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)

Reverse transcriptase required for the synthesis of msDNA.Ec67 in an Escherichia coli strain was purified as a large molecular weight complex with msDNA. The complex sedimented in a glycerol gradient at an s value greater than 19. The predominant protein species co-purifying with reverse transcriptase activity in the complex had a molecular weight estimated at 65,000 which is close to the expected size of 67,227 for the Ec67-reverse transcriptase. In addition, the large complex also contained msDNA.Ec67. The purified complex was able to synthesize cDNA using 5 S rRNA as a template (annealed to a synthetic DNA primer), and a double-stranded DNA using a synthetic DNA template (annealed to a synthetic DNA primer). When msDNA.Ec67 was used as a natural template:primer, the purified complex produced two major products: a 103-base single-stranded DNA by extending the 3' end of msDNA using msdRNA as a template, and a 60-base double-stranded DNA product resulting from the converse reaction in which the 3' end of msdRNA is extended using msDNA as a template. The results suggest that bacterial reverse transcriptase is capable of producing single-stranded cDNA and possibly double-stranded DNA as well. Possible implications of these findings on the biology of the msDNA-retron system are discussed.
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PMID:Reverse transcriptase from Escherichia coli exists as a complex with msDNA and is able to synthesize double-stranded DNA. 169 31

Preparations of recombinant reverse transcriptase RSV were isolated from E. coli HB101/pMF14 cell cultures. The enzyme purified to homogeneity was shown to be made up of two subunits with molecular masses of 97 +/- 4 and 61 +/- 3 kDa. A comparison of enzymatic properties of recombinant transcriptase to those of the enzyme isolated from the RSV (Rauss sarcoma) virus demonstrated that in the preparations under study the recombinant reverse transcriptase exists in a subunit form, alpha beta, and may acquire a relatively stable configuration, alpha 2.
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PMID:[Recombinant RNA-dependent DNA-polymerase from Rous sarcoma virus. Isolation and properties]. 169 35

A culture of rhesus monkey peripheral blood lymphocytes was divided into two parts; one was kept as an uninfected control, and the other was infected with a strain of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIVmac251) originally isolated from a rhesus monkey that died of a malignant lymphoma associated with acquired immune deficiency syndrome. Both cultures were sampled at successive intervals from 1 to 40 days postinfection. Each sample was subjected to in situ hybridization for detection of viral mRNA, immunocytochemical detection of viral core protein (p27), reverse transcriptase assay, electron microscopy, and immunophenotypic characterization of infected cells. These techniques were used to define viral growth kinetics of this novel lentivirus in peripheral blood lymphocytes. The first evidence of SIVmac251 replication was obtained by an in situ hybridization signal for viral mRNA at 2 days postinoculation. This was followed by detection of viral p27 core protein by immunocytochemistry on day 4. Reverse transcriptase activity above control values was not detected until day 8. Budding particles were not found in the infected cultures until 14 days postinfection. Results of in situ hybridization, immunocytochemistry, and reverse transcriptase assay indicated that two bursts of viral replication occurred during the course of this study. The first, at 3 weeks postinfection, was due to infection and subsequent depletion of CD4+ lymphocytes, while the second, 3 weeks later, resulted from a cycle of replication in CD8+ lymphocytes and the remaining CD4+ cells, culminating in the death of all cells on day 39 postinoculation.
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PMID:Study of long-term cultures of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIVmac 251)-infected peripheral blood lymphocytes. 169 33

The structural and enzymatic components of retroviral cores are formed by proteolytic cleavage of precursor polypeptides, mediated by the viral protease (PR). We constructed an active-site mutation, D37I, in the PR of avian leukosis virus. The D37I mutation was introduced into an infectious DNA clone, and quail cell lines expressing the mutant virus were established. These cell lines produce normal amounts of virus particles, the major internal protein components of which are the uncleaved gag and gag-pol precursors. As in other retroviral systems, the protease-defective virions are noninfectious and retain the "immature" type A morphology as determined by thin-section transmission electron microscopy. The virion cores are stable at nonionic detergent concentrations that completely disrupt wild-type cores. Digestion of mutant virions with exogenous PR in the presence of detergent leads to complete and correct cleavage of the gag precursor but incomplete cleavage of the gag-pol precursor. The protease-defective virions encapsidate normal amounts of genomic RNA and tRNA(Trp) that is properly annealed to the primer-binding site, but some of the genomic RNA remains monomeric. Results from UV cross-linking experiments show that the gag polyprotein of mutant virions interacts with viral RNA and that this interaction occurs through the nucleocapsid (NC) domain. However, within mutant virions the interaction of the NC domain with RNA differs from that of mature NC with RNA in wild-type virions. Reverse transcriptase (RT) activity associated with mutant virions is diminished but still detectable. Digestion of the virions with PR leads to a fivefold increase in activity, but this PR-mediated activation of RT is incomplete. Since in vitro cleavage of the gag-pol precursor is also incomplete, we hypothesize that amino acid sequences N terminal to the reverse transcriptase domain inhibit RT activity.
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PMID:Properties of avian retrovirus particles defective in viral protease. 169 12

Reverse transcriptase (RT) plays an essential role in the life cycle of the human immunodeficiency viruses (HIV). A better understanding of this enzyme, and its two catalytic functions, the DNA polymerase and the RNase H, could lead to the development of new drugs that would specifically block HIV replication. The available genetic, sequence, biochemical, and immunological data on the reverse transcriptase of HIV-1 constrain the possible structure of the DNA polymerase domain. The purpose of this review is to correlate the data and to discuss, in light of that data, a model for the structure of the polymerase domain. In this model, the polymerase domain is approximately 50 to 60 A in diameter with a 20 A opening to accommodate the nucleic acid duplex. The most evolutionarily conserved region of RT (amino acids 20-190 of HIV-1 RT) is proposed to form the inner surface of the 20 A opening to which the nucleic acid hemiduplex is bound.
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PMID:HIV-1 reverse transcriptase: structure predictions for the polymerase domain. 170 98

