Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.7.49 (reverse transcriptase)
31,746 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The DNA product of the endogenous reverse transcriptase reaction of Gibbon ape lymphoma virus has been analyzed and characterized. Data show that in simultaneous detection assays in which the type and/or concentration of divalent cation is varied the best yield of rapidly-sedimenting DNA was obtained from reactions containing 1.5 mM Mn2+. This yield is ten-fold better than the yield observed at the optimal Mg2+ concentration (5.0mM). Evidence is presented to show that DNA synthesized at the optimal concentration of either of these cations consists of large pieces varying in size from 4 to 12S. This DNA hybridizes efficiently to homologous viral RNA (greater than 60 percent annealing) and protects at least two-thirds of GALV 70S [32P]RNA from ribonuclease digestion. The hybrids formed with homologous viral RNA are stable as evidenced by their thermal elution patterns from hydroxylapatite columns. In contrast, DNA synthesized in reactions in which the concentration of Mn2+ or Mg2+ was greater than optimal was predominantly 4S or smaller in size and displayed a low level of hybridization (less than 10 percent) to homologous viral RNA.
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PMID:The endogenous reverse transcriptase activity of Gibbon ape lymphoma virus: characterization of the DNA product. 5 76

Ethidium bromide (2,3-diamino-5-ethyl-6-phenylphenanthridinium bromide) significantly inhibited the RNA-dependent DNA polymerase of types A and C particles isolated from transplanted adenovirus 12-induced tumors of CBA mice. It was also cytotoxic for an established in vitro line of adenovirus 12-induced tumor cells of CBA mice and caused cell death, inhibition of [3H]thymidine uptake, and a significant reduction of cells in metaphase. Ethidium bromide significantly inhibited the in vivo growth of transplanted adenovirus 12-induced tumor cells of CBA mice, simian virus 40-induced tumor cells of hamsters, and murine leukemia virus-induced lymphoma cells of BALB/c mice. The compound may have exerted the antitumor activity by selectively affecting oncornavirus in the tumor cells.
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PMID:Effect of ethidium bromide on transplanted virus-induced tumor cells. 6 62

Somatic cell hybrids were constructed between BALB/c-RAG mouse cells and feline lymphoma cells by the hypoxanthine-aminopterin-thymidine selection scheme. RAG cells spontaneously produce an endogenous B-tropic type C virus. Cat-mouse hybrids preferentially segregate feline chromosomes and retain murine chromosomes-demonstrable by karyotypic and isozyme analyses. Despite the presence of the complete mouse genome, including the viral genome, virus production was diminished to 1-5% of the levels observed in RAG parents based upon particle-associated RNA-dependent DNA polymerase (reverse transcriptase) activity in the culture fluid. Thirty-seven hybrids made on four different occasions had suppressed virus levels, and no hybrids expressed parental virus levels. Reverse selection experiments on 6-thioguanine demonstrated that a restriction gene, tentatively named Bvr-1, was linked to the feline structural genes for hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (IMP:pyrophosphate phosphoribosyltransferase; EC 2.4.4.8) and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (D-glucose-6-phosphate: NADP+ 1-oxidoreductase; EC 1.1.1.49) in cats, probably on the X-chromosome. The genetic mode of action of Bvr-1 is trans dominant in restriction of murine leukemia virus. The restriction locus results in a block late in virus maturation but prior to release, since expression of antigens for viral structural proteins and matrue budding particles is apparent on surfaces of restriced hybrid cells but not in high-speed pellets from culture fluid of restricted cells.
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PMID:Bvr-1, a restriction locus of a type C RNA virus in the feline cellular genome: identification, location, and phenotypic characterization in cat X mouse somatic cell hybrids. 6 49

Northern poke lymphosarcoma DNA polymerase was partially purified from particulate fractions banding at 1.15 to 1.16 g/ml from homogenates prepared from frozen necropsies of tumor-bearing pike. The enzyme behaves as a typical reverse transcriptase, in that it prefers ribotemplates to deoxytemplates. The isoelectric point (pl 5.5) is similar to that of avian myeloblastosis virus polymerase. The pike enzyme elutes from a phosphocellulose column at 0.22 M potassium phosphate, the same as avian myeloblastosis virus DNA polymerase. The enzyme activity is inhibited by pyran, a specific inhibitor of viral DNA polymerases. The most striking difference between the pike lymphoma polymerase and the other viral DNA polymerases tested is the low maximum temperature of 20 degrees, compared to 30 degrees for Rauscher leukemia virus polymerase and 38 degrees for avian myeloblastosis virus and Rous sarcoma virus.
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PMID:Presence of DNA polymerase in lymphosarcoma in northern pike (Esox lucius). 6 92

