Site-specific binding of short peptides with DNA modulated eukaryotic endonuclease activity.

Bull Exp Biol Med

St. Petersburg Institute of Bioregulation and Gerontology, Northwestern Division of the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, St. Petersburg, Russia.

Published: May 2011

Short peptides (2-4 amino acid residues) inhibit or stimulate hydrolysis of λ phage DNA by eukaryotic endonucleases WEN1 and WEN2 depending on DNA methylation status. Peptide modulation of endonucleases activity most likely appears as a result of their binding to DNA. Peptides discriminate (recognize) not only certain DNA sequences, but also their methylation status. Apart from intact DNA, the test peptides bind to single-stranded DNA structures (oligonucleotides) containing NG- and CG-sites methylated in eukaryotes. Peptides affect the set of hydrolyzed sites during endonuclease hydrolysis of double-stranded structures. The effects of peptides with different primary structure on DNA hydrolysis by endonucleases are different and are modulated by histones (histone H1). Site-specific peptide interactions with DNA may epigenetically control genetic functions of the cell. These interactions probably played an important role at the very early stages of evolution.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10517-011-1261-8DOI Listing

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