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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)
A human apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease activity, called AP
endonuclease
I, is missing from or altered specifically in cells cultured from Xeroderma pigmentosum group-D individuals (XP-D cells) (Kuhnlein, U., Lee, B., Penhoet, E. E., and Linn, S. (1978) Nucleic Acids Res. 5,951-960). We have now observed that another nuclease activity, UV
endonuclease III
, is similarly not detected in XP-D cells and is inseparable from the AP
endonuclease
I activity. This activity preferentially cleaves the phosphodiester backbone of heavily ultraviolet-irradiated DNA at unknown lesions as well as at one of the phosphodiester bonds within a cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer. The nuclease activities have been purified from mouse cells to yield a peptide of M(r) = 32,000, whose sequence indicates identity with ribosomal protein S3. The nuclease activities all cross-react with immunopurified antibody directed against authentic rat ribosomal protein S3, and, upon expression in Escherichia coli of a cloned rat cDNA for ribosomal protein S3, each of the activities was recovered and was indistinguishable from those of the mammalian UV
endonuclease III
. Moreover, the protein expressed in E. coli and its activities cross-react with the rat protein antibody. Ribosomal protein S3 contains a potential nuclear localization signal, and the protein isolated as a nuclease also has a glycosylation pattern consistent with a nuclear localization as determined by lectin binding. The unexpected role of a ribosomal protein in DNA damage processing and the unexplained inability to detect the nuclease activities in extracts from XP-D cells are discussed.
...
PMID:Implication of mammalian ribosomal protein S3 in the processing of DNA damage. 777 13
Deinococcus radiodurans is the most radioresistant bacterium discovered to date. Recently it has been demonstrated that this organism contains the DNA repair enzyme uracil-DNA glycosylase and an apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP)
endonuclease
that may function as part of a DNA base excision repair pathway. We demonstrate here that a DNA deoxyribophosphodiesterase activity that acts on incised AP sites in DNA to remove deoxyribose-phosphate groups is found in lysates prepared from D. radiodurans cells. The partially purified activity was found to be smaller in size than the E. coli dRpase activity, with an estimated molecular weight of 25-30 kDa. In addition, an activity that recognizes and cleaves DNA containing thymine glycols was also detected, with a molecular weight of approximately 30 kDa. This enzyme may be analogous to the thymine glycol glycosylase/AP lyase
endonuclease III
of E. coli.
...
PMID:DNA deoxyribophosphodiesterase and an activity that cleaves DNA containing thymine glycol adducts in Deinococcus radiodurans. 818 99
Repair endonucleases, viz.
endonuclease III
, formamidopyrimidine-DNA glycosylase (FPG protein),
endonuclease
IV, exonuclease III and UV
endonuclease
, were used to analyse the modifications induced in bacteriophage PM2 DNA by 333 nm laser irradiation in the presence of acetone or acetophenone. In addition to pyrimidine dimers sensitive to UV
endonuclease
, 5,6-dihydropyrimidines (sensitive to
endonuclease III
) and base modifications sensitive to FPG protein were generated. The level of the last in the case of acetone was 50% and in the case of acetophenone 9% of the level of pyrimidine dimers. HPLC analysis of the bases excised by FPG protein revealed that least some of them were 8-hydroxyguanine (7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine). In the damage induced by direct excitation of DNA at 254 nm, which was analysed for comparison, the number of FPG protein-sensitive base modifications was only 0.6% of that of the pyrimidine dimers. Mechanistic studies demonstrated that the formation of FPG protein-sensitive modifications did not involve singlet oxygen, as the damage was not increased in D2O as solvent. Hydroxyl radicals, superoxide and H2O2 were also not involved, since the relative number of single strand breaks and of sites of base loss (AP sites) was much lower than in the case of DNA damage induced by hydroxyl radicals and since the presence of SOD or catalase had no effect on the extent of the damage. However, the mechanism did involve an intermediate that was much more efficiently quenched by azide ions than the triplet excited carbonyl compounds and which was possibly a purine radical. Together, the data indicate that excited triplet carbonyl compounds react with DNA not only by triplet-triplet energy transfer yielding pyrimidine dimers, but also by electron transfer yielding preferentially base modifications sensitive to FPG protein, which include 8-hydroxyguanine.
