Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.7.6 (RNA polymerase)
34,946 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Samples of three nonmalignant and seven leukemic human cells were examined for DNA polymerase activity that could be identified as RNA tumor virus reverse transcriptase. Experiments on virus-infected model animal cells provided the basis for cell fractionation procedures, and reconstituted systems of known virus, added to human cells, established a threshold of virus detection by enzyme assay at 1 to 10 particles/cell. DNA polymerase activity with some properties similar to a reverse transcriptase was detected in some of the human leukemic cells. However, parallel analyses of nonmalignant cells showed sufficient similarities to raise serious questions about the specificity of the criteria. Reverse transcriptase activity has been reported to be present in white blood cells from a proportion of cases of leukemia; however, it is concluded from the present study that the usual enzymatic criteria using synthetic template primers, which were used in most of the studies reported, are not sufficient to identify a DNA polymerase activity as viral reverse transcriptase.
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PMID:Detection of reverse transcriptase activity in human cells. 8 60

A long-term cell culture of human glioblastoma was investigated microscopically, virologically, and biochemically. Reverse transcriptase activity was detected in cultured human glioblastoma cells. 3H uridine was incorporated into particles of buoyant density at 1.07 g/ml (Ficoll) which is equal to that of Oncorna virus particles, but 3H thymidine was not incorporated at all. Furthermore, reverse transcriptase activity was also demonstrated with the particles, suggesting that the cultured human glioblastoma cells were producing type C Oncorna virus. Ultrastructural observations of cell culture of glioblastoma showed type C virus particles in cisternae and culture medium. Budding of the virus was also seen on the surface of the cell. The mean diameter of the particles was approximately 100 nm. Ca. 1.1 nm of spikes protruded from the envelope. Both types of virions were observed, i.e. the doughnut-shaped type form and the solid circular form.
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PMID:Type C particles in culture of human glioblastoma cells. 8 68

A procedure using the virus-associated reverse transcriptase was developed for following the kinetics of adsorption, penetration, and uncoating of murine leukemia virus. Viral adsorption to cell membrane was determined by assaying this enzyme activity in isolated debris of mechanically disrupted cells after infection with murine leukemia virus in the presence of actinomycin D. At 37 degrees C, viral adsorption proceeded at a high initial rate, but after 5 min of incubation with the virus, it gradually slowed down. At 4 degrees C, viral adsorption was slower but proceeded at a linear rate. Intracellular virus was determined by centrifuging the cytoplasmic fraction of the disrupted cells at 105,000 x g for 45 min and assaying reverse-transcriptase activity in the high-speed pellet thus obtained. Sucrose gradient analysis of the enzyme activity recovered from the cytoplasm of infected cells indicated that this activity represented intact virus particles. No appreciable amount of such particles was recovered from the cytoplasm of cells infected at 4 degrees C. This indicates that the virions recovered from the cytoplasm of cells infected at 37 degrees C are indeed intracellular virus particles which penetrated into the cells and not just membrane-bound particles mechanically released to the cytoplasmic fraction during cell disruption. By this procedure intracellular virus was found to accumulate in the cytoplasm, reaching a maximal level within 20 min. The accumulated intracellular virus particles gradually disappeared from the cytoplasm, evidently due to their uncoating which was completed within 80 min.
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PMID:Adsorption, penetration, and uncoating of murine leukemia virus studied by using its reverse transcriptase. 9 Jan 59

UV irradiation of infectious vesicular stomatitis virus was employed to study the relationship between the expression of certain viral gene functions and viral inhibition of RNA synthesis in mouse myeloma (MPC-11) cells. Viral infectivity, protein synthesis, and viral mRNA synthesis were all highly susceptible to inactivation by UV radiation; however, low levels of viral transcriptase activity were detected in vitro in virus preparations subjected to large doses of UV radiation. In sharp contrast, the capacity of vesicular stomatitis virus to shut off cellular transcription was quite resistant to UV radiation. The data presented here indicate that viral transcription is essential to inhibit host RNA metabolism, even though synthesis of viral polypeptides in the inhibited cells could not be detected. At those levels of UV radiation that inactivated all viral gene functions, except viral inhibition of cellular RNA synthesis, the only viral product detected was non-adenylated, low-molecular-weight RNA species.
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PMID:Use of UV irradiation to identify the genetic information of vesicular stomatitis virus responsible for shutting off cellular RNA synthesis. 9 Jan 65

