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)

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) reverse transcriptase (RT) uses host tRNA(Lys) partially annealed to the primer binding site (PBS) as primer for the initiation of cDNA synthesis. When assaying cDNA synthesis with a template-primer complex formed by an RNA fragment carrying the PBS site and bovine tRNA(Lys) we noticed that an excess of primer tRNA inhibited strongly the DNA polymerase activity of a recombinant HIV RT (p66-p51 heterodimeric form) produced in transformed yeast cells. The same inhibitory effect was observed with animal DNA polymerase alpha, while avian retrovirus RT was neither affected by tRNA(Lys) nor by its specific primer tRNA(Trp). Although the strongest inhibition was observed with tRNA(Lys), other tRNas like tRNA(Phe) and tRNA(Trp) inhibited also the HIV RT, whereas tRNAs specific for valine, proline and glycine had no effect on enzyme activity. Digestion of tRNA(Lys) with pancreatic RNase abolished the inhibition; on the other hand T1 RNase digestion had no effect on the inhibition suggesting a role of the anticodon region in this effect. The 12- and 14-mers corresponding to the anticodon regions of the three bovine tRNA(Lys) isoacceptors inhibited RT activity, indicating that at least an important part of the inhibitory effect could be ascribed to this tRNA region. A strong stimulation of DNA polymerase activity was observed when the effect of tRNA(Lys) was assayed on a recombinant HIV reverse transcriptase produced in a protease deficient yeast strain, which leads to the production of an active p66 enzyme. The same tRNAs that inhibited strongly the heterodimeric form stimulated the p66 form of HIV reverse transcriptase. The results suggest that although both enzymatic forms are able to interact with tRNA(Lys) the topography, as well as the functional implications of the interaction between the precursor and the mature form of HIV reverse transcriptase with the tRNA(Lys) primer, are different.
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PMID:Inhibition of the p66/p51 form of human immunodeficiency virus reverse transcriptase by tRNA(Lys). 168 23

The reverse transcriptase enzymes of retroviruses are multifunctional proteins containing both DNA polymerase activity and a nuclease activity, termed RNase H, specific for RNA in RNA-DNA hybrid form. To determine the role of RNase H activity in retroviral replication, we constructed a series of mutant genomes of Moloney murine leukemia virus that encoded reverse transcriptase enzymes that were specifically altered to retain polymerase function but lack RNase H activity. The mutant genomes were all replication defective. Analysis of in vitro reverse transcription reactions carried out by mutant virions showed that minus-strand strong-stop DNA was formed but did not efficiently translocate to the 3' end of the genome; rather, the DNA was stably retained in RNA-DNA hybrid form. Plus-strand strong-stop DNA was not detected. These results suggest that RNase H normally promotes strong-stop translocation, perhaps by exposing single-stranded DNA sequences for base pairing. Four new DNA species were also detected among the reaction products. Analysis of these DNAs suggested that they were minus-strand DNAs formed from VL30 RNAs encoded by the mouse genome. We suggest that reverse transcriptase can initiate DNA synthesis at any one of four alternate tRNA primer-binding sites near the 5' ends of VL30 RNAs.
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PMID:Abortive reverse transcription by mutants of Moloney murine leukemia virus deficient in the reverse transcriptase-associated RNase H function. 171 62

We determined the distribution of monoadducts and biadducts induced in the supF tRNA gene carried by the shuttle vector pZ189, after exposure to 8-methoxypsoralen (8-MOP) plus a double UVA (365 nm) irradiation. These data were compared to our previously published 8-MOP-photoinduced mutation spectrum obtained after propagation of the damaged shuttle vector in mammalian cells. One mutational hot spot in an ATAT/TATA sequence is targeted at a hot spot of biaddition. A second hot spot is not related to the presence of photoadducts either at or near the site. Moreover, it is located in a sequence which can be defined as 'mutation-prone'. Mutations occurring at GC base pairs are not targeted at sites of photoaddition, and may result from a decrease in fidelity of DNA polymerase when copying the damaged vector.
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PMID:Damage distribution and mutation spectrum: the case of 8-methoxypsoralen plus UVA in mammalian cells. 186 86

