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)

Several cell culture factors were found to influence in vitro expression of mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) in the mouse adenocarcinoma cell line Mm5mt/c1. Cells were propagated in a variety of commercially available cell culture media to which dexamethasone (DXM) was added as a stimulator of MMTV production. Culture seeding density, culture medium type, and glucose concentration each influenced MMTV production when expressed on a per cell basis. Maximum cell growth occurred in cultures grown in RPMI-1640 medium containing insulin. Those media which provided good cell growth were not necessarily optimal for virus expression. Addition of insulin did not stimulate MMTV synthesis although dexamethasone alone was stimulatory in all media used; however, maximum MMTV expression was obtained when dexamethasone and insulin were used in concert. Equivalent levels of MMTV-specific cell membrane antigen, MMTV-specific protein, and virus particles were produced at incubation temperatures of 32 degrees, 34 degrees or 37 degrees C; however, higher levels of virus-related RNA-dependent DNA polymerase (RDDP) activity were recovered from cultures incubated at 32 degrees and 34 degrees C than at 37 degrees C. Decreased levels of RDDP were attributed to enzyme thermolability at 37 degrees C incubation.
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PMID:Cell culture factors influencing in vitro expression of mouse mammary tumor virus. 6 18

Treatment by glucosamine of avian sarcoma virus-transformed chicken embryo fibroblast (CEF) cells completely inhibited the formation of progeny-transforming virus particles. Such cells, however, could continue to synthesize non-infectious physical particles containing both viral RNA and the enzyme RNA-dependent DNA polymerase if glucosamine exposure was performed in the presence of glucose. Glucosamine treatment was found to affect antigenic expression in transformed CEF as measured by an indirect immunofluorescence test. Inhibition to a far lesser extent was observed when a lymphocyte stimulation assay for the detection of cell-mediated immunity was used in this system.
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PMID:Effect of glucosamine on virus production and antigen expression in avian sarcoma virus-transformed cells. 8 7

Sucrose density gradient analysis of purified pancreatic homogenates from glycaemic C57BL/Ks diabetes (db/db) mice and their normoglycaemic controls have revealed the presence in the diabetics of increased Mg++-dependent RNA-directed DNA polymerase activity sedimenting with a density of approximately 1.21 g/cm3. Electron microscopy revealed that this fraction contained typical intracisternal A-particles. Purified cultures of pancreatic islet cells 4--7 day old postnatal "misty diabetic" mice and normal siblings were established and then maintained in Eagle's minimal essential medium without serum. Under these conditions, the presence of intracisternal A-particles in beta cells of both mutant and control genotypes was very rare. No change in numbers of intracisternal A-particles was seen after 2--4 days of incubation in Dulbecco's-modified minimal essential medium containing 5.5 mmol/l glucose. However, when the glucose concentration of Dulbecco's medium was elevated to 16.5 mmol/l, ultrastructural changes specific to the beta cell population occurred that were reminiscent of those alterations observed in situ. Intracisternal A-particles were commonly seen in cultured beta cells showing hypersecretion-stress morphology. Since equal numbers of intracisternal A-particles were present in cultured beta cells from normal and mutant mice, it was concluded that the db gene itself was not required for intracisternal A-particle expression. The cell culture results suggest that elevated intracisternal A-particle activity observed in vivo may be produced directly or indirectly by the ambient high blood glucose levels characteristic of this mutant.
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PMID:Intracisternal A-particles in genetically diabetic mice: identification in pancreas and induction in cultured beta cells. 22 51

Strains carrying a marked Ty element (TyUra) in the LYS2 locus were transformed with plasmids bearing a differently marked Ty1 element (Ty1Neo) under the control of the GAL promoter. When these strains were grown in glucose, a low level of gene conversion events involving TyUra was detected. Upon growth on galactose an increase in the rate of gene conversion was seen. This homologous recombination is not the consequence of increased levels of transposition. When an intron-containing fragment was inserted into Ty1Neo, some of the convertants had the intron removed, implying an RNA intermediate. Mutations that affect reverse transcriptase or reverse transcription of Ty1Neo greatly reduce the induction of recombination in galactose. Thus, Ty cDNA is involved in homologous gene conversion with chromosomal copies of Ty elements. Our results have implications about the way families of repeated sequences retain homogeneity throughout evolution.
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PMID:Involvement of cDNA in homologous recombination between Ty elements in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 137 87