Human cells derived from both normal and neoplastic tissues can be infected by Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (MPMV) without accompanying cytopathology. Infection of cell cultures such as human rhabdomyosarcoma (A204) results in a persistenly infected cell line which can be subcultured over 30 sequential culture passages without significant change in phenotype properties according to reverse, transcriptase (RT), MPMV p27 antigen content, virus particle count and infectivity titre. Productive virus infections were established at relatively low virus particle (VP) input multiplicities (p.i.m.; about 0.06 VP/cell) In A204 cell cultures. At higher p.i.m. (about 600 to 6000 VP/cell) newly synthesized virus was detected within 4 days post infection. Although virus production was cumulative following primary infection, after subculture of infected cultures MPVM production was greater during active cell division. Using synchronization techniques, MPMV replication in persistently infected cultures was found to be cell cycle-dependent. The major internal antigen, p27, was synthesized in G2 and newly synthesized virus particles were released predominantly during mitosis and early G1. Colcemid arrest of cells during mitosis inhibited subsequent MPMV release. Consequently, production of extracellular virus depends upon the progression of cells through the mitotic stage. These data, which provided a basic understanding of the virus-host relationship that occurs in primate cells productively infected with MPMV, were used as a guideline for isolating MPMV-like viruses from experimentally and naturally infected Rhesus monkey.
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PMID:Characterization of infection and replication of Mason-Pfizer monkey virus in human cell cultures. 11 35

Rhinovirus type 14 RNA-dependent RNA polymerase complexes were isolated from microsomal and soluble fraction of infected KB cells. Maximum activities were measured at at 6 and 7 hours post inoculation (p.i.) for microsomal and soluble polymerases, respectively. Both polymerase activities are considerably reduced by 8 to 9 hours, p.i., and interval in which the in vivo rate of synthesis of viral RNA is maximal. In vitro RNA products of RNA polymerases in both fractions consist of ribonuclease-sensitive and ribonuclease-resistant RNA of heterogeneous sizes. Detergent treatment of the microsomal RNA polymerase(s) did not affect the total amount of RNA synthesized, the proportion of ribonuclease-sensitive RNA synthesized or the size of the RNA products. The data suggest that RV14RNA polymerase complexes are intially associated with membranes but are then irreversibly released into the soluble phase of the cytoplasm; possible explanations for this phenomena are discussed.
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PMID:Rhinovirus type 14 RNA polymerase complexes. 16 77

An abortive infection of a rabbit cornea cell line (RC-60) by vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), yielding less than 1 PFU/cell, was converted to a productive infection, yielding 1,900 PFU/cell, when cells were superinfected with vaccinia. Studies on the synthesis of VSV-directed RNA in RC-60 cells suggest that the abortive infection by VSV alone may be due in part to (i) a limited production of 40S virion RNA and (ii) a markedly reduced activity of virion-bound transcriptase activity in RC-60 cells compared to the activity in mouse L cells, a permissive host for VSV. No recognizable VSV structures, except a small amount of viral core structures, were produced by the abortive infection. In contrast, double infection of RC-60 cells with VSV and vaccinia in the presence of hydroxyurea resulted in the production of infective B particles of VSV. Although the function supplied by vaccinia responsible for the productive replication of VSV in double infected RC-60 cells has not been identified, metabolic inhibitor studies indicate that continuous vaccinia-dependent RNA synthesis is required for maximal production of infective VSV. The possibility is considered that vaccinia may supply a product or function required for VSV replication which is ordinarily supplied by the host but which is lacking in RC-60 cells.
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PMID:Abortive infection of a rabbit cornea cell line by vesicular stomatitis virus: conversion to productive infection by superinfection with vaccinia virus. 16 5

