pubmed:abstractText |
A uracil-DNA glycosylase activity has been purified about 750-fold from the chloroplasts of light-grown Zea mays seedlings. This report represents the first direct demonstration of a DNA-glycosylase repair activity in chloroplasts. The activity, in part, was associated with a chloroplast Triton X-100 sensitive membrane. Its apparent K(m) was 1.0 micromolar for a poly(dA-dT/U) substrate, and its molecular weight, as determined by gel filtration, was 18,000. The enzyme exhibited optimal activity at pH 7.0 with an atypically narrow pH tolerance. Activity was inhibited greater than 60% by 10 millimolar NaCl, 5 millimolar MgCl(2), or 5 millimolar EDTA. Enzyme activity was inhibited 80% by 10 millimolar N-ethylmaleimide, a sulfhydryl group-blocking agent. The activity removed uracil more rapidly from single-stranded DNA than from double-stranded DNA. With this report, uracil-DNA glycosylase activity has now been attributed to all three DNA-containing organelles of eucaryotic cells.
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