A vaccinia virus DNase preparation which cross-links superhelical DNA

一种痘苗病毒DNase制剂,可使超螺旋DNA交联

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Abstract

Multiple DNA-dependent enzyme activities have been detected in highly purified preparations of a single-strand-specific nuclease from vaccinia virus. These enzyme preparations were extensively purified and characterized by using superhelical DNAs as substrates. In particular, the nuclease activity was monitored by the extent of conversion of supercoiled closed duplex DNA (DNA I) to nicked circular DNA (DNA II), which could subsequently be converted to duplex linear DNA (DNA III) by prolonged incubation with the enzyme. DNA species which were not substrates for the enzyme included relaxed closed duplex DNA, DNA II which had been prepared by nuclease S1 treatment or by photochemical nicking of DNA I, and DNA III. With plasmid pSM1 DNA as substrate, the extent of cleavage of DNA I to DNA II was found to increase with superhelix density above a threshold value of about -0.06. The linear reaction products were examined by gel electrophoresis after restriction enzyme digestion of the DNAs from plasmids pSM1 and pBR322 and of the viral DNAs from bacteriophage phi X174 (replicative form) and simian virus 40, and the map coordinate locations of the scissions were determined. These products were further examined by electron microscopy and by gel electrophoresis under denaturing conditions. Electron micrographs taken under partially denaturing conditions revealed molecules with terminal loops or hairpins such as would result from the introduction of cross-links at the cutting sites. These species exhibited snapback renaturation. The denaturing gel electrophoresis experiments revealed the appearance of new bands at locations consistent with terminal cross-linking. With pSM1 and pBR322 DNAs, this band was shown to contain DNA that was approximately twice the length of a linear single strand. The terminal regions of the cross-linked linear duplex reaction products were sensitive to nuclease S1 but insensitive to proteinase K, suggesting that the structure is a hairpin loop not maintained by a protein linker. A similar structure is found in mature vaccinia virus DNA.

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