Abstract

Endonuclease V is highly conserved, both structurally and functionally, from bacteria to humans, and it cleaves the deoxyinosine-containing double-stranded DNA in Escherichia coli, whereas in Homo sapiens it catalyses the inosine-containing single-stranded RNA. Thus, deoxyinosine and inosine are unexpectedly produced by the deamination reactions of adenine in DNA and RNA, respectively. Moreover, adenosine-to-inosine (A-to-I) RNA editing is carried out by adenosine deaminase acting on dsRNA (ADARs). We focused on Arabidopsis thaliana endonuclease V (AtEndoV) activity exhibiting variations in DNA or RNA substrate specificities. Since no ADAR was observed for A-to-I editing in A. thaliana, the possibility of inosine generation by A-to-I editing can be ruled out. Purified AtEndoV protein cleaved the second and third phosphodiester bonds, 3' to inosine in single-strand RNA, at a low reaction temperature of 20-25°C, whereas the AtEndoV (Y100A) protein bearing a mutation in substrate recognition sites did not cleave these bonds. Furthermore, AtEndoV, similar to human EndoV, prefers RNA substrates over DNA substrates, and it could not cleave the inosine-containing double-stranded RNA. Thus, we propose the possibility that AtEndoV functions as an RNA substrate containing inosine induced by RNA damage, and not by A-to-I RNA editing in vivo.

Highlights

  • The chemical structure of the base of DNA or RNA is subjected to deamination [1,2], and the loss of extra-cyclic amino groups due to deamination occurs spontaneously under physiological conditions via a hydrolysis reaction

  • In Escherichia coli, deoxyinosine repair is initiated by endonuclease V (EndoV: EcEndoV from E. coli), which hydrolyses the second phosphodiester bond 30 to hypoxanthine [5]

  • The present study focuses on A. thaliana endonuclease V (AtEndoV) activity with variations in DNA or RNA substrate specificities

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Summary

Introduction

The chemical structure of the base of DNA or RNA is subjected to deamination [1,2], and the loss of extra-cyclic amino groups due to deamination occurs spontaneously under physiological conditions via a hydrolysis reaction. Hypoxanthine in DNA and deoxyinosine are potentially mutagenic because they can base pair with cytosine during replication and generate A : T to G : C transition type mutations [3,4]. In Escherichia coli, deoxyinosine repair is initiated by endonuclease V (EndoV: EcEndoV from E. coli), which hydrolyses the second phosphodiester bond 30 to hypoxanthine [5]. After one side nicking by endonuclease V, the damaged nucleotide is removed by proofreading 30–50 exonuclease activity of DNA polymerase I ( pol1), thereby generating a 2 nt gap. The second mechanism includes the misincorporation of inosine triphosphate (ITP) into the transcript by RNA polymerases during transcription. The present study focuses on A. thaliana endonuclease V (AtEndoV) activity with variations in DNA or RNA substrate specificities. We might rule out the possibility of the effects of inosine generation by A-to-I editing

DNA and RNA substrates
Proteins
Cleavage assays
Surface plasmon resonance analysis
Alignment of the amino acid sequences of AtEndoV
Purification of the recombinant AtEndoV protein and its mutant protein
Endonuclease activity of AtEndoV
Atendov binds ssRNA with higher affinity than ssDNA
Features of AtEndoV

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