An RNA-directed DNA polymerase was purified from a cell line derived from a radiation-induced lymphoma in NIH Swiss mice which produced non-infectious type C virus particles. The enzyme was isolated from a high speed particulate fraction which bands at a density of 1.16--1.19 g/ml in a sucrose gradient, and purified by successive chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, phosphocellulose and hydroxyapatite. The purified DNA polymerase has a molecular weight of 68 000, a pH optimum of 7.5, a KCl optimum of 50 mM, and a Mn2+ optimum of 0.25 mM. It prefers (dT)15 . (A)n to (dT)15 . (dA)n as the primer template and transcribes the poly(C) strand of (dG)15 .(C)n and (dG)15 . (OMeC)n. It transcribes heteropolymeric regions of avian myeloblastosis virus 70 S RNA, and is inhibited by antiserum to Rauscher murine leukemia virus DNA polymerase. Comparison of the properties of DNA polymerase purified from radiation-induced lymphoma cells with the DNA polymerase purified from non-defective murine type C RNA tumor viruses shows that the mouse lymphoma enzyme is both biochemically and immunologically related to murine leukemia virus DNA polymerases.
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PMID:Characterization of an RNA-directed DNA-polymerase from a cell line derived from a radiation-induced lymphoma in mice. 9 May 22

The reverse transcriptase (RNA-dependent DNA nucleotidyltransferase) of the type C RNA virus produced by the human lymphoma cell line SU-DHL-1 was purified by ion-exchange chromatography of SU-DHL-1 culture fluids and repetitive affinity chromatography on poly(rC).agarose, as were the polymerases of several other type C viruses. The DHL-1 enzyme used template-primers at levels expected of a viral reverse transcriptase, and sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoretic analysis of radioiodinated DHL-1 enzyme revealed a peak at a position corresponding to those of several other type C viral reverse transcriptases (namely, at 72,000-78,000 daltons). The purified enzyme was partially neutralized by antibodies specific for the reverse transcriptase of simian sarcoma virus. Two-dimensional analysis on thin-layer cellulose plates of tryptic hydrolysates of the radioiodinated enzymes of several viruses revealed that six peptides are common to the polymerases of simian sarcoma virus, gibbon ape leukemia virus, baboon endogenous virus, and the DHL-1 virus, and that two to four peptides are unique to each of these enzymes. The DHL-1 viral reverse transcriptase appears to be most closely related structurally to the enzymes of simian sarcoma virus, gibbon ape leukemia virus, and baboon endogenous virus. However, the DHL-1 viral enzyme differed from any one or combination of the other subhuman primate viral enzymes by virtue of its unique peptides. The implications of these findings with respect to the probable origin of the DHL-1 virus are discussed.
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PMID:Characterization of the reverse transcriptase of a type C RNA virus produced by a human lymphoma cell line. 9 23

The experiments described show that inoculation of two monkey species, M. arctoides and P. hamadryas, with human leukaemic blood or its filtrates causes a viral disease with the characteristics of malignant lymphoma of mixed type. The disease was passed in subsequent passages. The virus was isolated and identified as an oncornavirus of C-type by its characteristic morphological appearance and buoyant density (1.16 g/cm3 in sucrose and 1.21 g/cm3 in caesium chloride), and by the presence of 60-70S RNA and RNA-dependent DNA polymerase. There is some evidence that it differs immunologically from other known oncornaviruses of mammals including primates. It is postulated that both horizontal and vertical transmission of this oncornavirus can occur.
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PMID:Transmission of human leukaemia to nonhuman primates. 17 Jun 20

