Methods in Molecular Biology • 16 Enzymes of Molecular Biology

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

BAL 31 Nucleases 235



  1. Enzyme Requirements
    2.1. pH
    The near-neutral pH optima for the nuclease-catalyzed reactions
    (4,9,25) is an advantage for most work. There is a difference in the pH
    optima for single-stranded and linear duplex substrates for both the S
    and F nucleases, which are in the ranges 8.5-8.8 and 7.0-8.0 for single-
    stranded and linear duplex DNA, respectively (4, 9,25). Attack on super-
    coiled DNA, examined only for the S enzyme, was optimal at the same
    pH as for linear duplex DNA (4).
    2.2. Metal Ion Cofactors
    Ca 2+ and Mg 2÷ are both required cofactors (3). Ca 2+ is essential for
    activity, with nuclease activities on both single- and double-stranded
    DNA irreversibly (with respect to the readdition of excess Ca 2÷) lost
    in solution if the molar concentration of EDTA exceeds that of this
    cation (3,4). However, activity can be recovered after electrophoresis
    under denaturing conditions (sodium dodecyl sulfate [SDS]-polyacry-
    lamide gels) by incubation in a Ca2+-containing buffer (7).
    Maximum velocity against both single-stranded and linear duplex
    DNAs at constant [Ca 2÷] is achieved between 10 and 15 mM Mg 2÷
    (9,25). At nominally zero (actually 0.01-0.02 mM) Mg 2÷, there was
    residual duplex exonuclease activity (8 and 45% for the S and F
    enzymes, respectively), but virtually none for single-stranded DNA.
    In corresponding profiles where [Ca 2÷] was varied, concentrations
    near 10 mM are needed to achieve full velocity for the length reduction
    of duplex DNA, but activity is maximal on single-stranded DNA at or
    below 1 mM (9,25).
    In light of the above, a buffer containing 12.5 mM each of Ca 2÷ and
    Mg 2÷ is recommended, since this confers full activity with respect to
    both classes of substrate. The 5-mM concentrations of these ions in the
    BAL 31 nuclease buffers recommended by some suppliers would yield
    only 60-65% of the duplex exonuclease activity.


2.3. Effects of Temperature
The optimal temperature for the activity on single-stranded DNA is
near 60°C (4), but the use of such elevated temperatures is impractical.
Internal breaks would almost certainly be introduced into duplex DNA
because of at least transient thermally mediated unstacking of base

Free download pdf