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Carcinogenesis, Vol 18, 279-286, Copyright © 1997 by Oxford University Press


ARTICLES

A processive versus a distributive mechanism of action correlates with differences in ability of normal and xeroderma pigmentosum group A endonucleases to incise damaged nucleosomal DNA

S Feng, DD Parrish and MW Lambert
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, UMDNJ-New Jersey Medical School, Newark 07103, USA.

A DNA endonuclease, isolated from the nuclei of normal human and xeroderma pigmentosum complementation group A (XPA) cells, which recognizes predominately pyrimidine dimers, was examined for the mechanism by which it locates sites of damage on UVC-irradiated DNA. In reaction mixtures with low ionic strengths (i.e. lacking KCl), the normal and XPA endonuclease locate sites of UV damage on both naked and reconstituted nucleosomal DNA by different mechanisms. On both of these substrates, the normal endonuclease acts by a processive mechanism, meaning that it binds non-specifically to DNA and scans the DNA for sites of damage, whereas the XPA endonuclease acts by a distributive one, meaning that it randomly locates sites of damage on DNA. However, while both the normal and XPA endonucleases can incise UVC irradiated naked DNA, they differ in ability to incise damaged nucleosomal DNA. The normal endonuclease showed increased activity on UVC treated nucleosomal DNA compared with naked DNA, whereas the XPA endonuclease showed decreased activity on the damaged nucleosomal substrate. Since a processive mechanism of action is sensitive to the ionic strength of the micro-environment, the KCl concentration of the reaction was increased. At 70 mM KCI, the normal endonuclease switched to a distributive mechanism of action and its ability to incise damaged nucleosomal DNA also decreased. These studies show that there is a correlation between the ability of these endonucleases to act by a processive mechanism and their ability to incise damaged nucleosomal DNA; the normal endonuclease, which acts processively, can incise damaged nucleosomal DNA, whereas the XPA endonuclease, which acts distributively, is defective in ability to incise this substrate.
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