alkylating agents methyl methanesulfonate and mitomycin C and to the oxidants tert-butyl hydroperoxide and bleomycin. The nfo mutation enhanced the killing of xth (exonuclease III) mutants by methyl methanesulfonate, H2O2, tert-butyl hydroperoxide, and gamma rays, and it enhanced their mutability by methyl methanesulfonate. It also increased the temperature sensitivity of an xth dut (dUTPase) mutant that is defective in the repair of uracil-containing DNA. These results are consistent with earlier findings that
endonuclease
IV and exonuclease III both cleave DNA 5' to an apurinic-apyrimidinic site and that exonuclease III is more active. However, nfo mutants were more sensitive to tert-butyl hydroperoxide and to bleomycin than were xth mutants, suggesting that
endonuclease
IV might recognize some lesions that exonuclease III does not. The mutants displayed no marked increase in sensitivity to 254-nm UV radiation, and the addition of an nth (
endonuclease III
) mutation to nfo or nfo xth mutants did not significantly increase their sensitivity to any of the agents tested.
...
PMID:Endonuclease IV (nfo) mutant of Escherichia coli. 243 Sep 46
The oligonucleotide [5'-32P]pdT8d(-)dTn, containing an apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) site [d(-)], yields three radioactive products when incubated at alkaline pH: two of them, forming a doublet approximately at the level of pdT8dA when analysed by polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis, are the result of the beta-elimination reaction, whereas the third is pdT8p resulting from beta delta-elimination. The incubation of [5'-32P]pdT8d(-)dTn, hybridized with poly(dA), with E. coli endonuclease III yields two radioactive products which have the same electrophoretic behaviour as the doublet obtained by alkaline beta-elimination. The oligonucleotide pdT8d(-) is degraded by the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of T4 DNA polymerase as well as pdT8dA, showing that a base-free deoxyribose at the 3' end is not an obstacle for this activity. The radioactive products from [5'-32P]pdT8d(-)dTn cleaved by alkaline beta-elimination or by E. coli endonuclease III are not degraded by the 3'-5' exonuclease activity of T4 DNA polymerase. When DNA containing AP sites labelled with 32P 5' to the base-free deoxyribose labelled with 3H in the 1' and 2' positions is degraded by E. coli
endonuclease
VI (exonuclease III) and snake venom phosphodiesterase, the two radionuclides are found exclusively in deoxyribose 5-phosphate and the 3H/32P ratio in this sugar phosphate is the same as in the substrate DNA. When DNA containing these doubly-labelled AP sites is degraded by alkaline treatment or with Lys-Trp-Lys, followed by E. coli
endonuclease
VI (exonuclease III), some 3H is found in a volatile compound (probably 3H2O) whereas the 3H/32P ratio is decreased in the resulting sugar phosphate which has a chromatographic behaviour different from that of deoxyribose 5-phosphate. Treatment of the DNA containing doubly-labelled AP sites with E. coli endonuclease III, then with E. coli
endonuclease
VI (exonuclease III), also results in the loss of 3H and the formation of a sugar phosphate with a lower 3H/32P ratio that behaves chromatographically as the beta-elimination product digested with E. coli
endonuclease
VI (exonuclease III). From these data, we conclude that E. coli endonuclease III cleaves the phosphodiester bond 3' to the AP site, but that the cleavage is not a hydrolysis leaving a base-free deoxyribose at the 3' end as it has been so far assumed. The cleavage might be the result of a beta-elimination analogous to the one produced by an alkaline pH or Lys-Trp-Lys. Thus it would seem that E. coli '
endonuclease III
' is, after all, not an
endonuclease
.
...
PMID:Escherichia coli endonuclease III is not an endonuclease but a beta-elimination catalyst. 243 70
Previous DNA sequence analysis of bleomycin-induced forward mutations in repackaged lambda phage has suggested SOS-dependent replicative bypass of oxidized apyrimidinic sites as a possible mechanism of mutagenesis. In order to evaluate this hypothesis further, frequencies of mutation to a clear-plaque phenotype were compared for bleomycin-damaged phage grown in various repair-deficient strains of Escherichia coli. Survival of bleomycin-damaged phage was virtually identical in all host strains. Studies in SOS-deficient strains indicated specific requirements for functional recA+ and umuC+ alleles in the generation of the majority of bleomycin-induced mutations, as well as a less stringent requirement for induction of the SOS response by ultraviolet irradiation of the host cells. These results are expected for mutagenesis resulting from apyrimidinic sites. However, the mutation frequency for bleomycin-damaged phage was the same whether the phage were grown in a wild-type strain or in strains deficient in apurinic/apyrimidinic repair endonucleases; this was true even for an nth-nfo-xth- strain lacking all three major apurinic/apyrimidinic endonucleases (
endonuclease III
,
endonuclease
IV, and exonuclease III). Likewise, phage grown in an
endonuclease
IV-overproducing strain showed the same mutation frequency as those grown in wild-type cells. These data suggest that either i) bleomycin-induced mutagenesis results from SOS-dependent bypass of lesions other than apyrimidinic sites or ii) the number of apyrimidinic sites available for SOS processing is virtually independent of the level of apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease activity in the cell. It is possible that a fraction of the apyrimidinic sites induced by bleomycin either are intrinsically resistant to repair or undergo secondary reactions that render them resistant.
