Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.7.7.48 (
transcriptase
)
9,479
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have studied the effect of protein phosphokinase (EC 2.7.1.37; ATP:protein phosphotransferase) and phosphoprotein phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.16; phosphoprotein phosphohydrolase) on reverse transcriptase (RNA-dependent DNA nucleotidyltransferase) activity of
Rous sarcoma
virus. Protein kinase from
Rous sarcoma
virus-transformed chick embryo fibroblasts was purified by DEAE-cellulose chromatography, Sephadex gel filtration, and isoelectric focusing. Purified reverse transcriptase from Rouse sarcoma virus was preincubated with protein kinase and ATP under conditions allowing incorporation of phosphate into substrate protein. After the preincubation, reverse transcriptase activity was assayed in the presence of poly(rA).oligo(dT) as template. A 2- to 5-fold increase of reverse transcriptase activity was found after the preincubation of reverse transcriptase with protein kinase and ATP. Incubation of reverse transcriptase with heat-treated, inactive protein kinase and ATP had no effect on
transcriptase
activity. When the
transcriptase
preparation was incubated with protein kinase and [gamma-32P]ATP and subsequently purified by chromatography on phosphocellulose and Sephadex gel filtration, significant amounts of 32P-labeled proteins were found in the fractions exhibiting reverse transcriptase activity, suggesting 32P incorporation into
transcriptase
or
transcriptase
-associated proteins. A 20-60% decrease of reverse transcriptase activity was observed after incubation of reverse transcriptase with phosphatase. The results suggest that phosphorylative modification of reverse transcriptase may be critical in the regulation of reverse transcriptase-catalyzed DNA synthesis.
...
PMID:Protein kinase and its regulatory effect on reverse transcriptase activity of Rous sarcoma virus. 5 72
The alpha, beta2, and alphabeta forms of the RNA-dependent DNA polymerase of avian sarcoma virus B77 grown in duck embryo fibroblasts have been compared with respect to several kinetic properties. The following results were obtained. 1. The Km values for dTTP and dGTP for enzyme forms alpha, beta2, and alphabeta were 77, 39, and 74, and 6.8, 3.1, and 6.1 micronM, respectively. 2. The affinity of 70 S
Rous sarcoma
virus RNA for enzyme form alphabeta was about twice that for the other two forms. 3. The relative specific activities of the three enzyme forms on synthetic primer-templates such as poly(rA)-poly(dT) were almost the same. The viral 70 S RNA-dependent specific activities were 2 to 3 orders of magnitude lower and in the ratio of 1:3:5 for enzyme forms alpha:beta2:alphabeta. Addition of exogenous oligo(dT) stimulated the 70 S viral RNA-dependent activity of enzyme forms alphabeta and beta2 by a factor of 3, and that of enzyme form alpha by a factor of 30, so that it then became the most active
transcriptase
of viral 70 S RNA. 4. The largest transcripts formed by the three enzyme forms with 70 S viral RNA as primer-template were about 4,500 nucleotides long. About one-third of the total amount of polynucleotides polymerized by the alphabeta enzyme was in the form of such transcripts. This proportion was far higher than for the other two enzyme forms. 5. All three enzyme forms were capable of transcribing single-stranded into double-stranded DNA. 6. The 3-propylcyclohexyl piperidyl derivative of rifamycin SV, at a concentration of 100 microng/ml, inhibited enzyme forms beta2 and alphabeta by over 99.5 and 96%, respectively, but enzyme form alpha by only about 60%. 7. The beta2 and alphabeta forms of the enzyme were processive DNA polymerases, the alpha form a nonprocessive polymerase. 8. In general, these results indicate that in most respects the properties of the dimeric enzyme forms resemble each other much more closely than those of the alpha form. In some very important respects, such as affinity for viral RNA and the size of transcripts formed from it, the alphabeta enzyme form performs significantly better than either of the other two enzyme forms.
...
PMID:RNA-dependent DNA polymerase of avian sarcoma virus B77. II. Comparison of the catalytic properties of the alpha, beta2, and alphabeta enzyme forms. 6 35
Reverse
transcriptase
from avian retrovirus has a physically associated DNA endonuclease with novel substrate and cofactor requirements. A similar endonuclease activity copurifies with pp32, a protein from viral cores that has been identified with the non-alpha region of the beta subunit of reverse transcriptase. Several temperature-sensitive mutants of avian retrovirus with thermolabile DNA polymerase were tested for thermal sensitivity of their DNA endonuclease activity. Two pol mutants of
Rous sarcoma
virus, ts335 and ts337, had thermolabile DNA endonuclease; a temperature-resistant revertant of ts335 had a heat-stable DNA endonuclease. DNA endonuclease is therefore a product of the pol gene and an integral part of the reverse transcriptase. A second class of pol mutants, typified by ts568 and ts553, had thermolabile DNA polymerase, but heat-stable DNA endonuclease.
...
PMID:Virus-coded DNA endonuclease from avian retrovirus. 616 35
Reverse
transcriptase
from
Rous sarcoma
virus and avian myeloblastosis virus was purified by a rapid two-step procedure using chromatography on phosphocellulose and heparin-Sepharose. The resulting enzyme was homogeneous, had a high specific activity and was free of contaminating nucleases. This procedure has been adapted to small-scale preparation of enzyme from mutant virus containing thermolabile reverse transcriptase, and is equally suitable for large-scale enzyme purification.
...