A primase-reverse-transcriptase of Halobacterium halobium was purified by column chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, hydroxyapatite and carboxymethyl-cellulose, followed by sedimentation on a glycerol gradient. The enzyme is a multifunctional enzyme containing reverse transcriptase. DNA polymerase and RNase H activities and does not require a performed primer to initiate DNA synthesis. Using a single-stranded DNA as template, this enzyme synthesizes oligonucleotides (8-12 bases) that can be used a primer by Escherichia coli DNA nucleotidyltransferase I (DNA polymerase I, Klenow fragment). Two polypeptides of 67 and 57 kDa were found after 14750-fold purification of the enzyme.
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PMID:Reverse transcriptase in archaebacteria. Purification and characterization of a primase-reverse-transcriptase complex from Halobacterium halobium. 170 56

In the search for novel derivatives of 1-[2-(hydroxyethoxy)methyl]-6-(phenylthio)thymine (HEPT), we have found that several 5-ethyl-6-(3,5-dimethylphenylthio)uracil and 5-ethyl-6-(3,5-dimethylbenzyl)uracil analogues are exquisitely potent and selective inhibitors of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) replication in a variety of cell culture systems. Of this series, 5-ethyl-1-ethoxymethyl-6-(3,5-dimethylbenzyl)uracil (E-EBU-dM) emerged as the most active congener. Its 50% inhibitory concentration for HIV-1 (HTLV-IIIB) in MT-4 cells and peripheral blood lymphocytes is 2.2 and 0.45 nM, respectively. These concentrations are more than 10(5)-fold lower than the 50% cytotoxic concentrations of E-EBU-dM for the host cells. All compounds proved equally inhibitory to a number of clinical HIV-1 isolates, including a 3'-azido-2',3'-dideoxythymidine-resistant variant. However, as previously noted for HEPT, they do not inhibit human immunodeficiency virus type 2 replication. Reverse transcriptase assays have revealed that these HEPT derivatives act specifically on HIV-1 reverse transcriptase, according to a mechanism that is different from that of the dideoxynucleosides.
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PMID:Highly potent and selective inhibition of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 by a novel series of 6-substituted acyclouridine derivatives. 171 Nov 48

A peculiar type of satellite DNA, called msDNA, has been discovered in myxobacteria and some natural isolates of E. coli. These molecules are characterized by the presence of single-stranded DNA branching out from an internal guanosine residue of an RNA molecule by a unique 2',5'-phosphodiester linkage. Reverse transcriptase is required for the synthesis of msDNA. The discovery of retroelements in bacterial populations raises many intriguing questions concerning the evolutionary origin of reverse transcriptase, the function and the biosynthesis of msDNA, and the nature of the mechanisms generating the extensive diversity found in msDNA and reverse transcriptase genes among different bacterial strains.
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PMID:Retroelements in bacteria. 171 Dec 48

Poly(rA).oligo(dT)n binding to human immunodeficiency virus type-1 reverse transcriptase heterodimer (p66-p51) was primer length-dependent. The estimated Kd for (n = 10-14) was 20-30 nM and for (n = 16-20) was 0.11-0.14 nM. Gel electrophoretic analysis of the patterns of primer extension was consistent with an abrupt change in the Kd between a primer length of 14 and 16 nucleotides. Further, the rate constant for dissociation of the reverse transcriptase-template-primer complex was determined from steady state kinetics and enzyme-template-primer trapping experiments to be independent of primer length. Thus, the abrupt change in Kd was most likely due to a change in the rate constant for formation of the reverse transcriptase-template-primer complex. A similar shift in the Kd for template-primer binding was observed with poly(dA).oligo(dT)n. Reverse transcriptase homodimer (p66) catalyzed the incorporation of dTMP into poly(rA).oligo(dT)n with the same primer length dependence observed for the heterodimer. In contrast, binding of the p51 homodimer to poly(rA).oligo(dT)n was independent of primer length. Thus, the RNase H domain may contribute to reverse transcriptase heterodimer or p66 homodimer binding to template-primers in which the primer length is greater than 14 nucleotides.
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PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus reverse transcriptase. Effect of primer length on template-primer binding. 171 16

RNA sequences of five flaviviruses were detected by a modified polymerase chain reaction (PCR) that incorporated a reverse transcriptase and RNase inhibitor. Oligonucleotide primer pairs were synthesized to amplify sequences from St. Louis encephalitis (SLE), Japanese encephalitis (JBE), yellow fever (YF), dengue 2 (DEN-2), and dengue 4 (DEN-4) viruses. The amplified products were visualized as bands of appropriate size on ethidium bromide-stained agarose gels. The identity of these products was confirmed by restriction endonuclease cleavage to generate fragments of predicted lengths. The reverse-transcriptase PCR (RT-PCR) successfully amplified flavivirus sequences from cell cultures, frozen brain tissue, and formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded brain tissue. The reactions were highly specific, and the method compared favorably to two conventional assays of viral infectivity. RT-PCR followed by PCR with nesting primers (N-PCR) was 1,000-fold more sensitive in detecting virus than classical infectivity titration by intracerebral inoculation of suckling mice and nearly 1,000-fold more sensitive than amplification of virus in cell culture followed by inoculation of mice.
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PMID:Detection of flaviviruses by reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. 171 65


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