Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.7.7.7 (
DNA polymerase
)
17,007
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Purified
reverse transcriptase
from avian myeloblastosis virus or Rous sarcoma virus consists of two subunits of average mol wt of 100,000 and 60,000. The lower-molecular-weight subunit, alpha, has been isolated from avian myeloblastosis virus, Rous sarcoma virus and a temperature-sensitive mutant of Rous sarcoma virus, LA337. Subunit alpha manifests both the
DNA polymerase
and RNase H activities associated with purified
reverse transcriptase
of avian RNA tumor viruses. The thermal inactivation of these enzymatic activities of alpha subunit from the wild-type virus. The results show that both
DNA polymerase
and RNase H activities associated with the alpha subunit of LA337 are five to seven times more thermolabile then the corresponding alpha subunit from the wild-type virus. It is concluded that (i) both the polymerase and nuclease activities reside on the same polypeptide chain, and (ii) at least the lower-molecular-weight subunit alpha is coded for by the viral RNA.
...
PMID:Studies on reverse transcriptase of RNA tumor viruses. I. Localization of thermolabile DNA polymerase and RNase H activities on one polypeptide. 4 81
A new method for the analysis and purification of the
RNA-directed DNA polymerase
of RNA tumor viruses has been developed. This nucleic acid affinity chromatography system utilizes an immobilized oligo (dT) moiety annealed with poly (A). The alpha and alphabeta DNA polymerases of avain myeloblastosis virus bound effectively to poly (A) oligo (dT)-cellulose. Alpha
DNA polymerase
did not bind effectively to poly (A) oligo (dT)-cellulose, poly (A)-cellulose, or to cellulose. Alphabeta bound to oligo (dT)-cellulose and cellulose at the same extent (approximately 30%), indicating that this enzyme did not bind specifically to the oligo (DT) moiety only. However, alphabeta bound to poly (A)-cellulose two to three times better than to cellulose itself, showing that alphabeta could bind to poly (A) without a primer. Alphabeta
DNA polymerase
also bound to poly (C)-cellulose, whereas alpha did not. These data show that the alpha
DNA polymerase
is defective in binding to nucleic acids if the beta subunit is not present. Data is presented which demonstrates that the alphabeta
DNA polymerase
bound tighter to poly (A). oligo (DT)-cellulose and to calf thymus DNA-cellulose than the alpha
DNA polymerase
, suggesting that the beta subunit or, at least part of it is responsible for this tighter binding. In addition, alphabeta
DNA polymerase
is able to reversibly transcribe avian myeloblastosis virus 70S RNA approximately fivefold faster than alpha
DNA polymerase
in the presence of Mg2+ and equally efficient in the presence of Mn2+. alpha
DNA polymerase
transcribed 9S globin m RNA slightly better than alphabeta with either metal ion.
...
PMID:Binding properties of avian myeloblastosis virus DNA polymerases to nucleic acid affinity columns. 4 87
Nonionic detergents stimulate purified
RNA-directed DNA polymerase
(
reverse transcriptase
) activity from various RNA tumor viruses ranging from avian to primate species. The stimulatory effect of the nonionic detergent is dependent on the type and amount of template-primer. The greatest stimulation is obtained when high concentrations of (dT)12-18-(rA)n or activated salmon sperm DNA are used as template-primers. Little stimulation is obtained with viral 70S RNA or with (dT)12-18- (dA)n. The detergent stimulation appears to be specific for viral
reverse transcriptase
since this effect is not observed with purified bacterial
DNA polymerase
or with three known mammalian cellular DNA polymerases. This finding may, therefore, be a useful additional criterion for distinguishing viral
reverse transcriptase
isolated from cells from other cellular DNA polymerases. Nonionic detergent also has a stabilizing effect on viral
DNA polymerase
against thermal inactivation. This stabilizing effect is further enhanced by the presence of template-primer.
...