Upon infection of Chinese hamster ovary cells (CHO), vesicular stomatitis (VSV) virus synthesizes two membrane proteins (the VSV glycoprotein and the VSV matrix or membrane (M) protein) and three nonmembrane proteins (the VSV nucleocapsid, the viral transcriptase, and an NS protein). We have used the VSV-infected cell as a model system for the study of the site of synthesis of these membrane and nonmembrane proteins. We have isolated VSV mRNA from free polyribosomes, membrane-bound polyribosomes, and the postribosomal supernatant, and identified the individual species of VSV mRNA present in each fraction. The mRNA which encodes the VSV glycoprotein is found exclusively on membrane-bound polyribosomes, while the mRNAs which encode the VSV, M, N, and NS proteins are found in free polyribosomes, in the membrane fraction of the cell, and in the postribosomal supernatant. Our results suggest that the VSV glycoprotein is synthesized exclusively on membrane polyribosomes, while at least some of the M, N, and NS proteins are made on free polyribosomes.
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PMID:Site of synthesis of membrane and nonmembrane proteins of vesicular stomatitis virus. 16 63

Three types of conditional lethal mutant were isolated from wild-type vesicular stomatitis virus, New Jersey serotype, after mutagenization by 5-fluorouracil: (i) conventional temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants, which form plaques at 31 C but not at 39 C; (ii) conventional host range mutants (hr CE), which grow in BHK but not in secondary chicken embryo cells; and (iii) temperature-dependent host range mutants (td CE), which form plaques both at 31 and 39 C on BHK cells but only at 31 C on chicken embryo cells. To determine whether the mutation in hr CE and td CE mutants affected the virion-associated RNA transcriptase, this enzyme was assayed in vitro at 31 and 39 C, and the results were compared with those obtained for the wild-type virus. The RNA trascriptase activity of hr CE mutants did not appear to be affected by the mutation. The td CE mutants fall into two classes: those that synthesized RNA at 39 C similar to the wild-type virus and those that did not. One mutant of the latter category, td CE 3, had heat-sensitive transcriptase regardless of whether it was grown in BHK or chicken embryo cells. A revertant to the wild-type phenotype isolated from this mutant had regained the ability to synthesize RNA at 39 C. These results strongly suggest that a polypeptide that is either the transcriptase itself or part of the transcriptase complex was made temperature sensitive by the mutation in the second class of td CE mutants. The inhibition of the transcriptase activity of the mutant td CE 3 was fully reversible by lowering the temperature of incubation from 39 to 31 C, and both inhibition and reactivation appeared to be instantaneous.
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PMID:Virion trascriptase activity differences in host range mutants of vesicular stomatitis virus. 17 Apr 23

The virion transcriptase (nucleosidetriphosphate: RNA nucleotidyltransferase, EC 2.7.7.6) of vesicular stomatitis virus was fully active when ribonucleoprotein cores from purified virions were added to cell-free protein synthesizing systems of eukaryotic origin. Synthesis of mRNA was linear for at least 3 hr and the newly synthesized viral mRNA was efficiently utilized for the synthesis of viral proteins N (nucleoprotein), NS, and M (matrix); small amounts of a putative G (glycoprotein protein precursor and several unidentified polypeptides were regularly synthesized. The ratio of the various newly synthesized viral proteins was identical after different periods of coupled mRNA and protein synthesis. Identical proteins were obtained when the cell-free protein synthesizing systems were programmed with purified VSV mRNA synthesized in vitro. No detectable L protein was synthesized, even though transcripts complementary to the complete viral genome were detectable in the mRNA preparation by hybridization.
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PMID:Coupled in vitro transcription and translation of vesicular stomatitis virus messenger RNA. 17 Jun 4


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