Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.7.7 (DNA polymerase)
17,007 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Early chicken embryos that are either positive or negative for group-specific antigens of avian leukosis viruses contained endogenous RNA-directed DNA polymerase activity. This endogenous DNA polymerase activity was not increased after mixture of soluble DNA polymerases isolated from chicken embryos with disrupted chicken embryo cells. The endogenous activity was resistant to treatment with deoxyribonuclease, and the initial rate of DNA synthesis was partially resistant to actinomycin D. In contrast, over 90% of the endogenous polymerase activity was destroyed by ribonuclease in medium with high salt concentration. The DNA product of the endogenous DNA polymerase activity from chicken embryos did not hybridize with RNA of Rous sarcoma virus or reticuloendotheliosis virus, whereas about 40% of this DNA product hybridized with the RNA from the same chicken-cell fraction. Antibody against DNA polymerase of avian myeloblastosis virus did not neutralize the chicken endogenous DNA polymerase activity. These results demonstrate that uninfected chicken embryo cells contain endogenous RNA-directed DNA polymerase activity that is not derived from avian leukosis or reticuloendotheliosis viruses.
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PMID:Endogenous RNA-directed DNA polymerase activity in uninfected chicken embryos. 433 97

A complex of ribosomal DNA with RNA has been isolated from ovaries of metamorphosing tadpoles of Xenopus laevis. The complex is disrupted by treatments that destroy hydrogen bonds, and the sedimentation of the DNA within the complex is sensitive to RNase. We suggest that the RNA-ribosomal DNA complex is an intermediate in the synthesis of amplified ribosomal DNA and that the RNA is a template. In addition, in a preliminary attempt to mimic the amplification process in vitro, we have demonstrated the use of this RNA from the complex as a template for DNA synthesis by a DNA polymerase isolated from ovaries of Xenopus.
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PMID:[On the role of RNA in gene amplification]. 450 50

The influence of ribonucleic acid (RNA) and protein synthesis on the replication of the cloacinogenic factor Clo DF13 was studied in Escherichia coli cells and minicells. In chromosomeless minicells harboring the Clo DF13 factor, Clo DF13 deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) synthesis is slightly stimulated after inhibition of protein synthesis by chloramphenicol or puromycin and continues for more than 8 h. When minicells were treated with rifampin, a specific inhibitor of DNA-dependent RNA polymerase, Clo DF13 RNA and DNA synthesis appeared to stop abruptly. In cells, the Clo DF13 factor continues to replicate during treatment with chloramphenicol long after chromosomal DNA synthesis ceases. When rifampin was included during chloramphenicol treatment of cells, synthesis of Clo DF13 plasmid DNA was blocked completely. Isolated, supercoiled Clo DF13 DNA, synthesized in cells or minicells in the presence of chloramphenicol, appeared to be sensitive to ribonuclease and alkali treatment. These treatments convert a relatively large portion of the covalently closed Clo DF13 DNA to the open circular form, whereas supercoiled Clo DF13 DNA, isolated from non-chloramphenicol-treated cells or minicells, is not significantly affected by these treatments. These results indicate that RNA synthesis and specifically Clo DF13 RNA synthesis are involved in Clo DF13 DNA replication and that the covalently closed Clo DF13 DNA, synthesized in the presence of chloramphenicol, contains one or more RNA sequences. De novo synthesis of chromosomal and Clo DF13-specific proteins is not required for the replication of the Clo DF13 factor. Supercoiled Clo DF13 DNA, isolated from a polA107 (Clo DF13) strain which lacks the 5' --> 3' exonucleolytic activity of DNA polymerase I, is insensitive to ribonuclease or alkali treatment, indicating that in this mutant the RNA sequences are still removed from the RNA-DNA hybrid.
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PMID:Influence of protein and ribonucleic acid synthesis on the replication of the bacteriocinogenic factor Clo DF13 in Escherichia coli cells and minicells. 459 94

A ribonucleic acid-dependent deoxyribonucleic acid polymerase was found in virions of visna virus. The enzyme product was resistant to ribonuclease and alkaline hydrolysis but susceptible to the digestion of deoxyribonuclease.
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PMID:Ribonucleic acid-dependent deoxyribonucleic acid polymerase in visna virus. 499 52