...
PMID:Endonuclease-sensitive DNA modifications induced by acetone and acetophenone as photosensitizers. 838 42
A number of repair
endonuclease
, viz.
endonuclease III
, formamidopyrimidine-DNA glycosylase (FPG protein),
endonuclease
IV, exonuclease III and UV
endonuclease
, is used to simultaneously quantify various types of DNA modifications, which were induced by agents that generate reactive oxygen species. Under cell-free conditions, two types of DNA damage profiles are obtained. The profiles induced by chemically generated singlet oxygen and by various photosensitizers (acridine orange, methylene blue, riboflavin, hematoporphyrin) plus light are dominated by base modifications sensitive to FPG protein, while 5,6-dihydropyrimidines (recognized by
endonuclease III
), sites of base loss (AP sites, recognized by
endonuclease
IV and exonuclease III) and strand breaks are minor lesions. In contrast, the DNA damage profile induced by hydroxyl radicals (gamma-rays) consists of approx. equal levels of base modifications. AP sites and strand breaks. The damage profiles induced by Fe(III)-EDTA in the presence of superoxide and by Fe(III)-nitrilotriacetate in the presence of H2O2 do not differ from that by hydroxyl radicals. The damage profile induced by Cu(II)-phenanthroline deviates by high levels of AP sites that are recognized by
endonuclease
IV and exonuclease III-but not by those AP endonucleases which cleave at the 3' site-and probably represent AP sites oxidized at C-1'. The damage induced by Fe(III)-bleomycin plus H2O2 deviates by an increased level of double strand breaks and the absence of
endonuclease
-sensitive base modifications. Cellular DNA damage profiles are obtained from bacteria, cultured mammalian cells and mammalian mitochondria after exposure to acridine orange plus visible light. A comparison with the cell-free profiles reveals that the damage in all three systems is not induced indirectly by hydroxyl radicals or an activation of cellular nucleases, but by the same mechanism that is responsible for the cell-free DNA damage.
...
PMID:Use of repair endonucleases to characterize DNA damage induced by reactive oxygen species in cellular and cell-free systems. 838 92
N-Hydroxypyridine-2-thione (2-HPT), known to release hydroxyl radicals on irradiation with visible light, and two related compounds, viz. N-hydroxypyridine-4-thione (4-HPT) and N-hydroxyacridine-9-thione (HAT), were tested for their potency to induce DNA damage in L1210 mouse leukemia cells and in isolated DNA from bacteriophage PM2. DNA single-strand breaks and modifications sensitive to various repair endonucleases (Fpg protein,
endonuclease III
, exonuclease III, T4 endonuclease V) were quantified. Illumination of cell-free DNA in the presence of 2-HPT and 4-HPT gave rise to damage profiles characteristic for hydroxyl radicals, i.e. single-strand breaks and the various
endonuclease
-sensitive modifications were formed in the same ratios as after exposure to established hydroxyl radical sources. In contrast, HAT plus light gave rise to a completely different DNA damage profile, namely that characteristic for singlet oxygen. Experiments with various scavengers (t-butanol, catalase, superoxide dismutase) and in D2O as solvent confirmed that hydroxyl radicals are directly responsible for the DNA damage caused by photoexcited 2-HPT and 4-HPT, while the damage by HAT plus light is mediated by singlet oxygen and type I reactions. The type of DNA damage characteristic of hydroxyl radicals was also observed in L1210 mouse leukemia cells when treated with 2-HPT plus light or with H2O2 at 0 degrees C. t-Butanol (2%) inhibited the cellular DNA damage by approximately 50%. A dose of 2-HPT plus light that generated single-strand breaks at a frequency of 5 x 10(-7)/bp was associated with 50% cell survival. No DNA damage and cytotoxicity was observed after treatment with 2-HPT in the dark. We propose that 2-HTP and 4-HTP may serve as new agents to study the consequences of DNA damage induced by hydroxyl radicals in cells. In addition, the data provide direct evidence that hydroxyl radicals are ultimately responsible for the genotoxic effects caused by H2O2 in the dark.
