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Query: EC:3.1.31.1 (
micrococcal nuclease
)
2,818
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The structure of the
staphylococcal nuclease
(EC 3.1.4.7)-thymidine 3',5'-bisphosphate-Ca(2+) (enzyme-inhibitor) complex has been extended to 1.5-A resolution by using much additional data and a phase refinement scheme based on an electron-density map modification procedure. By correlating this structure with the known properties of the enzyme, a mechanism of action is proposed that involves nucleophilic attack on
phosphorus
by a water molecule, which is bound to Glu-43, in line with the 5'-CH(2)O(H) leaving group. The carboxylate of Glu-43 promotes this attack by acting as a general base for the abstraction of a proton from the attacking water molecule. Nucleophilic attack is further facilitated by polarization of the phosphodiester by an ionic interaction between a Ca(2+) ion and a phosphate oxygen atom and by four hydrogen bonds to phosphate oxygen atoms from guanidinium ions of Arg-35 and Arg-87. These interactions may also catalyze the reaction by lowering the energy of a trigonal bipyramidal transition state. The hydrolysis of nucleic acid substrate proceeds by cleavage of the 5'-P-O bond to yield a free 5'-hydroxyl group and a terminal, 3'-phosphate monoester group. In the inhibitor complex the only general acid group found in a position to donate a proton to the leaving 5'-oxygen is the guanidinium ion of Arg-87. Alternative proton donors, presently lacking direct structural support, could be the phenolic hydroxyl group of Tyr-113 or a water molecule. The precision and rigidity of the location of the reactants at the active site and the probable dual binding and catalytic roles of the guanidinium ions of Arg-35 and Arg-87 are especially noteworthy.
...
PMID:Staphylococcal nuclease: proposed mechanism of action based on structure of enzyme-thymidine 3',5'-bisphosphate-calcium ion complex at 1.5-A resolution. 28 45
Polynucleotide phosphorylase catalyzes the formation of polynucleotides from the Sp diastereomer of adenosine 5'-O-(l-thiodiphosphate) ADPalphaS), whereas the Rp diastereomer is a competitive inhibitor. The absolute configuration of the phosphorothioate diester bond in the polymer was determined by copolymerizing ADPalpha S, Sp isomer with UDP and degrading the resulting copolymer with R Nase A and
spleen phosphodiesterase
to give, inter alia, uridine 2',-3'-cyclic phosphorothioate. The latter product was shown to be the endo isomer by high-performance liquid chromatography. No evidence for the presence of the exo isomer was obtained. It can thus be concluded that the Sp diastereomer of ADPalphaS polymerizes with inversion of configuration at
phosphorus
without racemization to give a phosphorothioate diester bond with the Rp configuration.
...
PMID:Stereochemistry of internucleotide bond formation by polynucleotide phosphorylase from Micrococcus luteus. 42 Jul 91
A highly homogeneous 145-base-pair fragment of double helical poly(dA-dT) . poly(dA-dT) was obtained by
micrococcal nuclease
digestion of a semisynthetic chromatin prepared from the nucleosome core histones (H2A, H2B, H3, H4) and the synthetic polydeoxyribonucleotide. In contrast to higher molecular weight alternating copolymers, this fragment displayed two resolved 31P NMR signals, separated by 24 Hz at 10.93 MHz. The two signals were of equal intensity at all temperatures less than the Tm for the fragment. Analyses of the possible origins for the two reasonances leads to the conclusion that the phosphodiester backbone of this DNA contains two distinct
phosphorus
environments, probably in an alternating array. We suggest that this may indicate the presence of sequence-dependent local variation in the helical structure of DNA in general.
...
PMID:An alternating conformation characterizes the phosphodiester backbone of poly(dA-dT) in solution. 46 10
The biphasic nature of the time course of the action of
staphylococcal nuclease
on thymus nucleohistone was confirmed by studying the hydrolysis of this nucleoprotein at various enzyme concentrations. The transition from the rapid first to the sluggish second phase of the time course was particularly distinct at the highest enzyme concentrations. The rapid initial phase of the hydrolysis curve leveled off sharply when between 60 and 65 per cent of the total TNH
phosphorus
had been converted to acid-soluble
phosphorus
compounds. The insoluble complexes of TNH with protamines were found to be very resistant against the action of
staphylococcal nuclease
. The time course of the action of
staphylococcal nuclease
on a commercial nucleoprotamine of salmon testicles was found to become very sluggish when between 35 and 40 per cent of its total
phosphorus
had been converted to acid-soluble
phosphorus
compounds. When nucleoprotamines prepared in the laboratory from the secreted sperm cell suspension of Brown Brook Trout were digested with
staphylococcal nuclease
, only between 15 and 20 per cent of the total
phosphorus
were cleaved to acid-soluble
phosphorus
compounds during the rapid phase of the nuclease action. The respective values for the
phosphorus
fractions available for magnesium-binding and those susceptible to the rapid cleavage by
staphylococcal nuclease
were found to be very similar.