...
PMID:Mutagenesis of bleomycin-damaged lambda phage in SOS-deficient and repair endonuclease-deficient Escherichia coli. 245 58
A DNA repair
endonuclease
(redoxyendonuclease) was isolated from bakers' yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae). The enzyme has been purified by a series of column chromatography steps and cleaves OsO4-damaged, double-stranded DNA at sites of thymine glycol and heavily UV-irradiated DNA at sites of cytosine, thymine, and guanine photoproducts. The base specificity and mechanism of phosphodiester bond cleavage for the yeast redoxyendonuclease appear to be identical with those of Escherichia coli
endonuclease III
when thymine glycol containing, end-labeled DNA fragments of defined sequence are employed as substrates. Yeast redoxyendonuclease has an apparent molecular size of 38,000-42,000 daltons and is active in the absence of divalent metal cations. The identification of such an enzyme in yeast may be of value in the elucidation of the biochemical basis for radiation sensitivity in certain yeast mutants.
...
PMID:Yeast redoxyendonuclease, a DNA repair enzyme similar to Escherichia coli endonuclease III. 245 59
The genetic requirements for the excision repair of thymine glycols, urea residues, and apurinic (AP) sites were examined by measuring the survival in Escherichia coli mutants of phi X174 replicative form (RF) I transfecting DNA containing selectively introduced lesions. phi X RF I DNA containing thymine glycols was inactivated at a greater rate in mutants deficient in
endonuclease III
(nth) than in wild-type hosts, suggesting that
endonuclease III
is involved in the repair of thymine glycols in vivo. phi X RF I DNA containing thymine glycols was also inactivated at a greater rate in mutants that were deficient in both exonuclease III and
endonuclease
IV (xth nfo) than in wild-type hosts, suggesting that a class II AP endonuclease is required for the in vivo processing of thymine glycols. phi X duplex-transfecting DNA containing urea residues or AP sites was inactivated at a greater rate in xth nfo double mutants than in wild-type, but not single-mutant, hosts, suggesting that exonuclease III or
endonuclease
IV is required for the repair of these damages and that either activity can substitute for the other. These data are in agreement with the known in vitro substrate specificities of
endonuclease III
, exonuclease III, and
endonuclease
IV.
...
PMID:Excision repair of thymine glycols, urea residues, and apurinic sites in Escherichia coli. 245 10
Bleomycin and neocarzinostatin induce modified apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites by oxidation of the sugar moiety in DNA. In order to quantitatively assess the susceptibility of these lesions to repair endonucleases, drug-treated 3H-labeled colE1 DNA was mixed with 14C-labeled heat-depurinated DNA, and
endonuclease
-susceptible sites in the mixture were titrated with various AP endonucleases or with polyamines. Single- and double-strand breaks were quantitated by determining the fractions of supercoiled, nicked circular, and linear molecules. Exonuclease III and endonucleases III and IV of Escherichia coli, as well as putrescine, produced a nearly 2-fold increase in single-strand breaks in bleomycin-treated DNA, indicating cleavage of drug-induced AP sites. The bleomycin-induced AP sites were comparable to heat-induced sites in their sensitivity to E. coli endonucleases III and IV but were cleaved by exonuclease III only at high concentrations. Bleomycin-induced AP sites were much more sensitive to cleavage by putrescine than heat-induced sites. Treatment with putrescine or very high concentrations of
endonuclease III
also increased the number of double-strand breaks in bleomycin-treated DNA, suggesting a minor class of lesion consisting of an AP site accompanied by a closely opposed break in the complementary strand. These complex lesions were resistant to cleavage by
endonuclease
IV. However, when colE1 DNA was treated with neocarzinostatin, subsequent treatment with putrescine,
endonuclease
IV, or very high concentrations of
endonuclease III
produced a dramatic increase in double-strand breaks but no detectable increase in single-strand breaks. These results suggest that virtually all neocarzinostatin-induced AP sites are accompanied by a closely opposed strand break.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effect of apurinic/apyrimidinic endonucleases and polyamines on DNA treated with bleomycin and neocarzinostatin: specific formation and cleavage of closely opposed lesions in complementary strands. 245 92
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