...
PMID:Photolysis of N-hydroxpyridinethiones: a new source of hydroxyl radicals for the direct damage of cell-free and cellular DNA. 864 78
One, two or four copies of the 'helix-hairpin-helix' (HhH) DNA-binding motif are predicted to occur in 14 homologous families of proteins. The predicted DNA-binding function of this motif is shown to be consistent with the crystallographic structure of rat polymerase beta, complexed with DNA template-primer [Pelletier, H., Sawaya, M.R., Kumar, A., Wilson, S.H. and Kraut, J. (1994) Science 264, 1891-1903] and with biochemical data. Five crystal structures of predicted HhH motifs are currently known: two from rat pol beta and one each in
endonuclease III
, AlkA and the 5' nuclease domain of Taq pol I. These motifs are more structurally similar to each other than to any other structure in current databases, including helix-turn-helix motifs. The clustering of the five HhH structures separately from other bi-helical structures in searches indicates that all members of the 14 families of proteins described herein possess similar HhH structures. By analogy with the rat pol beta structure, it is suggested that each of these HhH motifs bind DNA in a non-sequence-specific manner, via the formation of hydrogen bonds between protein backbone nitrogens and DNA phosphate groups. This type of interaction contrasts with the sequence-specific interactions of other motifs, including helix-turn-helix structures. Additional evidence is provided that alphaherpesvirus virion host shutoff proteins are members of the polymerase I 5'-nuclease and FEN1-like
endonuclease
gene family, and that a novel HhH-containing DNA-binding domain occurs in the kinesin-like molecule nod, and in other proteins such as cnjB, emb-5 and SPT6.
...
PMID:The helix-hairpin-helix DNA-binding motif: a structural basis for non-sequence-specific recognition of DNA. 869 86
Ionizing radiation and other free radical-generating systems induce a great variety of oxidative damage to DNA bases. The major known lesions are repaired by two well-characterized DNA glycosylases of Escherichia coli,
endonuclease III
(Nth) and formamidopyrimidine-DNA glycosylase (Fpg), which have associated AP lyase activities. To detect and characterize potentially harmful oxidative base DNA lesions that may be repaired by alternative means, we exposed plasmid DNA to low doses of gamma-rays and removed the major base lesions by treatment with Nth and Fpg proteins. The closed circular DNA remaining after these treatments was used as a substrate of the UvrABC
endonuclease
complex from E. coli and as a template in a DNA polymerase arrest assay in vitro. The circular DNA contained lesions that were recognized and incised by the UvrABC nuclease and also lesions that blocked DNA polymerization in vitro. The blocking lesions were more abundant in DNA irradiated under nitrogen than under air and occurred mainly at tandem guanines; however, they were also frequent at tandem adenines and tandem cytosines.
...
PMID:DNA base damage induced by ionizing radiation recognized by Escherichia coli UvrABC nuclease but not Nth or Fpg proteins. 878 61
One gene locus on chromosome I in Saccharomyces cerevisiae encodes a protein (YAB5_YEAST; accession no. P31378) with local sequence similarity to the DNA repair glycosylase
endonuclease III
from Escherichia coli. We have analyzed the function of this gene, now assigned NTG1 (
endonuclease
three-like glycosylase 1), by cloning, mutant analysis, and gene expression in E. coli. Targeted gene disruption of NTG1 produces a mutant that is sensitive to H2O2 and menadione, indicating that NTG1 is required for repair of oxidative DNA damage in vivo. Northern blot analysis and expression studies of a NTG1-lacZ gene fusion showed that NTG1 is induced by cell exposure to different DNA damaging agents, particularly menadione, and hence belongs to the DNA damage-inducible regulon in S. cerevisiae. When expressed in E. coli, the NTG1 gene product cleaves plasmid DNA damaged by osmium tetroxide, thus, indicating specificity for thymine glycols in DNA similarly as is the case for EndoIII. However, NTG1 also releases formamidopyrimidines from DNA with high efficiency and, hence, represents a glycosylase with a novel range of substrate recognition. Sequences similar to NTG1 from other eukaryotes, including Caenorhabditis elegans, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, and mammals, have recently been entered in the GenBank suggesting the universal presence of NTG1-like genes in higher organisms. S. cerevisiae NTG1 does not have the [4Fe-4S] cluster DNA binding domain characteristic of the other members of this family.