The antiviral activity of 6-0-butanoylcastanospermine (MDL 28,574) [50% inhibitory concentration (IC50: 1.1 microM)] in JM cells infected with a recent isolate of HIV-1 (GB8), was compared with other inhibitors of glycoprotein-processing enzymes. N-butyldeoxynojirimycin (BuDNJ), deoxynojirimycin (DNJ), castanospermine (CAST) or the reverse transcriptase inhibitor 2'3'-dideoxycytidine (ddC) had activities of 56, 560, 29 and 0.1 microM, respectively. MDL 28,574 was at least 50 times more active than BuDNJ and less active but better tolerated in cell culture than ddC, two compounds currently undergoing clinical trials. The CAST derivative showed good protection in H9 cells infected with HIV-1 (RF; IIIB; U455), and HIV-2 (ROD), although the potency was less than that seen in the JM/GB8 system. HIV-1 glycoproteins, gp160 and gp120, synthesized in H9 cells chronically infected with HIV-1 (RF) and treated with MDL 28,574, were characterized by an increase in relative molecular weight of approximately 7-8000 kD. The ratio of gp120 to gp160 was markedly reduced in treated cells and provided further evidence that cleavage of the gp160 precursor molecule is a major consequence of the inhibition of glycoprotein processing. The intracellular target for MDL 28,574 was verified as alpha-glucosidase-I of the processing enzymes by the analysis of high-glucose glycopeptides recovered from treated mouse cells. This activity correlated with the antiviral effect observed against the growth of a mouse retrovirus, Moloney murine leukemia virus (MOLV), in mouse cells.
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PMID:6-0-butanoylcastanospermine (MDL 28,574) inhibits glycoprotein processing and the growth of HIVs. 165 79

Phosphate derivatives of AZT esterified with a carbohydrate (D-glucose, D-mannose, and ethyl D-mannopyranoside) and a hexadecyl chain were prepared from glucose 6-phosphate and D-mannose precursors. The 31P NMR study of the mannosyl phosphotriester series in the presence of large unilamellar vesicles demonstrated either an interaction with the external lipid layer or a transmembrane transport into the intravesicular interface. The antiviral activity, measured by the inhibition of cytopathogenicity on different infected cells and of reverse transcriptase activity in the supernatant of cultures, appeared to be comparable to that of AZT, in the micromolar range.
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PMID:Lipophilic glycosyl phosphotriester derivatives of AZT: synthesis, NMR transmembrane transport study, and antiviral activity. 171 47

Rifazone-8(2), a new rifamycin derivative, is shown to preferentially inhibit the growth of virus-transformed chick cells in culture. Macromolecular synthesis and glucose uptake of transformed cells are also appreciably decreased in the presence of low concentrations of rifazone-8(2) where the normal cells appear unaffected. While rifazone-8(2) is shown to be a selective inhibitor of RNA-directed DNA polymerase in vitro, its action on the growth of transformed cells may involve some other mechanism.
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PMID:Preferential inhibition of the growth of virus-transformed cells in culture by rifazone-82, a new rifamycin derivative. 436 63

