Exonuclease V from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A 5'----3'-deoxyribonuclease that produces dinucleotides in a sequential fashion.
1988
Abstract A novel deoxyribonuclease, exonuclease V, has been purified approximately 30,000-fold from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Exonuclease V is localized in the nucleus. The nuclease degrades single-stranded, but not double-stranded, DNA from the 5'-end. The products of exonuclease action are dinucleotides, except the 3'-terminal tri- and tetranucleotides which are not degraded. Studies with synthetic oligo- and polynucleotides with specified sequence elements showed that exonuclease V cleaves off dinucleotides as primary digestion products. Thus, the polymers (pT)9pA(pT)n and (pT)10pA(pT)n yielded pTpA and pApT as digestion products, respectively. Removal of the 5'-terminal phosphate from the DNA substrate results in reduced binding of the enzyme to the substrate. In addition, the initial hydrolytic cut by exonuclease V on the dephosphorylated substrate produces a mixture of dinucleoside monophosphates and trinucleoside diphosphates. The enzyme is processive in action.
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