BamHI

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<StructureSection load='1bhm' size='350' side='right' scene='' caption='BamHI dimer complex with DNA (PDB code [[1bhm]])'>
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[[Image:1bam.png|left|200px]]
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===Overview===
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<scene name='BamHI/1bhm/3'>BamHI</scene> is a type II restriction enzyme derived from ''Bacillus amyloliquefaciens''. Like all Type II restriction endonucleases, it is a <scene name='47/472560/Dimer/1'>dimer</scene> and the recognition site is palindromic and 6 bases in length. It recognizes the DNA sequence of G’GATCC and leaves an overhang of GATC which is compatible with many other enzymes.<ref name="Viadiu">Viadiu H, Aggarwal AK, Structure of BamHI bound to nonspecific DNA: a model for DNA sliding., ''Mol Cell.'' 2000 May;5(5):889-95. Print.</ref> The ''Bam''HI-DNA complex is a sequence-specific endonucleases-DNA complex. In the complex all hydrogen bonding occurs in the <scene name='47/472560/Major_groove/1'>major groove</scene> of the recognition site,either through direct or ''water-mediated'' hydrogen bonds with the protein, namely on oxygens and nitrogens in the DNA within 3.5 angstroms of the protein. No other DNA sequence could support this degree of complementarity with ''Bam''HI.<ref name="Voet">Voet, Voet, Donald, Judith G. Voet, and Charlotte W. Pratt. Fundamentals of Biochemistry Life at the Molecular Level. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 2008. p. 578-579. Print.</ref> There are five crystal structures of ''Bam''HI in the Protein Data Bank. These include ''Bam''HI bound to a non-specific DNA, ''Bam''HI complex with DNA and calcium ions (pre-reactive complex), BamHI complex with DNA and manganese ions (post-reactive complex), ''Bam''HI complex with DNA, and ''Bam''HI phased at 1.95 angstroms resolution by MAD analysis.<ref name="pdbe">PDBe., ''European Molecular Biology Laboratory.'' 2011. Webpage.</ref> See also [[Endonuclease]].
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<Structure load='1bam' size='500' frame='true' align='right' caption='Structure of restriction endonuclease BamHI phased at 1.95 angstroms resolution by mad analysis' scene='Insert optional scene name here' />
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<scene name='BamHI/1bam/1'>[[BamHI]]</scene> is a type II restriction enzyme derived from Bacillus amyloliquefaciens. It recognizes the DNA sequence of G’GATCC and leaves an overhang of GATC which is compatible with many other enzymes.[1] The BamHI-DNA complex is a sequence-specific endonucleases-DNA complex. In the complex every potential hydrogen bond donor and acceptor in the major groove of the recognition site takes part in direct or water-mediated hydrogen bonds with the protein. No other DNA sequence could support this degree of complementarity with BamHI.[2] There are five crystal structures of BamHI in the Protein Data Bank. These include BamHI bound to a non-specific DNA, BamHI complex with DNA and calcium ions (pre-reactive complex), BamHI complex with DNA and manganese ions (post-reactive complex), BamHI complex with DNA, and BamHI phased at 1.95 angstroms resolution by MAD analysis.[3]
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See also [[BamHI (Hebrew)]].
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==<scene name='BamHI/1esg/1'>Active Sites and Catalytic Mechanism to Nonspecific DNA</scene>==
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==Structure==
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Type II restriction enzymes require only Mg2+ as a cofactor to catalyze the hydrolysis of DNA phosphodiesters, leaving free 5’ phosphate and 3’ hydroxyl groups. The reaction is considered to proceed by an inline displacement of the 3’ leaving group, in which an activated water molecule acts as the attacking nucleophile. The active sites for BamHI are residues Asp94, Glu111, and Glu113. These can be spatially aligned with residues in EcoRI, EcoRV and PvuII. Several mechanisms have been proposed for the way these enzymes might activate a water molecule for nucleophilic attack. It is suggested there is a general base mechanism in which the acidic residues Asp94 and Glu111 coordinate Mg2+ at the active site while Glu113 acts as a general base to deprotonate the attacking water molecule. A separate mechanism has been suggested in which a water molecule is located centrally at the active site within hydrogen-bonding distances from the carboxylate groups of Glu111 and Glu113, the nonesterified oxygens of the phosphate group and the main chain carbonyl group of Phe112.[4]
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<scene name='BamHI/1bhm/8'>BamHI</scene> consists of 6 <scene name='BamHI/1bhm/10'>alpha helices</scene> and 6 <scene name='BamHI/1bhm/9'>beta sheets</scene>, surprisingly the protein sequence lacks similarity and has no recurring structural motifs analogous to the helix-turn-helix or the zinc finger of transcription factors.<ref name="pdbe">PDBe., ''European Molecular Biology Laboratory.'' 2011. Webpage.</ref> The beta sheet form a curved plane with only two sheets forming <scene name='BamHI/1bhm/11'>hydrogen bonds</scene> with specific DNA. BamHI is a dimer of 213 amino acid subunits. The structure of the protein allows <scene name='BamHI/1bhm/13'>hydrogen bonding</scene> to occur in the manner seen in this scene.
==Active Sites and Catalytic Mechanism to Specific DNA==
==Active Sites and Catalytic Mechanism to Specific DNA==
