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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)
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 isolates having dipeptide insertions in the fingers subdomain of the
reverse transcriptase
(RT) show high level resistance to 3 '-azido-3 '-deoxythymidine (AZT) and other nucleoside analogues. Insertions are usually associated with thymidine analogue resistance mutations, such as T215Y. The resistance phenotype correlates with increased ATP-dependent phosphorolytic activity, which facilitates removal of thymidine analogues from inhibitor-terminated primers. In this report, we show that substituting
Thr
, Ser, or Asn for Tyr-215 in a multidrug-resistant RT, bearing a Ser-Ser insertion between codons 69 and 70, leads to AZT and stavudine resensitization through the loss of the ATP-mediated removal activity. The mutation D67N, which is rarely found in insertion-containing strains, had no effect on excision and a minor influence on resistance. Substituting Tyr-215 had a larger effect than deleting the dipeptide insertion. The presence of both the insertion and mutation T215Y in the wild-type BH10 RT conferred significant ATP-mediated removal activity and moderate resistance to AZT. However, resistance levels and unblocking activities were lower than those observed with the multidrug-resistant enzyme. Removal reactions can be inhibited by the next complementary dNTP. Both Tyr-215 and the dipeptide insertion affect RT-DNA.DNA-dNTP ternary complex formation, an effect that was not detected in the presence of foscarnet. Based on crystal structures of binary and ternary complexes of HIV-1 RT, we propose that Tyr-215 exerts its action by facilitating a proper orientation of the pyrophosphate donor molecule, whereas the effects on dNTP binding are indirect and could be related to significant conformational changes occurring during polymerization.
...
PMID:Molecular determinants of multi-nucleoside analogue resistance in HIV-1 reverse transcriptases containing a dipeptide insertion in the fingers subdomain: effect of mutations D67N and T215Y on removal of thymidine nucleotide analogues from blocked DNA primers. 1504 90
We have identified an alternatively spliced form of synaptotagmin I in Aplysia neurons. This isoform, synaptotagmin I C2B-beta, is generated by alternative exon usage in the C2B domain leading to nine amino acid changes in the C2B sequence from the previously characterized synaptotagmin I, now designated as synaptotagmin I C2B-alpha. Quantitative
reverse transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction demonstrated that approximately 25% of mRNA encoding synaptotagmin I contained the C2B-beta exon in the nervous system. Synaptotagmin I C2B-beta showed greater resistance to digestion by chymotrypsin in the absence of calcium than did synaptotagmin I C2B-alpha, although both isoforms required the same amount of calcium to resist chymotrypsin digestion. The source of these changes in C2B properties was mapped to a single amino acid (
threonine
358). We have also cloned SNAP 25 in Aplysia and show that it binds synaptotagmin I C2B-beta with a higher affinity than synaptotagmin I C2B-alpha. These results suggest that this splicing alters biochemical properties of the C2B domain, affecting a number of its important known interactions.
...
PMID:Identification and characterization of a novel C2B splice variant of synaptotagmin I. 1505 79
Methionine at position 184 of human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1)
reverse transcriptase
(RT) was changed to valine, isoleucine,
threonine
, or alanine in an HIV-1-based vector. The vectors were analyzed for replication capacity and for resistance to the nucleoside analog 2',3'-dideoxy-3'thiacytidine (3TC) using a single-cycle assay. Viruses containing the valine or isoleucine mutations were highly resistant to 3TC and replicated almost as well as the wild-type virus. The virus containing the
threonine
mutation was resistant to 3TC, but replicated about 30% as well as the wild-type. The alanine mutation conferred partial resistance to 3TC, but replicated poorly. The amounts of viral DNA synthesized decreased in 3TC-treated cells when the cells were infected with wild-type virus and the M184A mutant. The effect of these mutations on the generation of the ends of the linear viral DNA was determined using the sequence of the 2-LTR circle junctions. The M184T mutation increased the proportion of 2-LTR circle junctions containing a tRNA insertion, suggesting that the mutation affected the RNase H activity of RT.
...
