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Enzyme
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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.
...
PMID:Transcriptase activity associated with rabies virion. 2 66
Adenosine (beta,gamma-imido)triphosphate (AMP-PNP) and guanosine (beta,gamma-imido)triphosphate (
GMP
-PNP) are analogs of ATP and GTP with non-hydrolyzable gamma-phosphates. Although both AMP-PNP and
GMP
-PNP were used in place of ATP and GTP by Escherichia coli RNA polymerase to transcribe vaccinia virus DNA, only
GMP
-PNP was used by the
transcriptase
present within vaccinia virus cores. AMP-PNP specifically prevented initiation of transcription, since RNA initiated in the presence of ATP, GTP, and CTP was subsequently elongated by incubating the washed cores in the presence of AMP-PNP, GTP, CTP, and UTP. The RNA formed in this manner, however, was (i) several times longer than normal transcripts, indicating a defect in chain termination and/or cleavage of nascent RNA, (ii) was not polyadenylylated (although free polyadenylic acid formed), and (iii) was not extruded from the virus cores. Nearest neighbor analysis demonstrated that AMP-PNP was incorporated adjacent to all four nucleotides, and hybridization to restriction endonuclease fragments of vaccinia virus DNA indicated that the high-molecular-weight RNA was transcribed from representative fractions of the entire genome. The possibility of a block in processing rather than or in addition to a block in chain termination was suggested by the cleavage of the high-molecular-weight RNA within the core after replacement of AMP-PNP with ATP. Cleavage of purified high-molecular-weight RNA by a soluble endoribonuclease extracted from vaccinia virus cores, however, was not dependent upon ATP, nor was it inhibited by AMP-PNP. The latter results suggest that AMP-PNP blocks a step preceding cleavage.
...
PMID:Multiple roles for ATP in the synthesis and processing of mRNA by vaccinia virus: specific inhibitory effects of adenosine (beta,gamma-imido) triphosphate. 69 Nov 15
In reovirus-infected cells, virus-specific particles accumulate that have associated with them a polyribocytidylate [poly(C)]-dependent polymerase. This enzyme copies in vitro poly(C) to yield the double-stranded poly(C).polyriboguanylate [poly(G)]. The particles with poly(C)-dependent polymerase were heterogeneous in size, with most sedimenting from 300S to 550S. Exponential increase in these particles began at 23 h, and maximal amounts were present by 31 h, the time of onset of exponential growth of virus at 30 degrees C. Maximal amounts of particles with active
transcriptase
and replicase were present at 15 and 18 h after infection. Thereafter, there was a marked decrease in particles with active
transcriptase
and replicase until base line levels were reached at 31 h. Thus, the increase in poly(C)-responding particles occurred coincident with the decrease in particles with active
transcriptase
and replicase. The requirement for poly(C) as template was specific because no RNA was synthesized in vitro in response to any other homopolymer, including 2'-O-methyl-poly(C). Synthesis was optimal in the presence of Mn(2+) as the divalent cation, and no primer was necessary for synthesis. In contrast, the dinucleotide GpG markedly stimulated synthesis in the presence of 8 mM Mg(2+). The size of the poly(C).poly(G) synthesized in vitro was dependent on the size of the poly(C) used as template. This suggested that the whole template was copied into a complementary strand of similar size. The T(m) of the product was between 100 and 130 degrees C. Hydrolysis of the product labeled in [(32)P]
GMP
with alkali or RNase T2 yielded
GMP
as the only labeled mononucleotide. This does indicate that the synthesis of the poly(G) strand in vitro did not proceed by end addition to the poly(C) template, but proceeded on a separate strand.
...
PMID:Reovirus-specific enzyme(s) associated with subviral particles responds in vitro to polyribocytidylate to yield double-stranded polyribocytidylate-polyriboguanylate. 88 47
To study the biological function of the NS protein of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), we prepared 21 species of synthetic oligopeptides with 11-21 amino acid residues, corresponding to every portion of the amino acid sequence of NS protein (Indiana serotype), and tested their effects on the VS virion (VSV)
transcriptase
activity in vitro. Only one peptide affected the virion-associated
transcriptase
activity of VSV Indiana, by reducing the incorporation of [3H]
GMP
into acid-insoluble fraction (IC50 = 26 microM). This peptide, the amino acid sequence of which corresponded to the carboxy (C)-terminal region of NS protein, also inhibited the New Jersey serotype virus
transcriptase
activity, as expected from a high degree of homology found between the amino acid sequences of the C-terminal regions of NS protein of both serotype viruses. Electrophoretic analysis on acrylamide gels of RNA transcripts revealed that the inhibitory synthetic peptide decreased the frequency of the initiation of transcription with no apparent effect on the chain-elongation process of viral transcription. As expected from its highly conserved amino acid sequence, these results suggest that the C-terminal domain of VSV NS protein is involved in initiating viral RNA synthesis.
