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)

Substitution of the conserved Asp-443 residue of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase by asparagine specifically suppressed the ribonuclease H activity of the enzyme without affecting the reverse transcriptase activity, suggesting involvement of this ionizable residue at the ribonuclease H active site. An analogous asparagine substitution of the Asp-498 residue yielded an unstable enzyme that was difficult to enzymatically characterize. However, the instability caused by the Asn-498 mutation was relieved by the introduction of a second distal Asn-443 substitution, yielding an enzyme with wild type reverse transcriptase activity, but lacking ribonuclease H activity.
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PMID:Site-directed mutagenesis of the conserved Asp-443 and Asp-498 carboxy-terminal residues of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase. 169 2

Glutamine depletion strongly inhibits the replication of Rauscher murine leukaemia retrovirus (RLV) in vitro. Pseudomonas 7A glutaminase-asparaginase (PGA), capable of depleting glutamine and asparagine for prolonged periods, was used to determine the therapeutic effectiveness of glutamine depletion in mice infected with RLV or Friend virus. During PGA treatment of viraemic animals, serum reverse transcriptase activity fell to control levels and infected animals did not develop splenomegaly. The therapeutic results obtained with PGA compared favourably with those of azidothymidine given intraperitoneally at 30 mg/kg/day. Western blots performed on splenic tissue from control and treated animals indicated that glutamine depletion prevented readthrough of an amber codon at the gag-pol junction, stopping translation of viral mRNA at that point. Treatment of RLV-infected animals with PGA resulted in nearly a 200% increase in mean survival time even when therapy was initiated late in the course of the disease. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration that a nutrient required for viral replication can be enzymically depleted in vivo to inhibit viral replication.
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PMID:Inhibition of mouse retroviral disease by bioactive glutaminase-asparaginase. 170 10

Two conserved sequence motifs, occurring in HIV-1 reverse transcriptase at residues 110-116 and 183-190, have been studied using site-directed mutagenesis of the cloned gene. In particular, aspartates at positions 185 and 186 have each been mutated to either asparagine or glutamate. The resulting mutant proteins were catalytically inactive but still able to bind the template-primer complex, poly rA-oligo dT. Other mutations in these regions resulted in reduced reverse trascriptase activity but the mutation of tyrosine-183 to serine caused a significant increase in the Km for dTTP and the Ki for inhibition by 3'-azidothymidine-triphosphate, 2',3'-dideoxythymidine-triphosphate and phosphonoformic acid.
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PMID:Mutational analysis of two conserved sequence motifs in HIV-1 reverse transcriptase. 170 76

The human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) reverse transcriptase (RT) is a protein of 66 kDa, p66, which contains two domains, an amino-terminal DNA polymerase and an RNase H at the carboxy terminus of the molecule. In order to characterize the mode of action of the RNase H, two previously described mutant enzymes were used, with substitutions in the highly conserved histidine 539, which was mutated to the neutral amino acid asparagine and to the negatively charged aspartate. The purified wild-type (wt) and mutant (mt) enzyme activities are analyzed here using RNA-DNA hybrids consisting of in vitro transcribed RNA that harbors the polypurine tract (PPT) from HIV-1 and DNA oligonucleotides complementary to the PPT or to other regions of the RNA. Analysis of the radioactively labeled RNA of these model hybrids after RNase H treatment indicates that both, wt and mt enzymes, are capable of cleaving the RNA in an endonucleolytic manner. The mt enzymes exhibit a severely reduced exonuclease activity. They are more sensitive towards salt and competition with excess of unlabeled hybrid, suggesting a reduced substrate binding affinity. DNA elongation by the RT is coupled with RNA hydrolysis by the 3'-5' exonuclease of the wt RNase H. The RNase Hmt of the mt enzymes, however, does not exhibit such processive 3'-5' exonuclease activity during DNA synthesis but gives rise to sporadic endonucleolytic cuts, whereas the RT is not affected. The endonuclease activities of the RNase H mt enzymes exhibit cleavage preferences in the absence or presence of DNA synthesis different from those of the wt enzyme. They cannot recognize specific sequences required to generate a PPT-primer and therefore cannot initiate plus-strand DNA synthesis in vitro at the 3' end of the PPT, which is essential for viral replication.
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PMID:Mutations of a conserved residue within HIV-1 ribonuclease H affect its exo- and endonuclease activities. 171 5

