| Literature DB >> 11243793 |
M D Sam1, N C Horton, T A Nissan, J J Perona.
Abstract
Crystal structures of EcoRV endonuclease bound in a ternary complex with cognate duplex DNA and manganese ions have previously revealed an Mn(2+)-binding site located between the enzyme and the DNA outside of the dyad-symmetric GATATC recognition sequence. In each of the two enzyme subunits, this metal ion bridges between a distal phosphate group of the DNA and the imidazole ring of His71. The new metal- binding site is specific to Mn(2+) and is not occupied in ternary cocrystal structures with either Mg(2+) or Ca(2+). Characterization of the H71A and H71Q mutants of EcoRV now demonstrates that these distal Mn(2+) sites significantly modulate activity toward both cognate and non-cognate DNA substrates. Single-turnover and steady-state kinetic analyses show that removal of the distal site in the mutant enzymes increases Mn(2+)-dependent cleavage rates of specific substrates by tenfold. Conversely, the enhancement of non-cognate cleavage at GTTATC sequences by Mn(2+) is significantly attenuated in the mutants. As a consequence, under Mn(2+) conditions EcoRV-H71A and EcoRV-H71Q are 100 to 700-fold more specific than the wild-type enzyme for cognate DNA relative to the GTTATC non-cognate site. These data reveal a strong dependence of DNA cleavage efficiency upon metal ion-mediated interactions located some 20 A distant from the scissile phosphodiester linkages. They also show that discrimination of cognate versus non-cognate DNA sequences by EcoRV depends in part on contacts with the sugar-phosphate backbone outside of the target site. Copyright 2001 Academic Press.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11243793 DOI: 10.1006/jmbi.2000.4434
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Biol ISSN: 0022-2836 Impact factor: 5.469