...
PMID:The action of staphylococcal nuclease (EC-number 3. 1. 4. 7.) on thymus nucleohistone (TNH) and on some nucleoprotamines. 112 11
The active sites of enzymes can be studied in great detail using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The determination of pKa values of active site histidine residues in bovine pancreatic ribonuclease and the characterization of the binding of peptide hormones to carrier proteins are two such examples. The study of the active site of
staphylococcal nuclease
is another example and is presented in detail in this paper. The structure of 3'5'-thymidine diphosphate bound in the active site of
staphylococcal nuclease
has been studied by measuring the relaxation rate enhancement of substrate analog nuclei by a paramagnetic metal ion. The lanthanide ion, Gd(III), was substituted for Ca(II) in the formation of the ternary complex of nuclease: Gd(III) : 3'5'-thymidine diphosphate. Measurements were made of the transverse relaxation rates of protons and the longitudinal and transverse relaxation rates of the
phosphorus
nuclei of bound nucleotide. Internuclear distances between the metal ion and atoms of the 3'5'-thymidine diphosphate nucleotide were determined from these data by using the Solomon-Bloembergen equation. In general, these distances corresponded closely to those determined by previous X-ray crystallography of the thymidine diphosphate complex. These internuclear distances were also used with a computer program and graphics display to solve for metal : nucleotide geometries which were consistent with the experimental data. A geometry similar to the structure of the metal : nucleotide complex bound to nuclease determined by X-ray analysis was one of the solutions to this computer modeling process. For
staphylococcal nuclease
the NMR and X-ray methods yield compatible high resolution information about the structure of the active site.
...
PMID:Application of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to proteins. 114 35
The conformation of the
staphylococcal nuclease
-bound metal-dTdA complex, previously determined by NMR methods [Weber, D.J., Mullen, G.P., Mildvan, A.S. (1991) Biochemistry 30:7425-7437] was docked into the X-ray structure of the enzyme-Ca(2+)-3',5'-pdTp complex [Loll, P.J., Lattman, E.E. (1989) Proteins: Struct., Funct., Genet. 5:183-201] by superimposing the metal ions, taking into account intermolecular nuclear Overhauser effects from assigned aromatic proton resonances of Tyr-85, Tyr-113, and Tyr-115 to proton resonances of the leaving dA moiety of dTdA, and energy minimization to relieve small overlaps. The proton resonances of the Phe, Tyr, and Trp residues of the enzyme in the ternary enzyme-La(3+)-dTdA complex were sequence specifically assigned by 2D phase-sensitive NOESY, with and without deuteration of the aromatic protons of the Tyr residues, and by 2D heteronuclear multiple quantum correlation (HMQC) spectroscopy and 3D NOESY-HMQC spectroscopy with 15N labeling. While resonances of most Phe, Tyr and Trp residues were unshifted by the substrate dTdA from those found in the enzyme-La(3+)-3',5'-pdTp complex and the enzyme-Ca(2+)-3',5'-pdTp complex, proton resonances of Tyr-85, Tyr-113, Tyr-115, and Phe-34 were shifted by 0.08 to 0.33 ppm and the 15N resonance of Tyr-113 was shifted by 2.1 ppm by the presence of substrate. The optimized position of enzyme-bound dTdA shows the 5'-dA leaving group to partially overlap the inhibitor, 3',5'-pdTp (in the X-ray structure). The 3'-TMP moiety of dTdA points toward the solvent in a channel defined by Ile-18, Asp-19, Thr-22, Lys-45, and His-46. The phosphate of dTdA is coordinated by the metal, and an adjacent inner sphere water ligand is positioned to donate a hydrogen bond to the general base Glu-43 and to attack the
phosphorus
with inversion. Arg-35 and Arg-87 donate monodentate hydrogen bonds to different phosphate oxygens of dTdA, with Arg-87 positioned to protonate the leaving 5'-oxygen of dA, thus clarifying the mechanism of hydrolysis. Model building of an additional 5'-dGMP onto the 3'-oxygen of dA placed this third nucleotide onto a surface cleft near residues Glu-80, Asp-83, Lys-84, and Tyr-115 with its 3'-OH group accessible to the solvent, thus defining the size of the substrate binding site as accommodating a trinucleotide.