PMID:Purification of reverse transcriptase from avian retroviruses using affinity chromatography on heparin-sepharose. 616 44
A temperature-sensitive mutant (LA83) of
Rous sarcoma
virus defective both in the transformation and replication function has been isolated and partially characterized. Temperature-shift experiments showed that the defects in both the focus-forming and replication functions were late and continuous. The mutant LA83 was complemented by avian leukosis viruses. Complementation of LA83 replication was also observed with the glycoprotein-deletion mutant, Brian high-titer RSV(-) suggesting that the env gene in LA83 was not defective. At the nonpermissive temperature LA83-infected cells produced noninfectious particles with a yield of about 30%. The noninfectious particles had only about 3% of reverse-
transcriptase
activity as the infectious LA83 produced at the permissive temperature. However, the LA83 virions were as thermolabile as the parent wild-type PR-B virions.
...
PMID:Characterization of a replication-defective temperature-sensitive mutant of Rous sarcoma virus. 620 47
A temperature-sensitive coordinate mutant tsLA83 of Prague (PR-B) strain of
Rous sarcoma
virus at the nonpermissive temperature (41 degrees) produces noninfectious virus particles (NI-LA83) which contained only 3% of the reverse-
transcriptase
activity present in infectious virions. Analyses of [35S]methionine-labeled NI-LA83 showed the presence of all of the viral proteins except reverse transcriptase. Pulse-chase analyses of the virus-specified proteins in cells infected with LA83 or PR-B showed that the gag and glycoprotein precursors, Pr76gag and gPr95env, respectively, were processed at both 35 and 41 degrees. The reverse-
transcriptase
precursor, Pr180gag-pol, however, was not processed in LA83-infected cells at 41 degrees. In contrast, cells infected with LA83 or PR-B at 35 degrees as well as with PR-B at 41 degrees showed normal cleavage of Pr180gag-pol. A shiftdown of LA83-infected cells at 41 degrees to the permissive temperature 35 degrees resulted in the normal processing of Pr180gag-pol and production of infectious virus containing reverse transcriptase. Electron microscopic analysis showed that at 41 degrees cells infected with LA83 showed a large number of budding structures but fewer released particles. A shiftdown from 41 to 35 degrees resulted in an increase of virus particles with a concomitant decrease in budding structures suggesting that the processing of reverse-
transcriptase
precursor is related to virion assembly.
...
PMID:Impaired cleavage of the joint gag-pol polyprotein precursor and virion assembly in a temperature-sensitive mutant of Rous sarcoma virus. 633 Sep 81
Reverse
transcriptase
(RT) isolated from
Rous sarcoma
virus (RSV) consists of heterodimeric RTalphabeta, RTalpha, and RTbeta. The alpha subunit (63 kDa) contains an N-terminal polymerase and a C-terminal RNase H domain. The N terminus of beta (95 kDa) corresponds to alpha with the integrase domain attached to the C terminus (32 kDa). We have constructed baculoviruses expressing the genes for alpha or beta or the entire pol (99 kDa). Infection of insect cells with recombinant virus yielded highly active and soluble RSV RT enzymes that could be purified to >90% homogeneity. HPLC gel filtration showed that alpha is a dimeric enzyme that can be partially monomerized upon the addition of 45% Me(2)SO. DNA synthesis on DNA-DNA and DNA-RNA primer-templates in the presence of competitor substrates revealed that alphabeta and beta as well as alpha are processive polymerases. However, the affinity of beta and alphabeta for primer-template substrates appears to be higher than that of alpha. All RSV enzymes investigated have the potential to displace RNA-RNA duplexes more efficiently than human immunodeficiency virus type 1 RT. Unlike human immunodeficiency virus type 1 RT, RSV RTs can catalyze an initial RNase H endonucleolytic cleavage of the RNA template but not a 3' --> 5' directed processing activity.
...
PMID:Soluble Rous sarcoma virus reverse transcriptases alpha, alphabeta, and beta purified from insect cells are processive DNA polymerases that lack an RNase H 3' --> 5' directed processing activity. 1047 89
Reverse
transcriptase
(RT) preparations containing various molecular forms of the enzyme consisting of alpha- and/or beta-subunits have been isolated from E. coli cells transformed with plasmid pMF14 containing the
Rous sarcoma
virus (RSV) pol gene. The three possible dimeric forms of the enzyme demonstrated DNA polymerase activity, the relative activities of the alphaalpha, betabeta, and alphabeta forms being about 1:3:4. RNase H activity is associated with the betabeta and alphabeta dimers but not with the alphaalpha dimer. Comparison of the enzymic properties of the various dimers and dissociation--reassociation results suggest that the betabeta and alphabeta dimers of the RSV recombinant reverse transcriptase are similar to the corresponding virion RT forms.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of Rous sarcoma virus recombinant reverse transcriptase dimers. 1049 11
Reverse
transcriptase
(RT) is a good diagnostic tool for the detection of retroviruses. We have developed a simple and rapid assay for RT activity in culture supernatants. A 370-base RNA sequence from the tetracycline-resistance gene in pBR322 plasmid DNA was used as a template for RT-mediated cDNA synthesis. To detect the resultant cDNA, we used the nested polymerase chain reaction. A sensitivity test using purified recombinant RT of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 demonstrated that the detection limit of this method was 10-7-10-8 units of RT activity in 20 mul of a test sample (2 x 10-9-2 x 10-10 units ml-1). This method detected RT activity in unconcentrated supernatants of cell cultures infected with human T-cell leukemia virus, Moloney murine leukemia virus, Moloney murine sarcoma virus, or
Rous sarcoma
virus. This nonisotopic method provides results within 10 h and is useful for quality control to detect retroviruses in cell cultures.
...
PMID:A simple and rapid reverse transcriptase assay for the detection of retroviruses in cell cultures. 1900 45