pubmed:abstractText |
A novel set of reaction conditions for mung bean nuclease has been described in which Plasmodium genes were specifically excised as intact fragments from purified DNA. We have now determined that under the new conditions mung bean nuclease cleaves precisely at sites outside of the coding region of every P. falciparum gene for which the extent of the protein coding region in genomic DNA is known. We conclude that this enzyme activity is probably a general one for P. falciparum genes. Introns are not specifically cleaved, although one gene contained a cleavage site within an intron. There is no direct relationship between dA.dT-richness and sites of cleavage under these conditions. Also contrary to the expectations of a model based on cleavage at denaturation bubbles, there was no general relationship between the concentration of the DNA denaturant, formamide, and the size of the resulting gene-containing fragments. Thus, the data strongly suggest the involvement of an altered DNA structure near gene boundaries in determining the recognition sites for this enzyme activity.
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