...
PMID:NMR docking of a substrate into the X-ray structure of staphylococcal nuclease. 151 99
In principle, the quantitative effect of a second mutation on a mutant enzyme may be antagonistic, absent, partially additive, additive, or synergistic with respect to the first mutation. Depending on the kinetic or thermodynamic parameter measured, the D21E and R87G mutations of
staphylococcal nuclease
exhibit four of these five categories of interaction in the double mutant. While Vmax of the R87G single mutant of
staphylococcal nuclease
is 10(4.8)-fold lower than that of the wild-type enzyme and the Vmax of the D21E single mutant is 10(3.0)-fold below that of wild type, the double mutant D21E + R87G was found to lose a factor of only 10(4.1) in Vmax relative to wild type, rather than the product of the two single mutations (10(7.8)). These results suggest antagonistic structural effects of the individual R87G and D21E mutations. An alternative explanation for the nonadditivity of effects, namely, the separate functioning of these residues in a stepwise mechanism involving the prior attack of water on
phosphorus
followed by protonation of the leaving group by Arg-87, is unlikely since no enzyme-bound phosphorane intermediate (less than 1% of [enzyme]) was found under steady-state conditions on the R87G mutant by 31P NMR at 242.9 MHz. Like the effects on Vmax, quantitatively similar antagonistic effects of the two mutations were detected on the binding of divalent cations in binary enzyme-Ca2+ and enzyme-Mn2+ complexes and in the ternary enzyme-Ca2(+)-5'-pdTdA complex, suggesting that the effects on Vmax result from antagonistic structural changes at the Ca2+ binding site. Simple additive weakening effects of the two mutations were found on the binding of the substrate 5'-pdTdA, in both the absence and the presence of the divalent cations, Mn2+ and Ca2+. However, synergistic effects of the two mutations were found on the binding of the substrate analogue 3',5'-pdTp, profoundly weakening its binding to the double mutant in both the absence and the presence of divalent cations. Such synergistic effects of the two mutations may result from negative cooperativity or strain in the binding of 3',5'-pdTp to the wild-type enzyme. It is concluded that the quantitative interactions of two active-site mutations of an enzyme can vary greatly depending on which parameter of the enzyme is measured. When the two mutations interact in the same way on several parameters, a common underlying mechanism is suggested.
...
PMID:Diverse interactions between the individual mutations in a double mutant at the active site of staphylococcal nuclease. 170 94
The dinucleoside phosphodiester dTdA is a slow substrate of
staphylococcal nuclease
(kcat = 3.8 X 10(-3) s-1) that forms binary E-S and ternary E-M-S complexes with Ca2+, Mn2+, Co2+, and La3+. The enzyme enhances the paramagnetic effects of Co2+ on 1/T1 and 1/T2 of the
phosphorus
and on 1/T1 of six proton resonances of dTdA, and these effects are abolished by binding of the competitive inhibitor 3',5'-pdTp. From paramagnetic effects of Co2+ on 1/T2 of
phosphorus
, koff of dTdA from the ternary E-Co(2+)-dTdA complex is greater than or equal to 4.8 X 10(4) s-1 and kon greater than or equal to 1.4 X 10(6) M-1 s-1, indicating the 1/T1 values to be in fast exchange. From paramagnetic effects of enzyme-bound Co2+ on 1/T1 of
phosphorus
and protons, with use of a correlation time of 1.6 ps on the basis of 1/T1 values at 250 and 600 MHz, 7 metal-nucleus distances and 9 lower-limit metal-nucleus distances are calculated. The long Co2+ to 31P distance of 4.1 +/- 0.9 A, which is intermediate between that expected for direct phosphoryl coordination (3.31 +/- 0.02 A) and a second sphere complex with an intervening water ligand (4.75 +/- 0.02 A), suggests either a distorted inner sphere complex or the rapid averaging of 18% inner sphere and 82% second sphere complexes and may explain the reduced catalytic activity with small dinucleotide substrates. Seventeen interproton distances and 108 lower limit interproton distances in dTdA in the ternary E-La(3+)-dTdA complex were determined by NOESY spectra at 50-, 100-, and 200-ms mixing times. While metal-substrate and interproton distances alone did not yield a unique structure, the combination of both sets of distances yielded a very narrow range of conformations for enzyme-bound dTdA, which was highly extended, with no base stacking, with high-anti glycosidic torsional angles for dT (64 degrees less than or equal to chi less than or equal to 73 degrees) and dA (66 degrees less than or equal to chi less than or equal to 68 degrees) and predominantly C-2'-endo sugar puckers for both nucleosides. Although the individual nucleosides are like those of B-DNA, their unstacked conformation, which is inappropriate for base pairing, as well as the conformational angles alpha and gamma of dA and zeta of dT, rule out B-DNA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Conformation of an enzyme-bound substrate of staphylococcal nuclease as determined by NMR. 185 46