Uteroglobin is a protein that is synthesized in large quantities by the rabbit uterine endometrial cells and secreted into the uterine lumen around the time of implantation of the developing blastocysts. The protein is also synthesized constitutively at a low level in the lung. In the uterus, synthesis of the protein is induced by progesterone but repressed by estradiol; whereas in the lung, it is not hormonally responsive. Using a full-length cDNA clone, we have established the nucleotide sequence of uteroglobin mRNA and have determined its levels in uterus and lung during early pregnancy. The clone, pUG617, contains all but 24 nucleotides at the 5' untranslated region of the structural gene. To establish the full mRNA sequence, we isolated a 5' end-labeled DNA fragment from pUG617 and extended its length using reverse transcriptase after hybridization with uterine poly(A)-containing RNA. The 5'-terminal sequence of uteroglobin mRNA was established by sequencing the extended DNA fragment. The nucleotide sequence of the peptide-coding portion of the gene has resolved some previously reported discrepancies in the amino acid sequence of the mature protein and those in the signal peptide. By comparison of sequences with a partial uteroglobin cDNA clone isolated by another laboratory, a polymorphic nucleotide at position 246 of the gene has been identified, where a G-A transition has caused an amino acid substitution from aspartic acid to asparagine at residue 46 of the mature protein. Analysis of steady-state RNA levels in the uterus has shown that the induction and repression of uteroglobin synthesis during early pregnancy is the result of accumulation and depletion of its mRNA, respectively. During the same period in the lung, no consistent changes in uteroglobin mRNA level were evident, reflecting the constitutive levels of the protein in this tissue.
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PMID:Hormonally regulated mammalian gene expression: steady-state level and nucleotide sequence of rabbit uteroglobin mRNA. 629 63

Bisheteroarylpiperazines are potent inhibitors of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) reverse transcriptase (RT). We describe a novel bisheteroarylpiperazine, U-90152 [1-(5-methanesulfonamido-1H-indol-2-yl-carbonyl)-4-[3-(1-methyl eth yl-amino)pyridinyl]piperazine], which inhibited recombinant HIV-1 RT at a 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) of 0.26 microM (compared with IC50s of > 440 microM for DNA polymerases alpha and delta). U-90152 blocked the replication in peripheral blood lymphocytes of 25 primary HIV-1 isolates, including variants that were highly resistant to 3'-azido-2',3'-dideoxythymidine (AZT) or 2',3'-dideoxyinosine, with a mean 50% effective dose of 0.066 +/- 0.137 microM. U-90152 had low cellular cytotoxicity, causing less than 8% reduction in peripheral blood lymphocyte viability at 100 microM. In experiments assessing inhibition of the spread of HIV-1IIIB in cell cultures, U-90152 was much more effective than AZT. When approximately 500 HIV-1IIIB-infected MT-4 cells were mixed 1:1,000 with uninfected cells, 3 microM AZT delayed the evidence of rapid viral growth for 7 days. In contrast, 3 microM U-90152 totally prevented the spread of HIV-1, and death and/or dilution of the original inoculum of infected cells prevented renewed viral growth after U-90152 was removed at day 24. The combination of U-90152 and AZT, each at 0.5 microM, also totally prevented viral spread. Finally, although the RT amino acid substitutions K103N (lysine 103 to asparagine) and Y181C (tyrosine 181 to cysteine), which confer cross-resistance to several nonnucleoside inhibitors, also decrease the potency of U-90152, this drug retains significant activity against these mutant RTs in vitro (IC50s, approximately 8 microgramM).
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PMID:U-90152, a potent inhibitor of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 replication. 768 95

