The kinetic mechanism of EcoRI endonuclease.
Steady-state parameters governing cleavage of pBR322 DNA by EcoRI endonuclease are highly sensitive to ionic environment, with K(m) and k(cat) increasing 1,000-fold and 15-fold, respectively, when ionic strength is increased from 0.059 to 0.23 M. By contrast, pre-steady-state analysis has shown that recognition, as well as first and second strand cleavage events that occur once the enzyme has arrived at the EcoRI site, are essentially insensitive to ionic strength, and has demonstrated that the rate-limiting step for endonuclease turnover occurs after double-strand cleavage under all conditions tested. Furthermore, processive cleavage of a pBR322 variant bearing two closely spaced EcoRI sites is governed by the same turnover number as hydrolysis of parental pBR322, which contains only a single EcoRI sequence, ruling out slow release of the enzyme from the cleaved site or a slow conformational change subsequent to double-strand cleavage. We attribute the effects of ionic strength on steady-state parameters to nonspecific endonuclease.DNA interactions, reflecting facilitated diffusion processes, that occur prior to EcoRI sequence recognition and subsequent to DNA cleavage.
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- Plasmids
- Osmolar Concentration
- Models, Chemical
- Kinetics
- Deoxyribonuclease EcoRI
- DNA, Bacterial
- Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
- 34 Chemical sciences
- 32 Biomedical and clinical sciences
- 31 Biological sciences
Citation
Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Plasmids
- Osmolar Concentration
- Models, Chemical
- Kinetics
- Deoxyribonuclease EcoRI
- DNA, Bacterial
- Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
- 34 Chemical sciences
- 32 Biomedical and clinical sciences
- 31 Biological sciences