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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 known antiretroviral agents were tested for their ability to inhibit the activities of human immunodeficiency virus type 1
reverse transcriptase
purified from virions or from a recombinant Escherichia coli strain. The recombinant
reverse transcriptase
, a
polypeptide
of 66 kilodaltons, showed inhibition profiles indistinguishable from those of the virion-derived enzyme with all tested compounds, except for suramin and two dextran sulfates. These were more inhibitory to the recombinant enzyme, presumably because the E. coli-derived enzyme was more highly purified. The relative ease with which large quantities of recombinant enzyme can be prepared should facilitate the large-scale screening and identification of new potential inhibitors of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1
reverse transcriptase
.
...
PMID:Comparison of inhibitory activities of various antiretroviral agents against particle-derived and recombinant human immunodeficiency virus type 1 reverse transcriptases. 246 89
Recombinant HIV-1
reverse transcriptase
(RT) was stably overproduced as a soluble protein in Escherichia coli using a double-plasmid expression system in which an RT precursor protein was expressed and processed in vivo by HIV-1 protease produced in trans. The RT thus produced consisted of an equimolar mixture of two polypeptides, p66 and p51, which were copurified to greater than 90% homogeneity and were found to share a common NH2 terminus as judged by sequence analysis of the
polypeptide
mixture. The observed sequence confirmed correct in vivo cleavage by protease at the protease-RT polyprotein junction to yield an NH2 terminus identical to that of genuine viral RT (M. M. Lightfoote et al. (1986) J. Virol. 60, 771-775; F. diMarzo Veronese et al. (1986) Science 231, 1289-1291). The bacterially expressed RT had a specific activity similar to that of viral RT and inhibition studies with phosphonoformate confirmed that it was indistinguishable from the viral enzyme with respect to sensitivity to this inhibitor. Polymerase activated gel analysis of the mixture indicated that p66 was associated with a higher level of RT activity than p51. RNase H activated gel analysis suggested that the purified preparation of recombinant RT was free of endogenous E. coli RNase H, and that the RNase H activity of RT was exclusively associated with the p66
polypeptide
, supporting the hypothesis that the RNase H domain is located in the COOH-terminal region of the molecule.
...
PMID:Recombinant HIV-1 reverse transcriptase: purification, primary structure, and polymerase/ribonuclease H activities. 247 69
The RNase H activity associated with recombinant p66/p51 HIV-1
reverse transcriptase
(RT) has been analyzed in the absence of DNA synthesis by using homogeneous RNA.DNA substrates. The substrates consisted of SP6 runoff transcripts from a portion of the gag region of the HIV-1 genome hybridized to complementary single-stranded DNA from either an M13 subclone or a phagemid transcription vector subclone. The corresponding hybrids either carried a 5'-mismatch of seven nucleotides or were fully base-paired. Analysis of recombinant HIV-1 p66/p51 RT by an activated gel assay employing these substrates suggested that the RNase H activity was exclusively associated with the p66
polypeptide
. Denaturing gel electrophoresis was used to analyze the oligonucleotide products generated by hydrolysis of the hybrids by HIV-1 RT, M-MuLV RT, and Escherichia coli RNase H. The significant difference in the time-dependent distribution of products of HIV-1 RT vs E. coli RNase H catalyzed cleavage of 5'-mismatched hybrids indicated that the preparation of recombinant HIV-1 RT was free of contaminating bacterial RNase H. Although the HIV-1 RT associated RNase H activity shares many of the general mechanistic features of other retroviral enzymes [Gerard, G. F. (1981) Biochemistry 20, 256-265], the appearance of unique intermediates and end products in the course of hydrolysis of 5'-mismatched and fully base-paired hybrids indicated a significant difference in the sequence dependence of the kinetics of RNase H cleavage by HIV-1 RT and M-MuLV RT.
...
PMID:Analysis of the ribonuclease H activity of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase using RNA.DNA hybrid substrates derived from the gag region of HIV-1. 248 1
An ovine mammary cDNA library has been constructed from total poly(A)+ RNA isolated from the mammary gland of a lactating ewe, using a classical procedure. Blunt-ended double-stranded cDNAs prepared with
reverse transcriptase
and nuclease S1 were tailed with dCTP, inserted into the dGMP-tailed PstI site of plasmid pBR322 and cloned in E. coli. Five series of homologous clones representing abundant messenger RNAs (strong hybridization with a single-stranded cDNA probe generated from total poly(A)+ RNA) were selected using each time a different predominant cloned ds-cDNA as probe, then identified by positive hybridization-translation of the cognate mRNA and subsequent immunoprecipitation and electrophoresis of the protein. The lengths of alpha s1-, alpha s2-, beta-, kappa-casein and beta-lactoglobulin mRNAs are in the range of 1.2, 1.1, 1.25, 1.0 and 0.85 kb, respectively, as determined by Northern blotting analysis. Five homologous mRNAs of similar sizes were identified in the porcine species by dot blot hybridization and Northern analyses. The nucleotide sequence of alpha s1-casein mRNA was determined by sequencing, according to Maxam and Gilbert, both a 1080 bp long cloned ds-cDNA and a ss-cDNA (268 nucleotides) generated by 5' extension of a 5' terminal truncated radiolabeled fragment (83 bp) of the relevant ds-cDNA, used as primer for reverse transcription. The 3' non coding region (431 nucleotides, excluding the poly(A) tail) represents 70% of the length of the coding region (618 nucleotides) flanked by a 61 nucleotide 5' region. Comparison of sequences of ovine and bovine, rat and guinea-pig alpha s1-casein mRNAs has revealed a greater homology in the 3' and especially 5' non coding regions. In the reading frame, the conserved regions are essentially those corresponding to the signal peptide and phosphopeptide domains. The derived 206 amino acid sequence of ovine pre-alpha s1-casein differs from that of its bovine counterpart (genetic variant B) by 24 amino acid substitutions and a deletion of 8 amino acid residues occurring in the
polypeptide
chain of the mature protein. Such a variation (84% homology only) in two phylogenetically closely related species indicates a high rate of evolution of alpha s1-casein.