...
PMID:Vesicular stomatitis virion-associated transcriptase activity was suppressed in vitro by a synthetic 21 amino acid oligopeptide prepared to mimic the carboxy-terminus of NS protein. 216 48
The influenza virus-associated RNA polymerase cleaves capped RNA in an endonucleolytic manner and the transcription is initiated by the addition of
GMP
, the first substrate to be polymerized under the direction of viral RNA template, onto 3'-termini of resulting capped RNA fragments. In the presence of high concentrations of GTP as a sole substrate, multiple
GMP
residues were polymerized onto the primers. By the addition of the second substrate CTP, excess
GMP
residues, other than the 1st residue, were removed prior to elongation. The result may suggest that the
RNA-dependent RNA polymerase
carries a proofreading function.
...
PMID:Proofreading function associated with the RNA-dependent RNA polymerase from influenza virus. 301 29
RNA-dependent RNA polymerase
(
RDRP
) activity was characterized in a cytoplasmic extract of Kunjin virus-infected Vero cells at 24 hr. The activity was influenced, possibly indirectly, by the length of prior treatment of infected cells with actinomycin D; however, 6 micrograms/ml actinomycin D and 10(-5) M alpha-amanitin in the
RDRP
assay had no effect. The replication complex was membrane-bound and Mg2+ was essential for
RDRP
activity. Incorporation was more dependent on exogenous UTP and GTP than ATP or CTP. The specific activity was low, and rate of incorporation of
GMP
decreased as the period of assay was increased; however, incorporation of label lasted for at least 60 min. RNA products were fractionated by LiCl precipitation, and kinetic studies showed that the sequence of accumulation of label was the same as that observed in vivo, viz., RI----RF----44 S RNA; limited reinitiation was also observed. This sequence of labeling also indicated that the in vitro
RDRP
activity was due to an enzyme capable of elongation, release, and reinitiation of Kunjin RNA synthesis and not merely end labeling or elongating preexisting RNA molecules. No labeled bands in urea-polyacrylamide gels were observed using extracts from mock-infected cells and hence the three RNA products of assays were readily identified in a single gel. The replication complex was still active after treatment with nonionic detergent, but no labeled 44 S RNA was detected in gels, even in the presence of RNasin in the assay which inhibited some nuclease activity. Antibodies to flavivirus-specific nonstructural proteins were preincubated with infected cell extracts in the presence and absence of detergent but no inhibition of
RDRP
activity was observed. However, anti-dsRNA plus detergent blocked activity by as much as 78% and label was found only in RF.
...
PMID:Characterization of Kunjin virus RNA-dependent RNA polymerase: reinitiation of synthesis in vitro. 302 75
A soluble
RNA-dependent RNA polymerase
was purified from the cytoplasm of poliovirus-infected HeLa cells. A single virus-specific protein designated as p63 (or NCVP4) copurified with this activity. The purified polymerase was free of ribonuclease activity and was shown to copy poliovirion RNA when oligo(U) was added to the in vitro reaction mixture. Characterization of the product RNA by electrophoresis in methylmercury (II) hydroxide-agarose gels showed that genome-sized copies of poliovirion RNA were synthesized in vitro by the purified polymerase. The product RNA was shown to be heteropolymeric, complementary to virion RNA, and covalently linked to oligo(U). The product RNA contained the expected distribution of UMP and
GMP
containing dinucleotide pairs which included a very low frequency of CpG pairs. The amount, size distribution, and rate of synthesis of product RNA was very dependent on the in vitro reaction conditions. Full sized product RNA was synthesized in about 6 min when reaction conditions were used that yielded maximum elongation rates (pH 8.0, 7 mM Mg2+, 37 degrees C). Under these conditions, most of the product RNA recovered from a 1-h reaction was full sized. Thus, the polymerase was found to specifically initiate synthesis at the 3'-end of the template using an oligo(U) primer and to carry out an elongation reaction at about 1250 nucleotides/min that resulted in the synthesis of full sized product RNA.
...