PMID:On the stimulation of viral DNA polymerase activity by nonionic detergent. 4 56
Two RNase H (RNA-DNA hybrid ribonucleotidohydrolase, EC 3.1.4.34) activities separable by Sephadex G-100 gel filtration were identified in lysates of Moloney murine sarcoma-leukemia virus (MSV). The larger enzyme, which we have called RNase H-I, represented about 10% of the RNase H activity in the virion. RNase H-I (i) copurified with
RNA-directed DNA polymerase
from the virus, (ii) had a sedimentation coefficient of 4.4S (corresponds to an apparent mol wt of 70,000), (iii) required Mn-2+ (2 mM optimum) for activity with a [3-h]poly(A)-poly(dT) substrate, (iv) eluted from phosphocellulose at 0.2 M KC1, and (v) degraded [3-H]poly(A)-poly(dT) and [3-H]poly(C)-poly(dG) at approximately equal rates. The smaller enzyme, designated RNase H-II, which represented the majority of the RNase H activity in the virus preparation, was shown to be different since it (i) had no detectable, associated
DNA polymerase
activity, (ii) had a sedmimentation coefficient of 2.6S (corresponds to an apparent mol wt of 30,000), (iii) preferred Mg-2+ (10 to 15 mM optimum) over Mn-2+ (5 to 10 mM optimum) 2.5-fold for the degradation of [3-H]poly(A)-poly(dT), and (iv) degraded [3-H]poly(A)-poly(dT) 6 and 60 times faster than [3-H]poly(C)-poly(dG) in the presence of Mn-2+ and Mg-2+, respectively. Moloney MSV
DNA polymerase
(RNase H-I), purified by Sephadex G-100 gel filtration followed by phosphocellulose, poly(A)-oligo(dT)-cellulose, and DEAE-cellulose chromatography, transcribed heteropolymeric regions of avian myeloblastosis virus 70S RNA at a rate comparable to avian myeloblastosis virus
DNA polymerase
purified by the same procedure.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of the DNA polymerase and RNase H activities in Moloney murine sarcoma-leukemia virus. 4 24
Dexamethasone (1,4-pregnadiene-9-fluor-16alpha-methyl-11beta,17alpha,21-triol-3,20-dione), a potent synthetic glucocorticoid, stimulates mouse mammary tumor virus expression 10- to 20-fold in tissue culture cells. This hormone effect was observed at concentrations as low as 1 times 10-10 M and was maximal at 10-7 to 10-8 M. The time course of induction indicated that detectable increases in extracellular viral
DNA polymerase
were first noted 18 to 24 hours following the addition of dexamethasone, and cells produced the highest polymerase levels at the time monolayers approached confluence. Steroid responsiveness was associated with specific increases in type B murine mammary tumor virus structural polypeptide (gp52(sl) expression and murine mammary tumor virus RNA that quantitatively paralleled the increase in extracellular virus production as measured by electron microscopy and supernatant
RNA-dependent DNA polymerase
activity. Another virally transformed murine cell line, KA 31, did not contain detectable levels of murine mammary tumor virus gp52(sl) or RNA before or after dexamethasone stimulation; thus induction was noted only in murine cells with pre-existing murine mammary tumor virus expression. No increase in basal levels of type C murine leukemia viral proteins or RNA was detected in dexamethasone-treated mammary cell lines which were producing increased levels of murine mammary tumor virus. Therefore, increases in murine mammary tumor virus gene products are specific for murine mammary tumor virus DNA sequences under these conditions.
...
PMID:Mammary tumor virus induction by glucocorticoids. Characterization of specific transcriptional regulation. 4 26
9-O-methyloximd erythromycin A and its analogue inhibited
reverse transcriptase
and blocked focus formation of Rous sarcoma virus. These chemicals inhibited neither
DNA-dependent DNA polymerase
nor DNA-dependent RNA polymerase from bacterial sources. However, they inhibited
reverse transcriptase
with an apparently differnt mechanism than that by rifamycin ABDP.
...
PMID:Oxime derivatives of erythromycin: inhibitors of Rous sarcoma virus reverse transcriptase activity and focus formation. 4 82
The properties of murine oncornavirus produced by cells of spontaneous lymphosarcroma of CC57Br mice are described. In addition to the properties common for C-type RNA tumor viruses such as 60-70 S high molecular weight RNA, the presence of
RNA-directed DNA polymerase
and murine gs I (intraspecies) antigen and typical morphology in electron microscope, etc., the virus under study is characterized by instability of virions, unusual features of the
DNA polymerase
system and by the absence of demonstrable oncogenicity either in laboratory animals or in tissue cultures.