PMID:Mutations at position 184 of human immunodeficiency virus type-1 reverse transcriptase affect virus titer and viral DNA synthesis. 1506 12
The host cell MAP kinase ERK-2 incorporated within human immunodeficiency virus type 1 particles plays a critical role in virus infectivity by phosphorylating viral proteins. Recently, a fraction of the virus incorporated late (L) domain-containing p6(gag) protein, which has an essential function in the release of viral particles from the cell surface, was reported to be phosphorylated by an unknown virus-associated cellular protein kinase (Muller, B., Patschinsky, T., and Krausslich, H. G. (2002) J. Virol. 76, 1015-1024). The present study demonstrates the contribution of the MAP kinase ERK-2 in p6(gag) phosphorylation. According to mutational analysis, a single ERK-2-phosphorylated
threonine
residue, belonging to a highly conserved phosphorylation MAP kinase consensus site, was identified at position 23 within p6(gag). Substitution by an alanine of the
Thr
(23) phosphorylable residue within the pNL4.3 molecular clone was found to decrease viral release from various cell types. As observed from electron microscopy experiments, most virions produced from this molecular clone remained incompletely separated from the host cell membrane with an immature morphology and displayed a reduced infectivity in single round infection experiments. Analysis of protein processing by Western blotting experiments revealed an incomplete Pr55(gag) maturation and a reduction in the virion-associated
reverse transcriptase
proteins was observed that was not related to differences in intracellular viral protein expression. Altogether, these data suggest that phosphorylation of p6(gag) protein by virus-associated ERK-2 is involved in the budding stage of HIV-1 life cycle.
...
PMID:The host cell MAP kinase ERK-2 regulates viral assembly and release by phosphorylating the p6gag protein of HIV-1. 1515 23
A two-serine insertion at position 69 (i69SS) of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)
reverse transcriptase
(RT) appears to be critical to enhance multi-nucleoside RT inhibitor resistance (MNR) in the sequence context of multiple zidovudine (AZT) resistance mutations (i.e., M41L, L210W, T215Y). In this study, we measured the replication capacity relative to the wild-type (WT) HIV-1 of a series of recombinant viruses carrying the i69SS in the background of a clinical isolate with MNR in which we introduced mutations D67N, Y215T, Y215S, or Y215N. In vitro measurements included replication kinetics and growth competition assays at different multiplicities of infection (MOI). While the addition of D67N had a minor effect on replication capacity, the reversion of Tyr-215 to
Thr
, Ser, or Asn was sufficient to increase the virus ability to replicate in a drug-free environment. The same genotypic changes at position 215 rendered the MNR virus susceptible to AZT and stavudine. Interestingly, the presence of the insertion together with mutation T215Y in an otherwise WT sequence background was not sufficient to confer high-level resistance to AZT, although its replication capacity was clearly impaired. Therefore, the RT residue 215 plays a critical role in both replication capacity and drug resistance of multidrug-resistant viruses containing the i69SS.
...
PMID:Relative replication fitness of multi-nucleoside analogue-resistant HIV-1 strains bearing a dipeptide insertion in the fingers subdomain of the reverse transcriptase and mutations at codons 67 and 215. 1526 99
Ala-114, together with Asp-113, Tyr-115 and Gln-151, form the pocket that accommodates the 3'-OH of the incoming dNTP in the HIV-1 RT (
reverse transcriptase
). Four mutant RTs having serine, glycine,
threonine
or valine instead of Ala-114 were obtained by site-directed mutagenesis. While mutants A114S and A114G retained significant DNA polymerase activity, A114T and A114V showed very low catalytic efficiency in nucleotide incorporation assays, due to their high apparent K(m) values for dNTP. Discrimination between AZTTP (3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine triphosphate) and dTTP was not significantly affected by mutations A114S and A114G in assays carried out with heteropolymeric template/primers. However, both mutants showed decreased susceptibility to AZTTP when poly(rA)/(dT)16 was used as substrate. Steady-state kinetic analysis of the incorporation of ddNTPs compared with dNTPs showed that substituting glycine for Ala-114 produced a 5-6-fold increase in the RT's ability to discriminate against ddNTPs (including the physiologically relevant metabolites of zalcitabine and didanosine), a result that was confirmed in primer-extension assays. In contrast, A114S and A114V showed wild-type ddNTP/dNTP discrimination efficiencies. Discrimination against ribonucleotides was not affected by mutations at position 114. Misinsertion and mispair extension fidelity assays as well as determinations of G-->A mutation frequencies using a lacZ complementation assay showed that, unlike Tyr-115 or Gln-151 mutants, the fidelity of HIV-1 RT was not largely affected by substitutions of Ala-114. The role of the side-chain of Ala-114 in ddNTP/dNTP discrimination appears to be determined by its participation in van der Waals interactions with the ribose moiety of the incoming nucleotide.
...