PMID:Genome-length copies of poliovirion RNA are synthesized in vitro by the poliovirus RNA-dependent RNA polymerase. 627 40
The presence of terminal nucleotidyl transferase activities catalyzing the addition of AMP, CMP,
GMP
, and UMP residues to the 3' ends of oligonucleotide primers was detected in healthy tomato plants. These enzyme activities copurify with
RNA-dependent RNA polymerase
during the initial stages of purification. Their separation from
RNA-dependent RNA polymerase
is finally achieved by DEAE chromatography: terminal transferase activities are retained on DEAE while
RNA-dependent RNA polymerase
does not bind in the presence of 20 mM MgCl2. Elution by a linear gradient of 0 to 400 mM NH4Cl releases all four terminal transferase activities from the DEAE column at a concentration of 270 mM NH4Cl, thus suggesting that they may belong to one enzyme molecule; this question, however, needs further clarification. The enzyme activities are completely dependent on the presence of an RNA primer and are strongly influenced by its base composition as well as its chain length. Characterization of the respective reaction products by electrophoresis on 15% polyacrylamide sequencing gels reveals striking differences as to the number of nucleotides added to a given primer. In the case of UMP transfer to U8 or A8 and in the case of
GMP
transfer to A8 only 1 to 6 nucleoside monophosphates are added to the 3' terminus of the oligonucleotide primer, whereas in the case of AMP transfer to A8 or U8, the CMP transfer to A8, and the
GMP
transfer to U8, longer chains of minimally 30 nucleotides are added to the respective primer. After gradient elution from DEAE the transferase preparation displays no nucleolytic activity when incubated in the presence of 3H-labelled ribosomal RNA or [3H]poly(A) X poly(U). Only in the case of [3H]poly(A) and [3H]poly(U) or [3H]poly(C) 10 to 15% of the radioactivity is transferred to acid-soluble counts.
...
PMID:Simultaneous presence of terminal adenylyl, cytidylyl, guanylyl, and uridylyl transferase in healthy tomato leaf tissue: separation from RNA-dependent RNA polymerase and characterization of the terminal transferases. 628 7
The catalytic properties of electrophoretically homogeneous
RNA-directed RNA polymerase
(RdRP,
EC 2.7.7.48
) from tomato leaf tissue were studied with the aid of oligonucleotides of defined sequence. It was found that RdRP catalyzes in vitro the transcription of short single-stranded RNA and DNA molecules into precisely complementary RNA copies up to the full length of these templates. The transcription of RNA- and DNA-oligonucleotide templates was equally effective. Differences in transcription efficiency were found to depend on nucleotide sequence rather than on the RNA or DNA nature of the single-stranded nucleic acid. Double-stranded nucleic acids such as poly(A).poly(U) and a double-stranded DNA 14-mer were not transcribed. The RdRP-directed transcription could be primed because RNA and DNA dinucleotides and trinucleotides complementary to the 3'-terminal nucleotides of the template were extended by the enzyme. The unprimed transcription was shown to start preferentially at the 3'-terminal nucleotides of the template. RdRP is capable of adding a single noncomplementary nucleotide to the 3' terminus of about 50% of the runoff transcripts. AMP was preferred over
GMP
, whereas CMP and UMP were terminally added at very low frequency.
...
PMID:RNA-directed RNA polymerase from tomato leaves. II. Catalytic in vitro properties. 768 23
The double-stranded RNA bacteriophage phi 6 contains a virion-associated
RNA-dependent RNA polymerase
complex. Removal of the virus envelope and the nucleocapsid surface protein, P8, reveals a nucleocapsid core particle (proteins P1, P2, P4, P7) which is the viral polymerase complex, capable of synthesizing RNA strands of positive polarity. The in vitro plus strand synthesis (transcription) reaction of the particle obtained from the mature virion was optimized and its activation and inactivation were investigated. Purine nucleoside triphosphates (NTPs), binding to a low-affinity binding site in the polymerase complex, activated plus strand synthesis. GTP was the preferred NTP, but dGTP, ddGTP, and the noncleavable analog
GMP
-PCP could also switch on transcription. This NTP-binding site is probably different from that of the unspecific viral NTPase found in protein P4 and also from that of the rNTP-specific RNA polymerase active site. Binding of purine NTPs was sufficient for the switch-on; hydrolysis of the NTP was not required. Besides nucleotides, divalent cations had an effect on phi 6 in vitro plus strand synthesis. Magnesium ions are required for the activity but calcium ions inhibit the reaction. Manganese ions are shown to dissipate the effect of magnesium and calcium ions, leading to uncontrolled, exceptionally high level plus strand synthesis.
...
PMID:In vitro transcription of the double-stranded RNA bacteriophage phi 6 is influenced by purine NTPs and calcium. 788 44
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