...
PMID:[Biochemical and physiocochemical characteristics of a type C virus isolated from spontaneous lymphosarcoma of CC57Br strain mice]. 4 66
The
RNA-directed DNA polymerase
of Rous sarcoma virus requires a 4S RNA molecule as primer for the initiation of DNA synthesis on the viral 70S RNA genome. We have now functionally identified primer activity in uninfected cells on the basis of the capacity of cellular 4S RNA to actively participate in the initiation of DNA synthesis by the
RNA-directed DNA polymerase
of Rous sarcoma virus in vitro. This was accomplished by reconstitution experiments in which 4S RNA from uninfected avian cells was tested for its ability to restore template activity to the viral RNA genome from which all primer had been removed. Similar reconstitution experiments were employed to demonstrate a primer activity in the 4S RNA population of duck, mouse, and human cells. Primer activity appears to be absent in lower eukaryotic or prokaryotic cells. Unambiguous identification of the Rous sarcoma virus primer molecule in uninfected cells was accomplished by directly purifying a 4S RNA molecule from the bulk of host cell transfer RNA and establishing structural similarities between this cellular 4S RNA species and the Rous sarcoma virus primer by two-dimensional paper electrophoresis of oligonucleotides obtained from a T1 ribonuclease digest of the RNA species. We conclude that the Rous sarcoma virus
DNA polymerase
can utilize a host cell molecule as primer for the initiation of RNA-directed DNA synthesis in vitro.
...
PMID:RNA-directed DNA synthesis by the DNA polymerase of Rous sarcoma virus: structural and functional identification of 4S primer RNA in uninfected cells. 4 51
The "virogene-oncogene" hypothesis of Huebner and Todaro and the "provirus" hypothesis of Temin implicate RNA tumor viruses in the neoplastic transformation of mammalian cells. These hypotheses have been substantiated in several animal systems including primates and, presumably, in man. Because the detection in a tissue of one or two activities allegedly related to RNA tumor virus may not be conclusive evidence for viral presence, we have developed a scheme of coordinated morphologic, biologic, and biochemical investigations of human prostatic tissues. We report here the more recent progress we have made in one of the segments of our scheme of investigations. Two, possibly three,
DNA polymerase
activities from human prostatic tissue have been isolated and partially purified by DEAE-cellulose and phosphocellulose chromatography. These activities have been partially characterized. Based on template preferences and non-inhibition by selective inhibitors of
reverse transcriptase
, neither of the major polymerase activities appears to be the
reverse transcriptase
-type activity.
...
PMID:The search for "virogene" in human prostatic tissues: prostatic DNA polymerases. 4 15
Nervous system tissues from a number of patients with idiopathic neurological disorders were examined for biochemical evidence of RNA tumor virus infection. RNase-sensitive
DNA polymerase
activity was found in a cytoplasmic particulate fraction from two patients with Guamanian amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) but not in brains from two normal U.S. individuals. The buoyant density of the enzyme-containing fraction was 1.16-1.18 g/ml and could be converted to a denser region of the gradient (1.24 g/ml) by treatment with the nonionic surfactant, Sterox. The cation and detergent requirements for the endogenous RNase-sensitive
DNA polymerase
reaction were determined. The early (5 min) endogenous
reverse transcriptase
product was analyzed by cesium sulfate gradient centrifugation. RNase- and heat-sensitive RNA-DNA hybrids were detected in the product analysis of two ALS, one Parkinsonism-dementia (PD) brain, and two brains from asymptomatic Chamorros but not in brains from normal U.S. individuals and a number of patients with neuro-psychiatric disorders. The DNA product was a 4.5S heteropolymer that hybridized more extensively to RNA extracted from the enzyme-containing pellet from PD brain as compared to a similar fraction from normal U.S. brain. The DNA product appeared to be unrelated to Rausvher or visna virus 70S RNA as determined by RNA-[-3H]DNA hybridization.
...
PMID:RNA-instructed DNA polymerase activity in a cytoplasmic particulate fraction in brains from Guamanian patients. 4 90
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>