Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.7.48 (transcriptase)
9,479 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Rabies virion-associated transcriptase activity was investigated in vitro and compared with that of the New Jersey serotype of vesicular stomatitis virus. The concentration of detergent that affected [3H]GMP incoporation into acid-insoluble material was significantly different for both viruses. Vesicular stomatitis virus New Jersey required 0.05 to 0.1% nonionic detergent, whereas rabies virion could not be fully activated unless 4 to 5% detergent was used. Other optimal conditions were as follows: 40 mM NaCl, 5 mM Mg2+, 40 mM Tris-hydrochloride (pH 7.4), 5 mM dithiothreitol, and 30 degrees C. The reaction required four nucleoside triphosphates. The initial rate of RNA synthesis by rabies virion enzyme was 140 pmol of GMP incorporated/mg of viral protein per h and linearly increased until about 8 h, with a slight initial lag phase. The enzyme activity that correlated with the content of L protein was highest when rabies virions were grown at 33 degrees C. The product was single-stranded RNA, which was complementary in base sequences to rabies viral RNA. Most of the RNA synthesized sedimented at 6-16S.
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PMID:Transcriptase activity associated with rabies virion. 2 66

The activities, the temperature and pH optima of in vitro functioning and stability upon heating of virion transcriptase of 10 human influenza virus A strains differing in reactogenicity and isolated in different epidemiological situations, and of fowl plague virus (FVP) were compared. As compared with virion transcriptase of human influenza virus strains studied, that of FPV had a higher pH optimum, was capable of functioning in vitro at a higher temperature and was more stable on heating. Freshly isolated and vaccine influenza virus strains on the one hand and strains isolated at the peak and in the end of an epidemic did not differ in the virion transcriptase properties. The virion transcriptase of a strain isolated from a local influenza outbreak was much less active than transcriptase of a highly epiedmic strain.
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PMID:Comparative study of virion transcriptase of some influenza virus strains. 2 10

Two types of particles were isolated during purification of rotavirus. Dense (D) particles have a density of 1.38 in CsCl and exhibit spontaneously a fully active endogenous transcriptase. Light (L) particles (density of 1.36 in CsCl) need to be treated with chelating agents to show a polymerase activity. The activation process of L particles was studied under strictly controlled monovalent, divalent, and hydrogen ion concentrations. These experiments demonstrate that i) activation is not affected by the ionic strength ii) activation occurs only at a pH higher than 7.1 iii) a low concentration of chelating agent (40 muM EDTA) is sufficient to activate the enzyme. Treatment of particles with EGTA, which chelates selectively Ca2+, leads to unmasking even in the presence of magnesium, indicating that the concentration of free calcium ions plays a major role in the activation process. Various glycosidases, detergents, and chelating agents were tested in respect to unmasking properties. Of these compound only chelating agents turned out to be efficient. Following activation, two glycopeptides were solubilized. These glycopeptides have an apparent molecular weight of 34,000 and 31,000 daltons and react with concanavalin A. The role of Ca2+ upon the stability of virus particles, and the activation of the endogenous transcriptase in vitro and in the infected cells is discussed.
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PMID:Activation of rotavirus RNA polymerase by calcium chelation. 4 4

Two sheep choroid plexus cell cultures were maintained and propagated for 413 days since being infected with strain K796 visna virus. The majority of the cells in these cultures contained visna virus-specific antigen on days 93 and 105 after infection. Reverse transcriptase-like activity similar to that present in visna virus preparations was obtained from these cultures when very little plaque-forming virus was being synthesized. The persistently infected cultures are resistant to the cytopathic effect which occurs in uninfected cultures upon exposure to visna virus. Persistently infected cells require more time than uninfected cells to become confluent. Less than 0.02 percent of the persistently infected sheep choroid plexus cells form macroscopic colonies within 14 days, whereas 20 to 30 percent of the cells from uninfected cultures form macroscopic colonies within this time.
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PMID:Long-term Visna virus infection of sheep choroid plexus cells: initiation and preliminary characterization of the carrier cultures. 4 11

In search of an anti-transcriptase, antibody was raised in rabbits to partially purified, soluble NS protein present in cytoplasmic extracts of cells infected with the Indiana serotype of vesicular stomatitis (VSInd) virus. This antiserum gave specific reactions of identity by agar immunodiffusion with both cytoplasmic and virion NS protein. NS antiserum also preferentially precipitated NS 3-H-labeled protein from infected cytoplasmic extracts, whereas anti-whole VSInd virion serum also precipitated N 3-H-labeled protein from extracts both of infected cytoplasm and virion nucleocapsids. Transcriptase activity of VSInd cytoplasmic or virion-derived nucleocapsids was effectively inhibited by ribonuclease-free immunoglubulin prepared from homologous NSInd antiserum or from anti-whole vesicular stomatitis virus serum. Transcriptase activity of heterologous New Jersey serotype (VSNJ) nucleocapsids and virions was not appreciably affected by anti-NSInd or by anti-whole VSInd virion gamma globulin. Anti-NS gamma glubulin immediately switched off RNA synthesis by actively transcribing VSInd nucleocapsids, a finding which suggests that NS antibody inhibits RNA chain elongation.
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PMID:Inhibition of viral transcriptase by immunoglobulin directed against the nucleocapsid NS protein of vesicular stomatitis virus. 4 40

