Patricia J. Greene
University of California, San Francisco
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Featured researches published by Patricia J. Greene.
Gene | 1977
Francisco Bolívar; Raymond L. Rodriguez; Patricia J. Greene; Mary C. Betlach; Herbert L. Heyneker; Herbert W. Boyer; Jorge H. Crosa; Stanley Falkow
In vitro recombination techniques were used to construct a new cloning vehicle, pBR322. This plasmid, derived from pBR313, is a relaxed replicating plasmid, does not produce and is sensitive to colicin E1, and carries resistance genes to the antibiotics ampicillin (Ap) and tetracycline (Tc). The antibiotic-resistant genes on pBR322 are not transposable. The vector pBR322 was constructed in order to have a plasmid with a single PstI site, located in the ampicillin-resistant gene (Apr), in addition to four unique restriction sites, EcoRI, HindIII, BamHI and SalI. Survival of Escherichia coli strain X1776 containing pBR313 and pBR322 as a function of thymine and diaminopimelic acid (DAP) starvation and sensitivity to bile salts was found to be equivalent to the non-plasmid containing strain. Conjugal transfer of these plasmids in bi- and triparental matings were significantly reduced or undetectable relative to the plasmid ColE1.
Gene | 1989
Frank H. Stephenson; Barry T. Ballard; Herbert W. Boyer; John M. Rosenberg; Patricia J. Greene
The RsrI endonuclease, a type-II restriction endonuclease (ENase) found in Rhodobacter sphaeroides, is an isoschizomer of the EcoRI ENase. A clone containing an 11-kb BamHI fragment was isolated from an R. sphaeroides genomic DNA library by hybridization with synthetic oligodeoxyribonucleotide probes based on the N-terminal amino acid (aa) sequence of RsrI. Extracts of E. coli containing a subclone of the 11-kb fragment display RsrI activity. Nucleotide sequence analysis reveals an 831-bp open reading frame encoding a polypeptide of 277 aa. A 50% identity exists within a 266-aa overlap between the deduced aa sequences of RsrI and EcoRI. Regions of 75-100% aa sequence identity correspond to key structural and functional regions of EcoRI. The type-II ENases have many common properties, and a common origin might have been expected. Nevertheless, this is the first demonstration of aa sequence similarity between ENases produced by different organisms.
Gene | 1986
Irene Kuhn; Frank H. Stephenson; Herbert W. Boyer; Patricia J. Greene
The construction and use of a series of positive-selection vectors are described. These plasmids encode EcoRI endonuclease, the synthesis of which is under the control of the lacUV5 promoter. The pKG2 plasmid encodes a wild-type EcoRI endonuclease. In the absence of EcoRI methylase, the endonuclease is lethal. Cloning into any of the unique restriction sites within the endonuclease-coding gene allows survival of the transformed EcoRI-methylase-less host. The pKGW and pKGS plasmids encode an altered EcoRI endonuclease which, when repressed in a lacIQ host, allows survival in the absence of the methylase. Induction with IPTG, however, results in cell death as a result of high-level EcoRI synthesis. Cloning into any of the unique restriction sites within the EcoRI gene of pKGW or pKGS allows survival of derepressed transformed cells. These vectors strongly select for cloning events which inactivate the endonuclease gene.
Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 1995
Francisco Gamarro; Pak-Lam Yu; Jia Zhao; Ursula Edman; Patricia J. Greene; Daniel V. Santi
The gene encoding the bifunctional dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) and thymidylate synthase (TS) of Trypanosoma brucei brucei has been isolated and expressed in Escherichia coli, and the enzyme has been purified and characterized. The coding sequence of the DHFR-TS is 1581 nt, encoding a 527-amino-acid protein of 58,505 Da. The gene was expressed under control of the trc promoter in pKK233-2. The resulting expression plasmid conferred trimethoprim resistance to E. coli DH5 alpha and complemented the TS deficiency in chi 2913recA cells indicating the presence of active DHFR and TS. DHFR-TS was purified by methotrexate-Sepharose chromatography. In addition to the full-length enzyme, the purified enzyme contained 31 and 31.5-kDa forms of the enzyme that cross-reacted with anti-L. major DHFR-TS antibodies; one was truncated at the N- and C termini, and the other at only the C terminus. Despite the presence of sufficient TS for complementation, TS activity was not detectable in the crude extract or in the final purified enzyme preparation. Although the majority of the enzyme appears to be full length, it is possible that the TS domain has been degraded by one of more residues, which would inactivate the ability to synthesize thymidylate. Kinetic analysis of DHFR yielded kcat and Km values similar to those of related enzymes. The T. brucei DHFR has Ki values for antimicrobial antifolates pyrimethamine and trimethoprim which are significantly lower than the closely related T. cruzi or L. major DHFRs or than human DHFR.
