Publications by authors named "Halford S"

The gene for the Eco RV methylase has been cloned into a plasmid under control of the strong lambda PL promoter and overexpressed in E. coli. This plasmid, pVIC1, gives reliable overexpression of the methylase at levels of about 20% of total protein.

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The mechanism of action of the EcoRV restriction endonuclease at its single recognition site on the plasmid pAT153 was analyzed by kinetic methods. In reactions at pH 7.5, close to the optimum for this enzyme, both strands of the DNA were cut in a single concerted reaction: DNA cut in only one strand of the duplex was neither liberated from the enzyme during the catalytic turnover nor accumulated as a steady-state intermediate.

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Type II restriction endonucleases have attracted attention for two main reasons: firstly, their many applications in the dissection of DNA and in the construction of novel DNA molecules; secondly, as systems for studying the interactions of proteins with specific DNA sequences. With respect to the latter, the EcoR I restriction endonuclease has been examined in greater depth than any other type II enzyme [1-3]. However, the EcoR I enzyme has a major disadvantage as a system for studying DNA-protein interactions: the protein has a remarkably low solubility.

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The resolvase from the transposon Tn21 catalyses site-specific recombination between the two res sites on its DNA substrate both in the absence and presence of Mg2+ ions. This contrasts with reports on the resolvase from gamma-delta (Tn1000) and on other recombinational proteins that are homologous to Tn21 resolvase but which need Mg2+ for their activity. Magnesium ions could enhance the activity of Tn21 resolvase, as did a number of other cations but some metal ions such as Ni2+ inhibit recombination.

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The EcoRV restriction endonuclease normally shows a high specificity for its recognition site on DNA, GATATC. In standard reactions, it cleaves DNA at this site several orders of magnitude more readily than at any alternative sequence. But in the presence of dimethyl sulphoxide and at high pH, the EcoRV enzyme cleaves DNA at several sites that differ from its recognition site by one nucleotide.

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The dual functions of resolvase, site-specific recombination and the regulation of its own expression from tnpR, both require the interaction of this protein with the DNA sequence at res, but the specificity of this interaction differs between groups of Tn3-like elements. In this study, DNA fragments that contained res from Tn21 or Tn1721 were subjected to either cleavage by DNase I or methylation by dimethyl sulphate in the presence of the purified resolvase from Tn21 or Tn1721. These experiments showed that each resolvase bound to the same three sites (I, II and III) within res from Tn1721 and to an equivalent series of three sites on Tn21: the differences in the amino acid sequences of the two proteins did not affect their interaction with either DNA.

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The solubility of the EcoRI restriction endonuclease was measured in solutions of varying NaCl concentrations, at different temperatures and in the presence of DNA. The precipitation of the protein was enhanced by low NaCl concentrations, by elevated temperatures, and by the addition of DNA. These observations are discussed in relationship to the interaction of this protein with DNA.

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The tac promoter was inserted into Tn21 upstream of the tnpR gene and the resultant plasmid was used to generate substantial amounts of resolvase. This protein was purified to homogeneity. The protein was characterized by amino acid sequence studies (which showed that an open-reading frame previously identified by DNA sequencing had been correctly assigned to the tnpR gene) and by molecular weight measurements (which demonstrated that the only active for of the protein in solution was dimeric).

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Single turnovers of the EcoRI restriction endonuclease, cleaving its recognition site on the covalently closed form of plasmid pMB9, were examined. Two methods were used to monitor the progress of the reactions: one involved quenching the reaction at various times followed by the electrophoretic separation of the products cleaved in one and in both strands of the duplex; the other employed a stopped-flow fluorimeter to measure the amount of ethidium bromide bound to the DNA as it changes when the DNA, cleaved in at least one strand, dissociates from the enzyme. Two procedures were used to initiate the reactions.

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We have analysed the kinetics of DNA cleavage in the reaction between the SalGI restriction endonuclease and plasmid pMB9. This reaction is subject to competitive inhibition by DNA sequences outside the SalGI recognition site; we have determined the Km and Vmax. for the reaction of this enzyme at its recognition site and the KI for its interaction at other DNA sequences.