Visna virus is a retrovirus which replicates in fibroblast-like cells of the sheep choroid plexus through a lytic cycle. Visna virions contain three major low-molecular-weight proteins (p30, p16, and p14) which, together with the genomic RNA and several molecules of reverse transcriptase, constitute the core structure of the virions. The core is surrounded by an envelope containing a major glycoprotein (gp135). By analogy with the oncoviruses, these three groups of structural proteins (i.e., the internal proteins, the envelope glycoprotein, and the reverse transcriptase) are probably encoded by the gag, env, and pol genes, respectively. To elucidate the genetic organization of the visna virus genome and its expression, we studied the synthesis of viral proteins in infected sheep choroid plexus cells. Intracellular viral proteins were detected by immunoprecipitation of pulse-labeled cell extracts with monospecific sera raised against p30, p16, and gp135 and resolution of the proteins by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Immunoprecipitation with anti-p30 and anti-p16 sera allowed the characterization of the 55,000-dalton polypeptide precursor to internal virion proteins p30, p16, and p14 (Pr55(gag)). Tryptic peptide mapping confirmed the precursor-product relationship between Pr55(gag) and the three internal proteins. In addition, a gag-related polypeptide of 150,000 daltons was also detected. This polypeptide, which was less abundant than Pr55(gag), is a likely precursor to the viral reverse transcriptase (Pr150(gag-pol)). Pr55(gag) and Pr150(gag-pol) are not glycosylated. The precursor related to major envelope protein gp135 is a glycosylated polypeptide with an average molecular weight of 150,000 (gPr150(env)). Pulse-chase experiments indicated that gPr150(env) matures into glycoprotein gp135 intracellularly; however, gp135 was never preponderant in cell extracts. The non-glycosylated from of gPr150(env), which accumulated in the presence of 2-deoxy-d-glucose, appeared as a polypeptide of about 100,000 daltons. These results indicated that visna virus codes for the largest non-glycosylated env-related precursor among all of the retroviruses and therefore probably contains the largest env gene.
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PMID:Precursor polypeptides to structural proteins of visna virus. 617 45

We have investigated the influence of 2',5' adenosine nucleotides on the replication and transformation of cells by Rous sarcoma virus (RSV). Treatment with the nucleotides ppp2',5'A4 and 2',5'A4 causes a striking reduction (50-fold) in the yield of infectious progeny virus, while ppp2',5A2 and 2',5'A3 had virtually no effect. The reduction in infectivity seen with 2',5'A4 nucleotides is paralleled by a smaller but significant (three- to four-fold) reduction in the amount of particles released as measured by reverse transcriptase activity and levels of viral structural proteins. The reduced infectivity of released particles is not due to viral RNA being missing since the amount of genomic RNA in particles from 2',5'A4-treated cultures was likewise only reduced by a factor of 2-3. Pulse-chase radioactive label experiments showed that processing of both viral group-specific antigens (gag) and viral envelope glycoprotein (env) gene products was completely normal in nucleotide-treated cultures, but that the rate of appearance of viral proteins in mature virus in the culture supernatants was reduced by a factor of about 3-4. Taken together, the data show that assembly of viral structural proteins into virions which can be released into the medium is slowed, and that assembly of virus particles with reduced infectivity follows upon nucleotide treatment. This inhibition of infectious virus production takes place without significant toxic effects on the cell; host protein synthesis is only 20% inhibited. There is also no significant effect on the secretory ability of the cells as measured by total protein release into the medium or release of fibronectin. The transformed cell phenotype was also subtly affected by 2',5'A4, but not by other oligomers. Plasminogen activator protease activity was sharply reduced upon treatment, while other typical features of RSV-transformed cells such as elevated hexose transport, and pp60src-associated protein phosphokinase activity, were little affected.
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PMID:Inhibition of Rous sarcoma virus assembly by treatment with 2',5' adenosine nucleotides. 619 38

The complete nucleotide sequence of the glucose-repressed alcohol dehydrogenase II gene (ADR2) from yeast has been established together with its 5'- and 3'-flanking regions. The limits of the gene have been determined by reverse transcriptase sequencing of the 5'-ends and by S1 nuclease mapping of the 3'-ends of the mature ADR2 mRNA. Comparison of the alcohol dehydrogenase I gene (ADC1) sequence (Bennetzen, J. L., and Hall, B.D. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 3018-3025) with that of ADR2 indicated four regions of sequence conservation in the 5'-flanking DNAs. One of these conserved regions contains the sequence TCAAG which may function as a yeast cap sequence. The coding sequence of ADR2 is 89% homologous with that of ADC1 and exhibits a bias in its codon utilization. Evidence is presented that the intergenic region at the 3'-end of the ADR2 gene is less than 550 base pairs.
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PMID:Nucleotide sequence of the yeast alcohol dehydrogenase II gene. 633 60


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