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|a Cao, Bo
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|a Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biological Engineering
|e contributor
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|a Cao, Bo
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|a Ramesh Babu, I.
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|a Dedon, Peter C.
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|a Zheng, Xiaoqing
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|a Cheng, Qiuxiang
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|a Yao, Fen
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|a Zheng, Tao
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|a Ramesh Babu, I.
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|a Zhou, Huchen
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|a You, Delin
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|a Dedon, Peter C.
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|a In vitro analysis of phosphorothioate modification of DNA reveals substrate recognition by a multiprotein complex
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|b Nature Publishing Group,
|c 2015-09-10T13:22:14Z.
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|z Get fulltext
|u http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/98432
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|a A wide variety of prokaryotes possess DNA modifications consisting of sequence-specific phosphorothioates (PT) inserted by members of a five-gene cluster. Recent genome mapping studies revealed two unusual features of PT modifications: short consensus sequences and partial modification of a specific genomic site in a population of bacteria. To better understand the mechanism of target selection of PT modifications that underlies these features, we characterized the substrate recognition of the PT-modifying enzymes termed DptC, D and E in a cell extract system from Salmonella. The results revealed that double-stranded oligodeoxynucleotides underwent de novo PT modification in vitro, with the same modification pattern as in vivo, i. e., GpsAAC/GpsTTC motif. Unexpectedly, in these in vitro analyses we observed no significant effect on PT modification by sequences flanking GAAC/GTTC motif, while PT also occurred in the GAAC/GTTC motif that could not be modified in vivo. Hemi-PT DNA also served as substrate of the PT-modifying enzymes, but not single-stranded DNA. The PT-modifying enzymes were then found to function as a large protein complex, with all of three subunits in tetrameric conformations. This study provided the first demonstration of in vitro DNA PT modification by PT-modifying enzymes that function as a large protein complex.
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|a National Natural Science Foundation (China) (Grant 31470183)
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|a National Natural Science Foundation (China) (Grant 31400029)
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|a National Natural Science Foundation (China) (Grant 31170085)
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|a National Natural Science Foundation (China) (Grant 30570400)
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|a National Natural Science Foundation (China) (Grant 31070058)
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|a China. Ministry of Science and Technology (Grant 2012CB721004)
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|a China. Ministry of Science and Technology (Grant 2009ZX09501-008)
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|a Shanghai Municipal Council of Science and Technology (Shanghai Pujiang Program Grant 12PJD021)
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|a China Scholarship Council
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|a National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Grant CHE-1019990)
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|a National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (Grant ES002109)
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|a Singapore. National Research Foundation (Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology)
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|a en_US
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|a Article
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|t Scientific Reports
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