DNA was extracted from two human sarcoma cell lines, TE-32 and TE-418, and the leukemic cells from five children with acute myelocytic leukemia, three children with acute lymphocytic leukemia and four adults with acute myelocytic leukemia. The DNAs, assayed for infectivity by transfection techniques, induced no measurable virus by methods which would detect known mammalian C-type antigens or RNA-directed DNA polymerase in TE-32, D-17 dog cells and other indicator cells, nor did they recombine with or rescue endogenous human or exogenous murine or baboon type-C virus. Model systems used as controls were human sarcoma cells, TE-32 and HT-1080, and human lymphoma cells TE-543, experimentally infected with KiMuLV, GaLV or baboon type-C virus, all of which released infectious virus and whose DNAs were infectious for TE-32 and D-17 dog cells. Other model systems included two baboon placentas and one embryonic cell strain spontaneously releasing infectious endogenous baboon virus and yielding DNAs infectious for D-17 dog cells but not for TE-32 cells. Four other baboon embryonic tissues and two embryonic cell strains, releasing either low levels of virus or no virus, did not yield infectious DNA.
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PMID:Search for infective mammalian type-C virus-related genes in the DNA of human sarcomas and leukemias. 20 87

The influence of 9-beta-D-arabinofuranosyladenine (ara-A) and its 5'-triphosphate derivative on programmed synthesis was tested with an intact cell system as well as with isolated enzyme systems. The effect of ara-A was tested in mouse lymphoma cells (L5178Y). The compound reduces cell proliferation in low concentration by cytostasis; under high ara-A concentration of radioactive precursors into DNA, RNA, and protein showed that ara-A selectively inhibits DNA synthesis. Formation of a polysome complex is not affected by ara-A. [3H]ara-A is incorporated into DNA in an intact cell system; 1 molecule of ara-A is incorporated per 8000 molecules of deoxyadenosine. Most of the ara-A molecules appeared to be in internucleotide linkages. Incorporation of ara-A into RNA could not be detected. 9-BETA-D-Arabinofuranosyladenine 5'-triphosphate (ara-ATP) does not reduce the incorporation rate of the following enzymes, isolated from quail oviducts: DNA-dependent RNA polymerases I and II, polyadenylic acid polymerase, and poly(adenosine diphosphate ribose) polymerase. The compound was found to inhibit DNA synthesis catalyzed by DNA polymerases isolated from quail oviducts and from oncogenic RNA viruses (Rous sarcoma viruses). All the enzymes tested were inhibited by ara-ATP in a competitive way with respect to deoxyadenosine 5'-triphosphate. The highest affinity of ara-ATP, i.e., the highest inhibitory potency of the drug, was found in the assays with the eukaryotic low-molecular DNA-dependent DNA polymerase. The influence on the eukaryotic high-molecular DNA-dependent Dna polymerase was a litte less. Compared to the eukaryotic DNA polymerases, the viral enzymes (RNA-directed DNA polymerase and DNA-directed DNA polymerase) are affected to a smaller extent by ara-ATP. No effects of ara-A and ara-ATP are observed in a protein-synthesizing, cell-free system isolated from L5178Y cells.
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PMID:Mode of action of 9-beta-D-arabinofuranosyladenine on the synthesis of DNA, RNA, and protein in vivo and in vitro. 114 31

The short segments of cDNA encoding glycoprotein (GP)Ib alpha, GPIIb, GPIIIa and platelet factor (PF) 4 were amplified using reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in order to characterize various types of megakaryoblasts. Cell lines with megakaryocytic features (K562, CMK and HEL) were tested. GPIb alpha, GPIIb and GPIIIa mRNAs were found to be present in K562, CMK and HEL cells, while only HEL cells expressed PF4 or mRNA. These results suggested that megakaryoblastic cell lines could be categorized into two groups, one with the PF4 transcript and the other without it. PF4 mRNA was present in the cells obtained from one Down's syndrome patient with transient myeloproliferative disorder and in one patient with primary myelofibrosis and megakaryoblastosis. On the other hand, one patient with acute megakaryoblastic leukemia transformed from refractory anemia had a poor prognosis with megakaryoblastic leukemia cells which expressed no PF4 mRNA. These observations suggested that the expression of PF4 mRNA in peripheral blood megakaryoblasts may indicate the absence of a true leukemic process.
Leuk Lymphoma 1992 Aug
PMID:Detection of platelet-specific protein mRNAs in different megakaryoblasts using the reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. 149 50


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