...
PMID:Base excision of oxidative purine and pyrimidine DNA damage in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by a DNA glycosylase with sequence similarity to endonuclease III from Escherichia coli. 885 49
Escherichia coli exonuclease III and
endonuclease III
are two distinct DNA-repair enzymes that can cleave apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites by different mechanisms. While the AP
endonuclease
activity of exonuclease III generates a 3'-hydroxyl group at AP sites, the AP lyase activity of
endonuclease III
produces a 3'-alpha,beta unsaturated aldehyde that prevents DNA-repair synthesis. Saccharomyces cerevisiae Apn1 is the major AP
endonuclease
/3'-diesterase that also produces a 3'-hydroxyl group at the AP site, but it is unrelated to either exonuclease III or
endonuclease III
. apn1 deletion mutants are unable to repair AP sites generated by the alkylating agent methyl methane sulphonate and display a spontaneous mutator phenotype. This work shows that either exonuclease III or
endonuclease III
can functionally replace yeast Apn1 in the repair of AP sites. Two conclusions can be derived from these findings. The first of these conclusions is that yeast cells can complete the repair of AP sites even though they are cleaved by AP lyase. This implies that AP lyase can contribute significantly to the repair of AP sites and that yeast cells have the ability to process the alpha,beta unsaturated aldehyde produced by
endonuclease III
. The second of these conclusions is that unrepaired AP sites are strictly the cause of the high spontaneous mutation rate in the apn1 deletion mutant.
...
PMID:Normal processing of AP sites in Apn1-deficient Saccharomyces cerevisiae is restored by Escherichia coli genes expressing either exonuclease III or endonuclease III. 919 99
Escherichia coli endonuclease VIII (endo VIII) was identified as an enzyme that, like
endonuclease III
(endo III), removes radiolysis products of thymine including thymine glycol, dihydrothymine, beta-ureidoisobutyric acid, and urea from double-stranded plasmid or phage DNA and cleaves the DNA strand at abasic (AP) sites (Melamede, R. J., Hatahet, Z., Kow, Y. W., Ide., H., and Wallace, S. S. (1994) Biochemistry 33, 1255-1264). Using apparently homogeneous endo VIII protein, we now show that endo VIII removes from double-stranded oligodeoxyribonucleotides the stable oxidative products of cytosine, 5-hydroxycytosine and 5-hydroxyuracil. Endo VIII cleaved the damage-containing DNA strand by beta,delta-elimination as does formamidopyrimidine DNA glycosylase (Fpg). Like Fpg, endo VIII also excised the 5'-terminal deoxyribose phosphate from an
endonuclease
IV (endo IV) pre-incised AP site. Thus, in addition to amino acid sequence homology (Jiang, D., Hatahet, Z., Blaisdell, J., Melamede, R. J., and Wallace, S. S. (1997) J. Bacteriol. 179, 3773-3782), endo VIII shares a number of catalytic properties with Fpg. In addition, endo VIII specifically bound to oligodeoxynucleotides containing a reduced AP site with a stoichiometry of 1:1 for protein to DNA with an apparent equilibrium dissociation constant of 3.9 nM. Like Fpg and endo III, the DNase I footprint was small with contact sites primarily on the damage-containing strand; unlike Fpg and endo III, the DNA binding of endo VIII to DNA was asymmetric, 3' to the reduced AP site.
...
PMID:Characterization of Escherichia coli endonuclease VIII. 940 26
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