| Literature DB >> 23605040 |
Nick Kamps-Hughes1, Aine Quimby, Zhenyu Zhu, Eric A Johnson.
Abstract
Restriction endonucleases are highly specific in recognizing the particular DNA sequence they act on. However, their activity is affected by sequence context, enzyme concentration and buffer composition. Changes in these factors may lead to either ineffective cleavage at the cognate restriction site or relaxed specificity allowing cleavage of degenerate 'star' sites. Additionally, uncharacterized restriction endonucleases and engineered variants present novel activities. Traditionally, restriction endonuclease activity is assayed on simple substrates such as plasmids and synthesized oligonucleotides. We present and use high-throughput Illumina sequencing-based strategies to assay the sequence specificity and flanking sequence preference of restriction endonucleases. The techniques use fragmented DNA from sequenced genomes to quantify restriction endonuclease cleavage on a complex genomic DNA substrate in a single reaction. By mapping millions of restriction site-flanking reads back to the Escherichia coli and Drosophila melanogaster genomes we were able to quantitatively characterize the cognate and star site activity of EcoRI and MfeI and demonstrate genome-wide decreases in star activity with engineered high-fidelity variants EcoRI-HF and MfeI-HF, as well as quantify the influence on MfeI cleavage conferred by flanking nucleotides. The methods presented are readily applicable to all type II restriction endonucleases that cleave both strands of double-stranded DNA.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23605040 PMCID: PMC3675476 DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkt257
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nucleic Acids Res ISSN: 0305-1048 Impact factor: 16.971
Figure 1.The path of a single restriction site–containing genomic locus is shown for both the RAD-seq protocol (left) and the modified overhang-independent RAD-seq protocol used in the star activity assay (right).
Percent of reads at star sites after digestion with MfeI
| Site | MfeI | MfeI-HF |
|---|---|---|
| 3.03 | 0.46 | |
| 0.14 | 0.07 | |
| 0.08 | 0.07 | |
| 0.04 | 0.11 |
Percent of reads at star sites after digestion with EcoRI
| Site | EcoRI | EcoRI-HF |
|---|---|---|
| 31.58 | 0.01 | |
| 4.17 | 0.01 | |
| 2.64 | 0.01 | |
| 0.31 | 0.01 | |
| 0.05 | 0.01 | |
| 0.04 | 0.01 |
Figure 2.MfeI activity is affected by flanking base preference. All graphs plot normalized sequencing coverage (y-axis) versus units of enzyme (x-axis). Blue circles, G base; green triangles, T base; yellow squares, A base; red triangles, C base. (A) Changes in sequencing coverage for the different bases adjacent to the MfeI half site, i.e. N-CAA. (B–E) Changes in sequencing coverage for the different distal bases of the dinucleotide adjacent to the MfeI half site, for the dinucleotide NG-CAA (graph B), NT-CAA (graph C), NA-CAA (graph D), NC-CAA (graph E).
The change in sequencing coverage from enzyme saturating to limiting conditions for each of the 16 single-nucleotide flanking pairs surrounding the cognate MfeI site
| Site | Change in coverage |
|---|---|
| GCAATTGC | 2.6 |
| TCAATTGC | 1.3 |
| GCAATTGA | 1.1 |
| GCAATTGG | 0.5 |
| CCAATTGC | 0.4 |
| ACAATTGC | 0.2 |
| GCAATTGT | 0.1 |
| TCAATTGA | −0.1 |
| CCAATTGA | −0.8 |
| ACAATTGA | −0.8 |
| TCAATTGT | −0.9 |
| TCAATTGG | −0.9 |
| CCAATTGT | −1.0 |
| ACAATTGG | −1.2 |
| CCAATTGG | −1.4 |
| ACAATTGT | −1.4 |
Figure 3.MfeI activity is affected by flanking base preference at CAACTG star sites. Bars represent the percentage of wild-type MfeI star activity assay reads mapping to CAACTG sites having a particular 5′ adjacent base, with a higher percentage indicating that adjacent base creates a favourable context for digestion. Because the star site is asymmetric, adjacent base preferences are shown for the two half sites, CAA (blue) and CAG (green).