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The cleavage of supercoiled DNA of plasmid pMB9 by restriction endonuclease SalGI has been studied. Under the optimal conditions for this reaction, the only product is the linear form of the DNA, in which both strands of the duplex have been cleaved at the SalGI recognition site. DNA molecules cleaved in one strand at this site were found to be poor substrates for the SalGI enzyme.

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The type II restriction endonuclease SalGI has been purified to near homogeneity. At least 80% of the protein remaining after the final stage of the preparation is SalGI restriction endonuclease; no contaminating nucleases remain detectable. The principal form of the protein under both native and denaturing conditions is a monomer of M(r) about 29000.

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The reactions of the EcoRI restriction endonuclease on the covalently closed DNA of plasmid pMB9 were studied in the presence of ethidium bromide. At the concentrations of ethidium bromide tested, which covered the range over which the DNA is changed from negatively to positively supercoiled, the dye caused no alteration to the rate at which this enzyme cleaved the covalently closed DNA to yield the open-circle form, but the rate at which these open circles were cleaved to the linear product could be inhibited. The fluorescence change, caused by ethidium bromide binding with different stoichiometries to covalently closed and open-circle DNA, provided a direct and sensitive signal for monitoring the cleavage of DNA by this enzyme.

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The EcoRI restriction endonuclease was found by the filter binding technique to form stable complexes, in the absence of Mg2+, with the DNA from derivatives of bacteriophage lambda that either contain or lack EcoRI recognition sites. The amount of complex formed at different enzyme concentrations followed a hyperbolic equilibrium-binding curve with DNA molecules containing EcoRI recognition sites, but a sigmoidal equilibrium-binding curve was obtained with a DNA molecule lacking EcoRI recognition sites. The EcoRI enzyme displayed the same affinity for individual recognition sites on lambda DNA, even under conditions where it cleaves these sites at different rates.

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The kinetics of the reactions of the EcoRI restriction endonuclease at individual recognition sites on the DNA from bacteriophage lambda were found to differ markedly from site to site. Under certain conditions of pH and ionic strength, the rates for the cleavage of the DNA were the same at each recognition site. But under altered experimental conditions, different reaction rates were observed at each recognition site.

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The reaction of the EcoRI restriction endonuclease was studied with both the plasmid pMB9 and DNA from bacteriophage lambda as the substrates. With both circular and linear DNA molecules, the only reaction catalysed by the EcoRI restriction endonuclease was the hydrolysis of the phosphodiester bond within one strand of the recognition site on the DNA duplex. The cleavage of both strands of the duplex was achieved only after two independent reactions, each involving a single-strand scission.

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31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) was used to directly observe the binding of inorganic phosphate to alkaline phosphatase. Evidencq for the tight binding of 1.5-2.

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The binding of the beta-1-4-linked trimer of N-acetyl-D-glucosamine to hen egg-white lysozyme was studied by rapid-reaction-kinetic methods with tryptophyl fluorescence observation of the transients. It was found that discrete segments of the fluorescence-difference spectrum from this reaction were perturbed at different time-points during the binding process. The results were interpretated as the formation of the initial complex, the fast phase of the reaction, perturbing the environment of tryptophan-62 and a subsequent and slower rearrangement of the initial complex perturbing the environment of tryptophan-108.

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The binding of 4-(N-acetylaminoglucosyl)-N-acetylglucosamine to lysozyme was studied by both nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and temperature-jump methods under comparable conditions. The NMR measurements on the inhibitor spectrum were carried out over a range of inhibitor concentrations including levels at which most of the inhibitor was bound to the enzyme. Data in this region were obtained by a novel difference method in conjunction with correlation spectroscopy.

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The hydrolysis of phosphate esters by a mutationally altered alkaline phosphatase from Escherichia coli was studied by both steady-state and transient-kinetic methods. The difference between the catalytic-centre activities of the mutationally altered and the wild-type alkaline phosphatases was found to vary with pH and at optimal pH values the modified enzyme had the higher activity. Stopped-flow experiments at acidic pH values showed that transient product formation by the mutationally altered enzyme was faster than that with the wild-type enzyme whereas the rate of the steady state was slower.

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