REPAIRtoire - a database of DNA repair pathways

Welcome! Click here to login or here to register.
Home
Proteins
DNA damage
Diseases
Homologs
Pathways
Keywords
Publications
Draw a picture
 
Search
 
Links
Help
Contact





Bujnicki Lab Homepage

"Purification and characterization of Escherichia coli endonuclease III from the cloned nth gene."

Asahara H, Wistort PM, Bank JF, Bakerian RH, Cunningham RP



Published May 16, 1989 in Biochemistry volume 28 .

Pubmed ID: 2669955

Abstract:
The gene which codes for endonuclease III of Escherichia coli has been sequenced. The nth gene was previously subcloned and defined as the gene which led to overproduction of endonuclease III when present on a multicopy plasmid and which created a deficiency in endonuclease III activity when mutated. The nth gene was sequenced and translated into a predicted polypeptide. The molecular weight (23,546), the amino-terminal amino acid sequence, and the amino acid composition of the polypeptide predicted from the nucleotide sequence are excellent agreement with those same properties determined for the purified protein. Thus, the nth gene is the structural gene for endonuclease III. Inspection of the nucleotide sequence reveals that there is an open reading frame immediately upstream of the nth gene, suggesting that it might be part of an operon. There is a region of dyad symmetry which could form a hairpin stem and loop structure if transcribed into RNA characteristic of a rho-dependent terminator downstream from the nth gene. The nth gene of Escherichia coli has been cloned onto a lambda PL expression vector which yields approximately 300-fold overproduction of endonuclease III. We have purified the enzyme to apparent homogeneity using two chromatographic steps. Our purification scheme allowed the preparation of 117 mg of protein from 190 g of E. coli with a 70% yield. The purified protein has both AP endonuclease activity and DNA N-glycosylase activity. The protein has a Stokes radius of 2.25 nm, a sedimentation coefficient of 2.65 S, a molecular weight of 26,300 in the native state and 27,300 in the denatured state, and a frictional ratio of 1.13.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


This publication refers to following REPAIRtoire entries:



Last modification of this entry: Oct. 6, 2010

Add your own comment!

There is no comment yet.
Welcome stranger! Click here to login or here to register.
Valid HTML 4.01! This site is Emacs powered. Made with Django.