Protein Expression and Purification | 1991
Daniel V. Santi; Ursula Edman; Svetlana Minkin; Patricia J. Greene
Catalytically active Pneumocystis carinii thymidylate synthase is expressed to the extent of about 4% of the soluble protein in Escherichia coli chi 2913 harboring plasmid pUETS-1.8 (U. Edman, J. C. Edman, B. Lundgren, and D. V. Santi, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 86, 6503-6507, 1989). Ion-exchange, affinity, hydrophobic, and reactive dye agarose chromatography steps were explored to devise a large-scale purification protocol for P. carinii thymidylate synthase. Sequential DE52, Q-Sepharose, phenyl-Sepharose, and Cibacron Blue F3GA chromatography yielded enzyme that was homogeneous by SDS-PAGE in a yield of over 50%. The sequence of the first 10 amino acid residues of the purified protein was in accord with that predicted from the DNA sequence. Isoelectric focusing gave a pI of 6.2. Kinetic analysis of the purified enzyme revealed that the Km values were 4.7 +/- 1.3 microM for dUMP and 15.7 +/- 4.3 microM for 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate, similar to those of many other thymidylate synthases; the kcat of the most active preparation was 0.8 s-1. The enzyme is stable for at least 2 months when stored at -80 degrees C in the presence of 40% glycerol, Tris-HCl, and thiol.
Gene | 1988
Patricia J. Greene; Barry T. Ballard; Frank H. Stephenson; William J. Kohr; Henry Rodriguez; John M. Rosenberg; Herbert W. Boyer
Rhodobacter sphaeroides strain 630 produces restriction enzyme RsrI which is an isoschizomer of EcoRI. We have purified this enzyme and initiated a comparison with the EcoRI endonuclease. The properties of RsrI are consistent with a reaction mechanism similar to that of EcoRI: the position of cleavage within the -GAATTC-site is identical, the MgCl2 optimum for the cleavage is identical, and the pH profile is similar. Methylation of the substrate sequence by the EcoRI methylase protects the site from cleavage by the RsrI endonuclease. RsrI cross-reacts strongly with anti-EcoRI serum indicating three-dimensional structural similarities. We have determined the sequence of 34 N terminal amino acids for RsrI and this sequence possesses significant similarity to the EcoRI N terminus.
Trends in Biochemical Sciences | 1987
John M. Rosenberg; Judith A. McClarin; Christin A. Frederick; Bi-Cheng Wang; John Grable; Herbert W. Boyer; Patricia J. Greene
Abstract The structure of a complex between Eco RI endonuclease and a cognate oligonucleotide shows that sequence specificity is mediated by 12 protein-DNA hydrogen bonds. These interactions discriminate the Eco RI recognition site from all other sequences because any base substitution would rupture at least one of these hydrogen bonds.
Journal of Biomolecular Structure & Dynamics | 1984
John Grable; Christin A. Frederick; Cleopas T. Samudzi; Linda Jen-Jacobson; David Lesser; Patricia J. Greene; Herbert W. Boyer; Keiichi Itakura; John M. Rosenberg
Recognition complexes between EcoRI endonuclease and either of two synthetic oligonucleotides (sequences CGCGAATTCGCG and TCGCGAATTCGCG) crystallize in Space Group P321 with unit cell parameters a = 128 and c = 47 A and a = 118.4 and c = 49.7 A, respectively. Native diffraction data to 3 A resolution have been collected from the form containing the tridecameric sequence. Electrophoretic analyses of dissolved crystals demonstrate that this form contains DNA and protein in a ratio of one double helix per enzyme dimer. The most likely asymmetric unit contents are one 31,000 dalton enzyme subunit and one strand of DNA, yielding VM values of 3.1 A3/dal and 2.8 A3/dal for the forms containing dodecameric and tridecameric DNA, respectively. This implies that the DNA-protein complex possesses two-fold rotational symmetry, which has been incorporated in the crystalline lattice.
Science | 1986
Judith A. McClarin; Christin A. Frederick; Bi-Cheng Wang; Patricia J. Greene; Herbert W. Boyer; John Grable; John M. Rosenberg
Science | 1990
Yc Kim; John Grable; R Love; Patricia J. Greene; John M. Rosenberg