Rhesus monkey cDNA for tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) was cloned by means of the reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction, using liver mRNA, and its nucleotide sequence was determined by sequencing five independent clones. Monkey TFPI was found to have a signal peptide of 28 amino acid residues and to be a mature protein of 276 amino acid residues, in which three and seventeen amino acid residue substitutions compared to human TFPI were found, respectively. All the cysteine residues, three putative carbohydrate-linked asparagine residues, and the P1 amino acid residues of each of the three Kunitz inhibitor domains were conserved in the two species. Recombinant monkey TFPI (rTFPI) was isolated from the culture medium of transformed Chinese hamster ovary cells. Amino acid sequence analysis and immunoblotting analysis, using polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies, showed that the carboxyl-terminal basic part of Rhesus monkey rTFPI had been truncated. The inhibitory activity of monkey rTFPI was compared with that of human rTFPI without the carboxyl-terminal basic part. The prothrombin time of human plasma was slightly more prolonged by the addition of monkey rTFPI than by that of human rTFPI. However, no significant differences were found between the potencies of human and monkey rTFPI as to the inhibition of factor Xa and tissue factor-factor VIIa complex.
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PMID:Amino acid sequence and inhibitory activity of rhesus monkey tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI): comparison with human TFPI. 808 87

The expression of the pol gene of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) occurs by a ribosomal frameshift between the gag and the pol genes. The Gag-Pol polyprotein is produced at levels of 5 to 10% of that of the Gag protein, and is incorporated into virions to provide the viral protease, reverse transcriptase, and integrase which are essential for replication. The mechanism(s) by which the Gag-Pol polyprotein are targeted to the HIV virion is unknown, although it is believed to be via an interaction with the Gag protein. To further explore the mechanism by which the Gag-Pol polyprotein is incorporated into virions, we have constructed a mutation which changes an aspartic acid in the protease active site to asparagine (pHXB2pro-); a four-amino-acid insertion into the protease gene (pHXB2Smal); and insertion of translational termination codons in the protease gene following the gag gene (pHXB55). Transfection of these proviral genomes into COS-1 cells resulted in intracellular expression of only Pr55gag, demonstrating the inactivation of the viral protease. The expression of Pr55gag was evident in cells transfected with pHXB2pro- during a short pulse and first 3 hr of chase period, whereas at later times the intracellular levels of Pr55gag were greatly reduced. In contrast, the intracellular Pr55gag expressed from transfection of pHXB2Smal or pHXB55 were evident even after 6- or 12-hr chase times. To ascertain the effects of the mutations on the assembly and release of viruslike particles, the supernatants from the transfected cells were analyzed for the presence of Pr55gag. The release of Pr55gag from cells transfected with pHXB2pro- occurred as early as 1 hr following chase period, and increased for up to 3 hr. In contrast, reduced levels of Pr55gag were detected in the medium from cells transfected with pHXB2Smal or pHXB55. Subcellular fractionation studies demonstrated that the Pr55gag expressed from transfection of pHXB2pro- was rapidly targeted to intracellular membranes, while the majority of the Pr55gag expressed from transfection of pHXB2Smal or pHXB55 was distributed evenly between the cytoplasm and membrane fractions. Finally, the released viruslike particles obtained from the transfection of proviral genome pHXB2pro- were stable to mild detergent treatment, whereas particles obtained from transfection of pHXB2Smal and pHXB55 were relatively unstable. These results demonstrate that subtle changes in the Gag-Pol polyprotein of HIV-1 can have significant effects on the assembly and physical stability of the released virus.
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PMID:Mutations in the protease gene of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 affect release and stability of virus particles. 850 89

Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-infected CEM cells were treated (as single agents or in combination) with (minus)-2', 3'-dideoxy-3'-thiacytidine (3TC) and the following HIV-1-specific non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase (RT) inhibitors (NNRTIs): 2', 5'-bis-O-(tert-butyldimethylsilyl)-3'-spiro-5'-(4'-amino-1',2'-oxathi ole)-2',2'-dioxide derivative of 3-methylthymidine (TSAO-m3T), the thiocarboxanilides UC10 and UC42, bis(heteroaryl)piperazine (BHAP) derivative U90152, and the 1-(2-hydroxyethoxymethyl)-6-(phenylthio)thymine (HEPT) derivative 5-isopropyl-1-ethoxymethyl-6-benzyluracil (MKC-442). When used individually, the compounds led to the emergence of HIV-1 strains containing the following mutations in the RT: Glu138 to lysine for TSAO-m3T, Met184 to valine for 3TC, Lys103 to threonine/asparagine for the thiocarboxanilides, and Tyr181 to cysteine for BHAP and MKC-442. When 3TC was combined with TSAO-m3T, UC10, UC42, BHAP, or MKC-442, breakthrough of virus was markedly delayed or even suppressed. For these drug combinations, the concentrations of the individual drugs could be lowered by > or = 25-50-fold to suppress virus breakthrough compared with the individual use of the compounds. The concomitant presence of the Lys138 and Ile/Val184 mutations was found in the RT of the mutant viruses that emerged with combination therapy of the lowest concentrations of 3TC with either the lowest concentrations of TSAO-m3T or UC10 (approximately 0.5-3-fold the EC50 value). These virus strains retained high sensitivity to other NNRTIs such as BHAP or HEPT. The virus mutants that arose in the presence of combinations of the lowest concentrations of 3TC with either BHAP or HEPT predominantly contained the Cys181 mutation in the RT. In one case, the Ile181 mutation was found. The latter mutations, particularly the Ile181 mutation, resulted in markedly decreased sensitivity to the NNRTIs but not to 3'-azido-2', 3'-dideoxythymidine or 3TC.
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PMID:Marked inhibitory activity of non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors against human immunodeficiency virus type 1 when combined with (-)2',3'-dideoxy-3'-thiacytidine. 862 38

cDNA clones encoding two new Arabidopsis thaliana peroxidases, ATP 1a and ATP 2a, have been identified by searching the Arabidopsis database of expressed sequence tags (dbEST). They represent a novel branch of hitherto uncharacterized plant peroxidases which is only 35% identical in amino acid sequence to the well characterized group of basic plant peroxidases represented by the horseradish (Armoracia rusticana) isoperoxidases HRP C, HRP E5 and the similar Arabidopsis isoperoxidases ATP Ca, ATP Cb, and ATP Ea. However ATP 1a is 87% identical in amino acid sequence to a peroxidase encoded by an mRNA isolated from cotton (Gossypium hirsutum). As cotton and Arabidopsis belong to rather diverse families (Malvaceae and Crucifereae, respectively), in contrast with Arabidopsis and horseradish (both Crucifereae), the high degree of sequence identity indicates that this novel type of peroxidase, albeit of unknown function, is likely to be widespread in plant species. The atp 1 and atp 2 types of cDNA sequences were the most redundant among the 28 different isoperoxidases identified among about 200 peroxidase encoding ESTs. Interestingly, 8 out of totally 38 EST sequences coding for ATP 1 showed three identical nucleotide substitutions. This variant form is designated ATP 1b. Similarly, six out of totally 16 EST sequences coding for ATP 2 showed a number of deletions and nucleotide changes. This variant form is designated ATP 2b. The selected EST clones are full-length and contain coding regions of 993 nucleotides for atp 1a, and 984 nucleotides for atp 2a. These regions show 61% DNA sequence identity. The predicted mature proteins ATP 1a, and ATP 2a are 57% identical in sequence and contain the structurally and functionally important residues, characteristic of the plant peroxidase superfamily. However, they do show two differences of importance to peroxidase catalysis: (1) the asparagine residue linked with the active site distal histidine via hydrogen bonding is absent; (2) an N-glycosylation site is located right at the entrance to the heme channel. The reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) was used to identify mRNAs coding for ATP 1a/b and ATP 2a/b in germinating seeds, seedlings, roots, leaves, stems, flowers and cell suspension culture using elongation factor 1alpha (EF-1alpha) for the first time as a positive control. Both mRNAs were transcribed at levels comparable to EF-1alpha in all plant tissues investigated which were more than two days old, and in cell suspension culture. In addition, the mRNA coding for ATP 1a/b was found in two day old germinating seeds. The abundant transcription of ATP 1a/b and ATP 2a/b is in line with their many entries in dbEST, and indicates essential roles for these novel peroxidases.
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PMID:Sequence and RT-PCR expression analysis of two peroxidases from Arabidopsis thaliana belonging to a novel evolutionary branch of plant peroxidases. 913 61


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