ENZYMATIC PROBES FOR OPEN REGIONS IN SUPERCOILED DNA
Project Number3R01GM030614-11S1
Contact PI/Project LeaderKOWALSKI, DAVID
Awardee OrganizationROSWELL PARK CANCER INSTITUTE
Description
Abstract Text
The long term goal of this proposal is to understand how the structure and
energetics of the DNA template contribute to regulatory mechanisms for the
initiation of DNA replication and transcription in living cells.
Supercoiling of the DNA template is energetically unfavorable and can
result in localized opening or unwinding of the helix in vitro. This
proposal is a continuation of our characterization of the single-strand-
specific endonucleases, mung bean nuclease and P1 nuclease, as probes for
unwinding in naturally-occurring DNA sequences present in supercoiled
plasmids and viral genomes. The enzymes recognize Z-DNA, cruciforms and a
novel, stably-unwound DNA conformation call the AT-rich structure. The AT-
rich structure occurs in several prokaryotic and eukaryotic replication
origins. Extensive mutational analysis of a yeast replication origin
revealed that detection of the AT-rich structure in vitro correlates with
the ability to initiate DNA replication in vivo. The specific aims of this
proposal are to 1) examine the architecture, DNA sequence selectivity and
energetics of the AT-rich structure, 2) investigate easily-unwound DNA
sequences as determinants for initiation of replication in vivo, and 3)
probe for localized DNA unwinding in chromatin. The hypothesis that the
AT-rich structure is not melted but rather a lower energy DNA conformation
which is partially untwisted and base paired, will be tested by 1) two
dimensional gel electrophoresis of topoisomers to assess the energy and
extent of DNA unwinding, and 2) analysis of DNA sequences which react with
the enzymes as well as chemical probes for paired or unpaired bases. They
hypothesis that the low energy of DNA unwinding is a determinant of
replication initiation in vivo will be tested by comparing the effects of
mutations on formation of an AT-rich structure in the chromosomal origin
(oriC) of E. coil and the simian virus 40 (SV40) origin in vitro with the
ability of the mutant derivatives to initiate replication in vivo.
Finally, we will establish the use of mung bean nuclease and P1 nuclease as
chromatin probes for unpaired and non-Watson-Crick paired bases, in SV40
chromatin at nucleotide level resolution.
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