The presence is reported of an RNA-instructed DNA polymerase in visna virus, the causative agent of a "slow" neurological disease in sheep. The product synthesized by the RNA-directed reaction has been shown to be a DNA heteropolymer by the following criteria: synthesis requires the presence of all four deoxyriboside triphosphates; the product is resistant to ribonuclease and alkali but is degraded by DNase; and the product has a density of 1.420 in Cs(2)SO(4) solution, characteristic of DNA.Visna virions, like those of the oncogenic RNA viruses, contain DNA polymerase activities that respond to a variety of double-stranded DNAs and to synthetic DNA.RNA hybrids.
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PMID:DNA polymerase activities in varions of visna virus, a causative agent of a "slow" neurological disease. 499 14

RNase-sensitive DNA polymerase activity (RSDP) was tested in different cell fractions of Neurospora crassa cell types and its morphological mutants. This RSDP was found localized in the microsomal pellet fraction and absent in the purified nuclear pellets isolated from different N. crassa cell types: conidia, germinated conidia, and mycelia. This enzyme is capable of synthesizing a DNA product only in the presence of all four deoxyribonucleoside-5' - triphosphates and Mg2+. Removal of RNA from the pellet fraction by RNase strongly inhibited the DNA synthesis. The endogenous synthesis of DNA in the microsomal pellet fraction was associated with the formation of an RNA:DNA hybrid as analyzed by Cs2SO4 equilibrium density gradient centrifugation. The DNA product after alkali hydrolysis hybridizes with the RNA isolated from the same pellet fraction, as analyzed by elution from hydroxylapatite column at 60C. This DNa product did not hybridize with poly (A). A few mutants tested showed this RNase-sensitive DNA polymerase activity.
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PMID:RNase-sensitive DNA polymerase activity in cell fractions and mutants of Neurospora crassa. 616 50

The effect of the ribonuclease inhibitor polyvinyl sulfate on the activity of retroviral DNA polymerase and terminal c transferase was examined. This substance was found to be a potent inhibitor of these enzymes by virtue of competition between the sulfated sidechains of the molecule and the template primer for a site on the enzyme. The significance of these findings in relation to searching for reverse transcriptase is discussed.
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PMID:Inhibition of reverse transcriptase by polyvinyl sulfate (PVS). 616 65

The nascent DNA synthesized by permeable cells of Bacillus subtilis in the presence of 5'-mercurideoxycytidine triphosphate and 2',3'-dideoxyATP has been isolated and characterized. The newly synthesized DNA was isolated free from other cellular nucleic acids by affinity chromatography on thiol-substituted agarose. The number average chain length of the nascent DNA synthesized in one minute at 25 degrees C was 33 nucleotide residues, due to the chain-terminating action of 2',3'-dideoxyATP. Several lines of evidence indicated that at least 90% of the DNA thus isolated carried a terminally phosphorylated RNA moiety at its 5'-end: (1) the nascent DNA was resistant to exonucleolytic degradation by spleen phosphodiesterase unless first hydrolyzed by strong alkali or ribonuclease; (2) the 5'-termini of nascent DNA could not be phosphorylated by polynucleotide kinase unless first treated with alkaline phosphatase or subjected to hydrolysis by strong alkali or ribonuclease; (3) alkaline hydrolysis of nascent DNA labeled with 32P at the 5'-end released unlabeled DNA with a free 5'-terminus and 32P-labeled ribonucleoside 3',5'-bisphosphates; (4) ribonuclease degradation of similarly labeled material produced an unlabeled DNA-containing polynucleotide fraction and 32P-labeled ribo-oligonucleotides; (5) chromatography on dihydroxyboryl cellulose showed that the RNA moiety lacked a 3'-terminal cis-diol grouping (even after treatment with alkaline phosphatase) unless first subjected to the 3'-exonucleolytic action of bacteriophage T4 DNA polymerase. The sequence of the ribonucleotide chains was elucidated by end-group labeling with polynucleotide kinase and digestion with various ribonucleases. The ribonucleotide moiety was primarily three and four residues in length with the predominant sequence (pp)pApG(pC)1-2pDNA. The possibility that it represents a primer for discontinuous DNA synthesis is discussed.
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PMID:Analysis of the 5'-termini of nascent DNA chains synthesized in permeable cells of Bacillus subtilis. 618 36