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.
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PMID:Protein kinase and its regulatory effect on reverse transcriptase activity of Rous sarcoma virus. 5 72

A cytoplasmic particulate fraction from human leukemic cells has been shown to contain reverse transcriptase and its associated high-molecular weight RHA template. We attempted to detect the reverse-transcriptase-template complex in morphologically normal peripheral blood leukocytes from patients with acute leukemia in complete remission. Our assay system consisted of a velocity glycerol gradient and cesium sulfate equilibrium gradient analysis of the endogenous reverse transcriptase reaction product. Three of nine patients in remission had positive reactions determined by glycerol gradient analysis, and eight of 10 patients in remission had positive reactions by cesium sulfate gradient analysis. We were unable to detect the template complex in leukocytes of normal persons. Thus, normal-appearing leukocytes in the peripheral blood of some leukemia patients in remission seem to retain a number of biochemical characteristics, possibly viral related, associated with leukemic cells.
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PMID:Reverse transcriptase in leukocytes of leukemic patients in remission. 5 87

The alkoxybenzophenanthridine alkaloids (coralyne acetosulfate, fagaronine chloride, and nitidine chloride) have been reported to possess antileukemic activity in mice. These compounds were tested for inhibition of reverse transcriptase activity of an RNA tumor virus and DNA polymerase, RNA polymerase, and polyadenylic acid polymerase activities of NIH-Swiss mouse embryos. Reverse transcriptase and DNA polymerase activities were strongly inhibited by these antileukemic alkaloids, whereas RNA polymerase and polyadenylic acid polymerase activities were only moderately affected. Viral and cellular DNA polymerase activities were potently diminished by the alkaloids when poly[d(A-T)], poly(dA)-oligo(dT), and poly(rA)-oligo(dT) template primers were used in the reaction mixture; however, no inhibition of enzyme activity was obtained with poly(rC)-oligo(dG) as template primer. These results suggest that alkoxybenzophenanthridine alkaloids inhibit DNA polymerase activity by interaction with A:T base pairs of the template primer.
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PMID:Inhibition of mammalian and oncornavirus nucleic acid polymerase activities by alkoxybenzophenanthridine alkaloids. 5 19

1. Circular dichroic (CD) spectra of purified intermediate subviral particles of reovirus were determined in the presence of different monovalent cations. 2. The CD spectra reveal that reo intermediate subviral particles can exist in two conformationally different forms. The two forms are readily distinguished by comparison of their ellipticities in the wavelength regions 210 nm and 220 nm, with a Na+-induced form exhibiting a reduced negative ellipticity relative to a Cs+-induced form. 3. The transition between the Na+- and Cs+-induced forms is reversible by manipulation of the species of monovalent cation present and appears to be temperature independent. 4. Temperature variation studies on dilute suspensions of particles indicate that the Na+-induced form is stable, whereas the Cs+-induced from undergoes a second transition, temperature dependent and irreversible, to become a viral core. 5. A model is presented relating these observations to the known properties of reovirus uncoating and transcriptase activation.
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PMID:Circular dichroism of intermediate subviral particles of reovirus. Elucidation of the mechanism underlying the specific monovalent cation effects on uncoating. 6 90

DNA, complementary to chicken globin mRNA was synthesized using either Avian Myeloblastosis virus reverse transcriptase, or E. coli DNA polymerase I. Transcriptase cDNA sediments at 9 S on sucrose gradients, and is 620 nucleotides in length, representing a complete copy of globin mRNA template. In contrast, Polymerase I cDNA sediments at 4 S, is 100 to 200 nucleotides in length, and is a copy of a small region at the 3'(poly A) end of globin mRNA. Similarly, Transcriptase cDNA and Polymerase I cDNA hybridize to globin mRNA template with characteristic, individual Crot1/2 values. The Crot1/2 value for Transcriptase cDNA hybridization is 7 X 10(-4) mol s 1(-1), and that for Polymerase I cDNA is 5 X 10(-3). This work shows that Avian Myeloblastosis virus reverse transcriptase can use Polymerase I cDNA to prime further cDNA synthesis along the mRNA template. The product of extended cDNA synthesis is identical in length and hybridization properties to oligo (dT) primed transcriptase cDNA.
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PMID:Gene specific priming of complementary DNA synthesis. 6 22


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