...
PMID:Construction and identification of recombinant plasmids carrying cDNAs coding for ovine alpha S1-, alpha S2-, beta-, kappa-casein and beta-lactoglobulin. Nucleotide sequence of alpha S1-casein cDNA. 300 1
We have developed conditions for efficient cDNA cloning of nanogram amounts of purified mRNAs coding for cystathionine beta-synthase [L-serine hydro-lyase (adding homocysteine), EC 4.2.1.22] and for the cytosolic precursors of mitochondrial ornithine transcarbamylase (carbamoylphosphate:L-ornithine carbamoyltransferase, EC 2.1.3.3) and the beta subunit of propionyl-CoA carboxylase [propanoyl-CoA: carbon-dioxide ligase (ADP-forming), EC 6.4.1.3]. The three mRNAs, prepared by sequential immunoselection from the same batch of rat liver polysomes, were pooled (20 ng each), and cDNA was synthesized by using avian
reverse transcriptase
. The second DNA strand was prepared by "nick-translation repair" of the cDNA . mRNA hybrid with RNase H, polymerase I, and DNA ligase from Escherichia coli. The double-stranded (ds) DNA was tailed with deoxycytidine residues, annealed with Pst I-cut/dG-tailed pBR322, and used to transform E. coli. The library generated by this three-step procedure contained 5000 independent colonies. A 550-base-pair (bp) cDNA clone of the beta subunit of propionyl-CoA carboxylase was detected by hybrid-selected translation; it was then used to screen the library for longer cDNAs. Two hybridizing cDNAs, 1200 and 1000 bp long with a 200-bp overlap, representing together a full-length copy of the coding region and 446 bp of 3' untranslated sequence, were recovered. Each plasmid mapped to the region q13.3----q22 of human chromosome 3. Cystathionine beta-synthase clones were obtained by screening the library with a single-stranded [32P]cDNA prepared directly from the highly purified synthase mRNA by
reverse transcriptase
. The longest hybridizing cDNA of 1700 bp was used in hybrid-selected translation and detected a
polypeptide
of 63 kDa, identical in size to rat liver synthase. In situ hybridization of this cDNA to q22 of human chromosome 21 confirmed two previous tentative assignments of the synthase locus to this chromosome.
...
PMID:Cloning and screening with nanogram amounts of immunopurified mRNAs: cDNA cloning and chromosomal mapping of cystathionine beta-synthase and the beta subunit of propionyl-CoA carboxylase. 345 73
The
polypeptide
product of the gene for the large subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase from Euglena gracilis based on the DNA sequence of the chloroplast-encoded gene is described. The large subunit
polypeptide
of 475 codons is co-linear with the homologous polypeptides from other chloroplasts and cyanobacteria. The amino acid sequence is 92% homologous to that of Chlamydomonas, 84% homologous to spinach, 82% homologous to maize, and 80% homologous to that of the cyanobacterium Anabaena variabilis. Known functional domains of the protein are coded by the larger exons of the gene. Introns in the gene generally occur at coding sequences specifying hydrophilic, presumably surface exposed, regions of the
polypeptide
. The location of some of the introns may reflect a separation of functional domains. The 5'- and 3'-ends of the rbcL transcript were determined by primer extension sequencing using
reverse transcriptase
and S1 nuclease protection, respectively. The transcribed but untranslated sequences are quite distinct from those from other rbcL loci.
...