The Glu-43 residue of
staphylococcal nuclease
has been proposed to function as a general base that facilitates the attack of water on the phosphodiester substrate [Cotton, F. A., Hazen, E. E., & Legg, M. J. (1979) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 76, 2551-2555]. With DNA as substrate, Vmax in the glutamate-43--serine (E43S) mutant enzyme is decreased by 2700-fold at pH 7.4 but only 376-fold at pH 9.9. With the wild-type enzyme, Vmax increases with pH to pH 9.2, above which it becomes less sensitive to further increase in pH, leveling off at pH 9.8. In contrast, Vmax of the E43S mutant continues to rise, first order in [OH-], to pH 9.8. Above pH 10 both activities fall irreversible. Hence the hydroxyl ion can partially replace the effect of Glu-43 on kcat, in accord with the proposed role of Glu-43 as a general base. The inflection point in the curve relating pH to log Vmax of the wild-type enzyme at pH 9.4 may reflect the ionization of a Ca2+-bound water, or of a Lys or Tyr residue at the active site. The activator Ca2+ and the competitive inhibitor Mn2+ bind to the E43S mutant an order of magnitude more weakly than to the wild-type enzyme as detected by kinetics and by direct metal binding studies, and approximately one additional water ligand on Mn2+ is found in the binary Mn2+ complex of the E43S mutant (1.4 +/- 0.2) as compared to that of the wild-type enzyme (0.8 +/- 0.2). These data suggest that Glu-43 coordinates the divalent cation in the binary enzyme-metal complex but dissociates from the metal to create a water binding site and to function as a general base in the ternary enzyme-metal-DNA complex. While a 2-fold weaker binding of DNA to the Ca2+ complex of the E43S mutant than to the wild-type enzyme is found by kinetic studies, an order of magnitude tighter binding of the competitive inhibitor 3',5'-pdTp to the Mn2+ and Ca2+ complexes of E43S is found by direct binding studies. Distances from Co2+ to
phosphorus
in the ternary enzyme-Co2+-pdTp complexes reveal coordination of only the 5'-phosphate by Co2+ on the wild-type enzyme but coordination of both the 3'- and 5'-phosphates of pdTp on the E43S mutant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Kinetic and magnetic resonance studies of the glutamate-43 to serine mutant of staphylococcal nuclease. 256 22
Phosphodiesterase from calf spleen exhibits nucleotidyltransferase activity when incubated with either the (PR) or the (PS) diastereomer of thymidyl 3'-(4-nitrophenyl phosphorothioate). Thymidylyl(3'-5')thymidyl phosphorothioate 3'-(4-nitrophenyl phosphorothioate) was identified as the main product of the enzyme-catalyzed reaction and the absolute configuration at the internucleotide
phosphorus
atom of the product was determined. The nucleotidyltransferase reaction is shown to proceed with retention of configuration at
phosphorus
, implying involvement of a double displacement mechanism with the formation of a nucleotidylated enzyme intermediate. To study the substrate specificity of
spleen phosphodiesterase
a series of deoxyribonucleosidyl 3'-(4-nitrophenyl phosphates) and phosphorothioates were synthesized, and Km and V parameters for each substrate were measured. The results obtained show virtually no specificity for substrates with different nucleosidyl moieties, while about a 20 - 30-fold drop in V and a slight increase in Km values is observed for phosphorothioate analogues as compared with corresponding phosphates. The enzyme showed no significant stereoselectivity towards phosphorothioates of opposite configurations at
phosphorus
.
...
PMID:Substrate specificity and stereospecificity of calf spleen phosphodiesterase towards deoxyribonucleosidyl 3'-(4-nitrophenyl phosphates) and phosphorothioates. 299 90
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