PMID:Nucleotide specificity of HIV-1 reverse transcriptases with amino acid substitutions affecting Ala-114. 1554 34
The proline residue at position 306 in hepatitis B virus (HBV)
reverse transcriptase
(rtP306) has been suggested to constrain the conformation of the alpha-helices in the thumb subdomain that interacts with the viral DNA template-primer. To study the impact of residue rt306 in HBV replication further, 11 site-directed mutants were constructed that substituted rtP306 with different amino acids. The replicative competencies of these mutants were assayed by HepG2 cell transfection and real-time PCR. When rtP306 was substituted with glycine or
threonine
, the replication competency of these mutants was drastically reduced to 1.96 and 4.51% of the wild-type HBV level, respectively. When rtP306 was substituted with glutamic acid, the replicative competency of the mutant increased up to 9.4-fold compared with wild-type virus. The results also showed that changes in the replicative competency of these constructed mutants were not associated with functional changes of HBV enhancer I. These results indicate the importance of amino acid(s) at the interface between the thumb and palm subdomains in modulating the replicative competency of HBV isolates. This regulatory residue(s) could serve as a new target for the development of anti-HBV drugs.
...
PMID:Substitution of proline 306 in the reverse transcriptase domain of hepatitis B virus regulates replication. 1560 34
We identified a novel mutation (Ala392Thr) in the factor XII (FXII) gene of a patient with congenital FXII deficiency, designated Factor XII Shizuoka. The proband was an asymptomatic 63-year-old Japanese male with an abnormal coagulation test, discovered by chance during preoperative testing. The FXII activity was under 3% and antigen level was under 10%. Sequence analysis of the proband's FXII gene revealed a homozygous nucleotide substitution G to A in exon 10, resulting in the amino acid substitution Ala392 to
Thr
in the catalytic domain. We constructed the mutant FXII cDNA in an expression plasmid vector and transfected it into Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. The recombinant wild-type FXII antigen was detected in the culture medium by immunoprecipitation assay, but the mutant FXII (A392T) was not observed. Both the wild-type FXII and A392T cell lysates, however, contained equivalent levels of FXII antigen and FXII mRNA, as estimated by Western blotting and quantitative
reverse transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), respectively. These findings suggest that the Ala392 to
Thr
substitution impairs intracellular protein processing and causes a cross-reacting material -negative FXII deficiency.
...
PMID:Factor XII Shizuoka, a novel mutation (Ala392Thr) identified and characterized in a patient with congenital coagulation factor XII deficiency. 1561 41
The IgG-derived immunomodulating peptide tuftsin,
Thr
-Lys-Pro-Arg, is recognized by specific receptors on phagocytic cells, notably macrophages, and is capable of targeting proteins and peptides to these sites. Aiming to target 3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine (AZT) to HIV-infected macrophages, a conjugate of AZT with tuftsin was synthesized. The AZT-tuftsin chimera possesses the characteristic capacities of its two components. Thus, like AZT, it inhibits
reverse transcriptase
activity and HIV-antigen expression, and similarly to tuftsin, it stimulates IL-1 release from mouse macrophages and augments the immunogenic function of the cells. Importantly, the conjugate is not cytotoxic to T-cells. The results suggest that the AZT-tuftsin conjugate might have potential use in AIDS therapy.
...
PMID:Tuftsin-AZT conjugate: potential macrophage targeting for AIDS therapy. 1563 25
The plant lectins from Hippeastrum hybrid (HHA) and Galanthus nivalis (GNA) are 50,000-D tetramers showing specificity for alpha-(1,3) and/or alpha-(1,6)-mannose oligomers. They inhibit HIV-1 infection at a 50% effective concentration of 0.2 to 0.3 microg/ml. Escalating HHA or GNA concentrations (up to 500 microg/ml) led to the isolation of three HIV-1(III(B)) strains in CEM T cell cultures that were highly resistant to HHA and GNA, several other related mannose-specific plant lectins, and the monoclonal antibody 2G12, modestly resistant to the mannose-specific cyanovirin, which is derived from a blue-green alga, but fully susceptible to other HIV entry inhibitors as well as HIV
reverse transcriptase
inhibitors. These mutant virus strains were devoid of up to seven or eight of 22 glycosylation sites in the viral envelope glycoprotein gp120 because of mutations at the Asn or
Thr
/Ser sites of the N-glycosylation motifs. In one of the strains, a novel glycosylation site was created near a deleted glycosylation site. The affected glycosylation sites were predominantly clustered in regions of gp120 that are not involved in the direct interaction with either CD4, CCR5, CXCR4, or gp41. The mutant viruses containing the deleted glycosylation sites were markedly more infectious in CEM T-cell cultures than wild-type virus.
...
PMID:Marked depletion of glycosylation sites in HIV-1 gp120 under selection pressure by the mannose-specific plant lectins of Hippeastrum hybrid and Galanthus nivalis. 1571 24
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