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
Summary
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
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