Deoxyribonuclease II

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
deoxyribonuclease II alpha
Identifiers
SymbolDNASE2
Alt. symbolsDNASE2A, DRN2, DNL, DNL2
Chr. 19 p13.2
Search for
StructuresSwiss-model
DomainsInterPro
deoxyribonuclease II beta
Identifiers
SymbolDNASE2B
Chr. 1 p22.3
Search for
StructuresSwiss-model
DomainsInterPro

Deoxyribonuclease II (

DNase II, pancreatic DNase II, deoxyribonucleate 3'-nucleotidohydrolase, pancreatic DNase II, acid deoxyribonuclease, acid DNase) is an endonuclease that hydrolyzes phosphodiester linkages of deoxyribonucleotide in native and denatured DNA, yielding products with 3'-phosphates and 5'-hydroxyl ends, which occurs as a result of single-strand cleaving mechanism.[1] As the name implies, it functions optimally at acid pH because it is commonly found in low pH environment of lysosomes
.

The action of DNase occurs in three phases. The initial phase introduces multiple nicks in the

hyperchromic shift resulting from reduction of oligonucleotides.[1]

There are several known

DNases
II, including:

References

  1. ^ .
  2. .
  3. .
  4. ^ Universal protein resource accession number Q8WZ79 for "DNASE2B – Deoxyribonuclease-2-beta precursor – Homo sapiens (Human) – DNASE2B gene & protein" at UniProt.

External links