bI1 RNA (excised from the first intron of the long form of the cytochrome b gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondria) hybridizes with the two strands of a Bg/II-MboI DNA segment from this region. This fraction is resistant to digestions by DNase I and RNase T1 and disappears completely upon alkali hydrolysis. Strand-specific labeling of an intronic DNA fragment, cloned in pBR322 plasmid, was accomplished through the use of a T4 DNA polymerase. The purity of the probes was demonstrated by cloning an exon-intron fragment and labeling it by the same procedure; mRNA and pre-mRNA bands hybridized only with the transcribed DNA strand whereas bI1 RNA hybridized with the two strands under the stringent washing conditions employed (tm + 20 degrees C). Several experimental results argue against the possibility that the observation of two complementary bI1 RNA strands results from a partial self-complementarity of the RNA. A pre-mRNA intermediate from a box8 (G5046) mutant, still containing this intron, hybridizes only with the transcribed DNA strand of the pure intronic probe. The amount of the non-sense bI1 RNA strand is very low, in cells from two wild-type strains, relative to the sense RNA strand during the early stages of growth on glucose. It increases as the cells are released from glucose repression. bI1 RNA is resistant to RNase. Very little self-complementarity is seen by computer analysis of the sequence. Purified bI1 RNA is seen by electron microscopy under non-denaturing conditions as a mixture of double-stranded circular and linear molecules thus confirming the existence of the two complementary strands. The disappearance of all material following alkali hydrolysis demonstrates that these are indeed two RNA strands. Under fully denaturing conditions a mixture of single-stranded circular and linear molecules is seen as reported previously (Cell, 19, 321-329, 1980). We conclude that yeast mitochondria contain the two complementary bI1 RNA strands, one circular and the other linear. Considering a largely asymmetrical transcription of the mitochondrial genome in yeast and assuming that circularization of some intronic RNAs is part of RNA processing, we do not believe that the two strands are each a mixture of linear and circular molecules. The ratio of non-sense to sense bI1 RNA in a cytoplasmic petite mutant, A1B1, also varies according to growth conditions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Yeast mitochondria contain a linear RNA strand complementary to the circular intronic bI1 RNA of cytochrome b. 620 24

Novikoff hepatoma stimulatory factor IV has been resolved from the DNA polymerase-beta on a single-stranded DNA-cellulose column and then purified to > 95% homogeneity on hydroxylapatite. A single band of Mr = 12,000 is found on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. Addition of factor IV to a DNA synthesis reaction causes (i) an increase in initial velocity, (ii) a prolongation of linear synthesis, and (iii) an increase in extent of incorporation. In the absence of factor IV, the reaction reaches a plateau in approximately 1 h. Factor IV, added at this point, causes resumption of synthesis with kinetics similar to when factor IV was present from the start. When factor IV is present, synthesis is followed by DNA degradation, indicating nuclease activity. Factor IV is shown to be an exonuclease which hydrolyzes double-stranded substrates in both the 3' to 5' and 5' to 3' directions at similar rates. Factor IV interacts with the 3.3 S beta-polymerase forming an aggregate sedimenting at 4.1 S and containing both polymerase and exonuclease activities. Analysis of fractions containing a beta-polymerase . exonuclease complex on polyacrylamide gels suggests a stoichiometry of 1:1. The exonuclease shows a strong preference for double-stranded substrates and is most active on poly(dA-dT). It can hydrolyze chains containing either a 3'- or 5'-phosphoryl or a 5'- or 3'-hydroxyl terminus. The product of digestion is predominantly 5'-nucleoside monophosphates. The enzyme cannot hydrolyze di- or trinucleotides, lacks RNase-H activity, and will not liberate thymine dimers from UV-irradiated DNA. The exonuclease has an alkaline pH optimum and requires a divalent cation. Since the properties of this exonuclease are unlike those of previously described mammalian DNases, we have named this enzyme mammalian DNase V.
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PMID:Interaction of mammalian deoxyribonuclease V, a double strand 3' to 5' and 5' to 3' exonuclease, with deoxyribonucleic acid polymerase-beta from the Novikoff hepatoma. 625 67


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