Ribonuclease H enzymes cleave the
phosphodiester bonds of
RNA in a double-stranded RNA:DNA hybrid, leaving a
3' hydroxyl and a
5' phosphate group on either end of the cut site with a two-metal-ion catalysis mechanism, in which two divalent cations, such as Mg2+ and Mn2+, directly participate in the catalytic function. Type 1 RNases H have prokaryotic and eukaryotic RNases H1 and retroviral RNase H. Type 2 RNases H have prokaryotic and eukaryotic RNases H2 and bacterial RNase H3. These RNases H exist in a monomeric form, except for eukaryotic RNases H2, which exist in a heterotrimeric form. RNase H1 and H2 have distinct
substrate preferences and distinct but overlapping functions in the cell. In prokaryotes and lower eukaryotes, neither enzyme is
essential, whereas both are believed to be essential in higher eukaryotes.
Ribonuclease H1 Ribonuclease H1 enzymes require at least four
ribonucleotide-containing
base pairs in a substrate and cannot remove a single ribonucleotide from a strand that is otherwise composed of deoxyribonucleotides. For this reason, it is considered unlikely that RNase H1 enzymes are involved in the processing of
RNA primers from
Okazaki fragments during
DNA replication. In many eukaryotes, including
mammals, RNase H1 genes include a
mitochondrial targeting sequence, leading to expression of
isoforms with and without the MTS present. As a result, RNase H1 is localized to both
mitochondria and the
nucleus. In
knockout mouse models, RNase H1-null mutants are
lethal during
embryogenesis due to defects in replicating
mitochondrial DNA. The defects in mitochondrial DNA replication induced by loss of RNase H1 are likely due to defects in
R-loop processing. The B subunit mediates
protein-protein interactions between the H2 complex and
PCNA, which localizes H2 to
replication foci. Although both H1 and H2 are present in the mammalian
cell nucleus, H2 is the dominant source of RNase H activity there and is important for maintaining genome stability. Unlike HI and HII, which are both widely distributed among prokaryotes, HIII is found in only a few organisms with a scattered taxonomic distribution; it is somewhat more common in
archaea and is rarely or never found in the same prokaryotic genome as HI. ==Mechanism==