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Type II restriction enzymes require only Mg2+ as a cofactor to catalyze the hydrolysis of DNA phosphodiesters, leaving free 5’ phosphate and 3’ hydroxyl groups. The reaction is considered to proceed by an inline displacement of the 3’ leaving group, in which an activated water molecule acts as the attacking nucleophile. The <scene name='47/472560/Active_site/2'>active site</scene> for ''Bam''HI are residues Asp94, Glu111, and Glu113. These can be spatially aligned with residues in EcoRI, EcoRV and PvuII. Several mechanisms have been proposed for the way these enzymes might activate a water molecule for nucleophilic attack. It is suggested there is a general base mechanism in which the acidic residues Asp94 and Glu111 coordinate Mg2+ at the active site while Glu113 acts as a general base to deprotonate the attacking water molecule. A separate mechanism has been suggested in which one of the <scene name='47/472560/Active_site_water/1'>three water molecules</scene> located centrally at the active site within hydrogen-bonding distances from the carboxylate groups of Glu111 and Glu113 acts as a nucleophile and attacks the phosphate group of DNA.<ref name="Newman">Newman, Matthew, Structure of ''Bam''HI Endonuclease Bound to DNA: Partial Folding and Unfolding on DNA Binding., ''Science.'' 1995 Aug;4(269):656-63. Print.</ref>
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==Active Sites and Catalytic Mechanism for Binding to Nonspecific DNA==
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The problem of specific versus nonspecific DNA selection is particularly acute for bacterial restriction enzymes. For every BamHI cognate DNA site in the Bacillus amyloliquefaciens H genome, there are 18 sites that differ by only a single base pair. Only the cognate sites are protected from cleavage by methylation produced by the partner methylase enzyme. The stringent specificity for a bacterial restriction enzyme can reduce their cleavage activity by a million-fold with a change in just one base pair. There is an exception in which ''Bam''HI binds to a noncognate DNA sequence GAATCC which differs by only one base pair from the cognate G’GATCC sequence. The structure reveals the enzyme is a distinct conformation that is incompetent for cleavage but competent for sliding. The central problem faced by DNA binding proteins is how to select the correct DNA sequence from the sea of nonspecific sequences in a cell. The problem is particularly acute for bacterial restriction enzymes because cleavage at an incorrect DNA site could be lethal. Despite only a single base pair change in the recognition sequence, the enzyme adopts an <scene name='BamHI/1esg/1'>open configuration</scene> that is on the pathway between free and specifically bound forms of the enzyme. Surprisingly, the DNA drops out of the binding cleft with a total loss of base-specific and backbone contacts. Taken together, the structure provides a remarkable snapshot of an enzyme poised for linear diffusion (rather than cleavage) along the DNA. <ref name="Viadiu">Viadiu H, Aggarwal AK, Structure of BamHI bound to nonspecific DNA: a model for DNA sliding., ''Mol Cell.'' 2000 May;5(5):889-95. Print.</ref> The <scene name='BamHI/1esg/3'>active sites</scene> for ''Bam''HI binding to GAATCC are the same as those binding to specific DNA; Asp94, Glu111, and Glu113, but it can be seen that they interact with the ends of the DNA complex rather than hydrogen bonding from the outside as seen in specific DNA binding for hydrolysis. <scene name='BamHI/1esg/4'>Hydrogen bonding</scene> between the protein, DNA, as well as water molecules which are aligned due to the open structure of the protein. There are much more hydrogen bonding interactions through the water molecules in this open structure.
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</StructureSection>
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==3D structures of BamHI==
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Updated on {{REVISIONDAY2}}-{{MONTHNAME|{{REVISIONMONTH}}}}-{{REVISIONYEAR}}
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[[1bhm]], [[3bam]], [[2bam]], [[1esg]] – BaBAM + DNA – ''Bacillus amyloliquefaciens''<br />
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[[1bam]] – BaBAM<br />
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== References ==
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<references/>
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[[Category:Topic Page]]
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[[Image:Specificbamhibinding.JPG|300px|left|thumb| Your Caption Text]][[Image:Nonspecificbamhibinding.JPG|300px|right|thumb| Your Caption Text]]
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Current revision

BamHI dimer complex with DNA (PDB code 1bhm)

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3D structures of BamHI

Updated on 17-January-2022

1bhm, 3bam, 2bam, 1esg – BaBAM + DNA – Bacillus amyloliquefaciens
1bam – BaBAM

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Viadiu H, Aggarwal AK, Structure of BamHI bound to nonspecific DNA: a model for DNA sliding., Mol Cell. 2000 May;5(5):889-95. Print.
  2. Voet, Voet, Donald, Judith G. Voet, and Charlotte W. Pratt. Fundamentals of Biochemistry Life at the Molecular Level. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 2008. p. 578-579. Print.
  3. 3.0 3.1 PDBe., European Molecular Biology Laboratory. 2011. Webpage.
  4. Newman, Matthew, Structure of BamHI Endonuclease Bound to DNA: Partial Folding and Unfolding on DNA Binding., Science. 1995 Aug;4(269):656-63. Print.

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