PMID:The Euglena gracilis chloroplast ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase gene. II. The spliced mRNA and its product. 393 71
The present study concerns the purification and partial characterization of simian foamy virus type 1 (SFV 1) structural core polypeptides. The obtention of SFV 1 cores separated from envelope components after viral disrupture was verified by electron microscopy (EM), density gradient, and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). Multistep purification by column chromatography, verified by PAGE, enabled us to separate the structural core polypeptides from the 80,000 molecular weight
reverse transcriptase
. Two species of structural core polypeptides were identified with apparent molecular weights of 51 and 15 kd. By affinity chromatography on a double-stranded DNA-cellulose column, the main internal protein, p51, was shown to be composed of a major 30 kd protein and a minor 19 kd
polypeptide
, which binds to double stranded DNA. The p15 internal protein was shown to have a ribonucleotide binding nature.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of simian foamy virus type I structural core polypeptides. 394 6
Ribonuclease H (RNA.DNA-hybrid ribonucleotidohydrolase, EC 3.1.4.34) has been reported to copurify with
reverse transcriptase
(RNA directed DNA polymerase) of RNA tumor viruses. In addition, viral specific ribonuclease H and
reverse transcriptase
of avian type-C viruses are thought to be part of the same
polypeptide
. In this report we show that a fraction of the ribonuclease H activity from Rauscher murine leukemia and Kirsten murine sarcoma viruses was separated from
reverse transcriptase
by anion exchange chromatography while the remaining portion co-purified with the viral polymerase. The amount of this co-purified nuclease activity was about 4- to 8-fold lower than the activity found in avian myeloblastosis virus (with respect to the ratio of ribonuclease H to
reverse transcriptase
) and this nuclease activity can only be detected by using labeled substrate of high specific radioactivity. However, a complete separation of ribonuclease H activity from
reverse transcriptase
was obtained by purifying core structures of the virus by sucrose density gradient centrifugation. While
reverse transcriptase
was present in the cores, there was no detectable ribonuclease H. Furthermore, a specific antibody against Rauscher leukemia virus
reverse transcriptase
did not inhibit any virion associated ribonuclease H activity. Our results suggest that in these virions these two enzyme activities reside in two separate molecules and probably in two different compartments of the virus. These findings emphasize a basic difference between the avian and murine type-C virus DNA polymerases.
...
PMID:Separation of ribonuclease H and RNA directed DNA polymerase (reverse transcriptase) of murine type-C RNA tumor viruses. 413 16
Influenza B/LEE/40, B/Rome/1/67, B/Hong Kong/8/73, and B/Victoria/98926/70 viruses have a similar
polypeptide
composition as analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. These viruses are composed of six or seven polypeptides, depending on whether one or two high-molecular-weight polypeptides are resolved, ranging in molecular weights from 27,000 to 90,400. Three of these polypeptides, namely the heavy and light hemagglutinin chains and the neuraminidase, have attached carbohydrate. Highly purified influenza B/LEE/40 and B/Rome/1/67 virus preparations have RNA-dependent RNA polymerase activity equivalent to the incorporation of 100 and 30 pmol, respectively, of (3)H-UMP per mg of virus protein per h at 37 C, which is demonstrated only in detergent-treated virus suspensions. However, no
RNA-dependent DNA polymerase
enzyme activity was detected in the two viruses although virus suspensions were "activated" by heat, alpha-chymotrypsin, and detergents. Other enzymatic activities were associated with purified preparations of influenza B virus and were attributed to minor contamination of virus with host cell enzymes. Thus, nucleoside and deoxynucleoside phosphohydrolase enzymes were active in the absence of detergents and catalyzed the release of 1,200 and 1,800 nmol of P(i) per mg of virus protein in 30 min at 37 C from ATP and dATP substrates. Thin-layer chromatography indicated that the products of the phosphohydrolase enzymes of influenza B/LEE/40 were mainly nucleoside diphosphate and monophosphate. The latter enzymes were tightly bound to influenza B/LEE/40 virus and could not be removed completely by repeated centrifugation, including centrifugation of the virus to equilibrium in density gradients of 25 to 40% (wt/vol) cesium chloride. A low degree of RNase (approximately 0.01 mug% contamination) and phosphatase (10-30 nmol of P(i) released per mg of virus protein per 30 min) activity was detected in some, but not all, influenza B/LEE/40 virus preparations.
...
PMID:Polypeptide composition of Influenza B viruses and enzymes associated with the purified virus particles. 435 55
Mammalian type-C viruses contain a major internal
polypeptide
of about 30,000 daltons that is characterized by both intraspecies and interspecies antigenic reactivities. Radioimmunoprecipitation assays were used for measurement of this protein; the assay was based upon interspecies reactivities of the protein. As little as 5 ng of the group-specific antigen of murine leukemia virus can be measured by radioimmunoprecipitation assays, thus providing an approximate 10,000-fold increase in sensitivity over the standard immunodiffusion procedure. The type-C viruses that were recently isolated from a woolly monkey and gibbon ape each have an interspecies type-C antigenic reactivity. The primate viruses, however, could be distinguished from the type-C viruses of murine, rat, hamster, and feline origin that were more highly related to each other. The interspecies reactivity of the 30,000-dalton
polypeptide
is an immunological marker of the mammalian type-C viruses, since even with this sensitive assay other mammalian viruses with
RNA-dependent DNA polymerase
activity did not contain the type-C interspecies antigen.
...
PMID:Radioimmunoassay of mammalian type-C viral proteins: interspecies antigenic reactivities of the major internal polypeptide. 450 53
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