pubmed:abstractText |
An endonuclease which hydrolyzes depurinated DNA has been isolated from Phaseolus multiflorus enbryos; it has a molecular weight around 40,000. The enzyme is specific for apurinic sites; it has no action on normal DNA strands or on alkylated sites, and is without exonulcease activity. The rate of phosphoester bond hydrolysis near apurinic sites is far greater in native than in denatured DNA. The endonuclease is not inactivated by 10 mM EDTA, but is activity is however stimulated by Mg2+ or Mn2+. Its optimum pH is 7.5 to 8.0, and its optimum temperature 40degrees although, at this temperature, it is rapidly denatured; even low NaCl concentrations inhibit the enzyme activity. The endonuclease for apurinic sites of P. multiflorus is a non-histone protein of chromatin; the properties (like thermosensitivity of susceptibility to ionic strength) of the enzyme in situ, working on chromatin DNA, might be different from those described for the isolated endonuclease in homogenous aqueous solution.
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