66 research outputs found
Lanthanide Spectroscopic Studies of the Dinuclear and Mg(II)-Dependent PvuII Restriction Endonuclease
Type II restriction enzymes are homodimeric systems that bind four to eight base pair palindromic recognition sequences of DNA and catalyze metal ion-dependent phosphodiester cleavage. While Mg(II) is required for cleavage in these enzymes, in some systems Ca(II) promotes avid substrate binding and sequence discrimination. These properties make them useful model systems for understanding the roles of alkaline earth metal ions in nucleic acid processing. We have previously shown that two Ca(II) ions stimulate DNA binding by PvuII endonuclease and that the trivalent lanthanide ions Tb(III) and Eu(III) support subnanomolar DNA binding in this system. Here we capitalize on this behavior, employing a unique combination of luminescence spectroscopy and DNA binding assays to characterize Ln(III) binding behavior by this enzyme. Upon excitation of tyrosine residues, the emissions of both Tb(III) and Eu(III) are enhanced severalfold. This enhancement is reduced by the addition of a large excess of Ca(II), indicating that these ions bind in the active site. Poor enhancements and affinities in the presence of the active site variant E68A indicate that Glu68 is an important Ln(III) ligand, similar to that observed with Ca(II), Mg(II), and Mn(II). At low micromolar Eu(III) concentrations in the presence of enzyme (10−20 μM), Eu(III) excitation 7F0 → 5D0 spectra yield one dominant peak at 579.2 nm. A second, smaller peak at 579.4 nm is apparent at high Eu(III) concentrations (150 μM). Titration data for both Tb(III) and Eu(III) fit well to a two-site model featuring a strong site (Kd = 1−3 μM) and a much weaker site (Kd ≈ 100−200 μM). Experiments with the E68A variant indicate that the Glu68 side chain is not required for the binding of this second Ln(III) equivalent; however, the dramatic increase in DNA binding affinity around 100 μM Ln(III) for the wild-type enzyme and metal-enhanced substrate affinity for E68A are consistent with functional relevance for this weaker site. This discrimination of sites should make it possible to use lanthanide substitution and lanthanide spectroscopy to probe individual metal ion binding sites, thus adding an important tool to the study of restriction enzyme structure and function
Phospholipase A2 engineering. 6. Single amino acid substitutions of active site residues convert the rigid enzyme to highly flexible conformational states
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Modulating Restriction Endonuclease Activities and Specificities Using Neutral Detergents
It is well known that type II restriction enzyme activities and specificities can be modulated by altering solution conditions. The addition of co-solvents such as dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), alcohols and polyols can promote star activity, which is the cleavage of non-cognate sequences. While neutral detergents are often used to control protein aggregation, little is known about the effect of neutral detergents on restriction enzyme activities and specificities. We report here that BamHI, BglI, BglII, EcoRI, EcoRV, HindIII, MluI, PvuII, SalI and XhoI restriction endonucleases are remarkably tolerant of high concentrations of neutral detergents Triton®X-100, CHAPS and octyl glucoside. In most cases, λ DNA cleavage rates were comparable to those observed in the absence of detergent. Indeed, the specific activities of SalI and XhoI were appreciably increased in the presence of Triton X-100. For all enzymes active in the presence of detergents, sequence specificity toward λ DNA was not compromised. Assays of star cleavage of pUC18 by EcoRI, PvuII and BamHI endonucleases in equimolar concentrations of Triton X-100 and sucrose revealed reduced star activity in the detergent relative to the sucrose cosolvent. Interestingly, under star activitypromoting conditions, PvuII endonuclease displayed greater fidelity in Triton X-100 than in conventional buffer. Taken altogether, these results suggest that in some cases, neutral detergents can be used to manipulate restriction endonuclease reaction rates and specificities
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