We have studied spontaneous and UV mutagenesis of the glyU gene in Escherichia coli trpA461 (GAG) strains carrying the pIP11 plasmid, in which the dnaQ gene encoding the 3'-5' exonuclease subunit (epsilon) of DNA polymerase III is fused to the tac(trp-lac) promoter. We have used a pair of M13glyU phage in which the gene encoding the glycyl-tRNA is cloned in opposite orientations, consequently the phage present either GGG or CCC anticodon triplets for mutagenesis. The presence of IPTG, the inducer of the tac-dnaQ fusion, results in about 100-fold decrease in frequency of spontaneous Su+ (GAG) mutations arising in the CCC phage. The enhanced expression of tac-dnaQ reduces 10-fold the frequency of UV-induced Su+ (GAG) mutations in the CCC phage and nearly completely prevents generation by UV of Su+ (GAG) mutations in the GGG phage, in which UV-induced pyrimidine photo-products can be formed only in the vicinity of the target triplet. These results suggest that both locally and regionally targeted mutagenesis is affected by overproduction of the epsilon subunit. By delayed photoreversal mutagenesis we have shown that UV-induced chromosomal mutagenesis of the umuC36 trpA461 strain harboring pIP11 is completely abolished in the presence of IPTG. This result seems to indicate that the misinocorporation step of DNA translesion synthesis is affected by excess of the epsilon subunit. Finally, we have introduced the pIP13 plasmid carrying the dnaQ gene into the recA1207 strain, which is deficient in the recombinase activity of RecA but constitutive in the protease activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effect of enhanced synthesis of the epsilon subunit of DNA polymerase III on spontaneous and UV-induced mutagenesis of the Escherichia coli glyU gene. 219 32

The proposal that Ap4A acts as an inducer of DNA replication is based primarily on two pieces of evidence (7). The intracellular levels of Ap4A increase ten- to 1000-fold as cells progress into S phase and the introduction of Ap4A into nonproliferating cells stimulated DNA synthesis. There is also some additional suggestive evidence such as the binding of Ap4A to a protein that is associated with multiprotein forms of the replicative DNA polymerase alpha and the ability of this enzyme to use Ap4A as a primer for DNA synthesis in vitro with single-stranded DNA templates. These observations have stimulated interest in the cellular metabolism of Ap4A. This is well since there is a great need for additional experimentation in order to clearly establish Ap4A as an inducer of DNA replication. Microinjection experiments of Ap4A into quiescent cells are needed in order to ascertain if Ap4A will stimulate DNA replication and possibly cell division in intact cells. Studies of the effects of nonhydrolyzable analogs of Ap4A on DNA replication in intact quiescent cells could also prove valuable. Although Ap4A can function as a primer for in vitro DNA synthesis by DNA polymerase alpha this may not be relevant in regard to its in vivo role in DNA replication. Ap4A in vivo could interact with key protein(s) in DNA replication and in this way act as an effector molecule in the initiation of DNA replication. In this regard the interaction of Ap4A with a protein associated with a multiprotein form of DNA polymerase alpha isolated from S-phase cells is of interest. More experiments are required to determine if there is a specific target protein(s) for Ap4A in vivo and what its role in DNA replication is. The cofractionation of tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase with the replicative DNA polymerase alpha from animal and plant cells is of interest. The DNA polymerase alpha from synchronized animal cells also interacted with Ap4A. Although the plant cell alpha-like DNA polymerase did not interact with Ap4A this DNA polymerase was not a multiprotein form of polymerase alpha and the synchrony of the wheat germ embryos was not known. A possible tie between protein-synthesizing systems and the regulation of proteins involved in DNA replication may exist. The requirement of protein synthesis for the initiation of DNA replication has long been known. Also, it is well established that many temperature-sensitive mutants for tRNA synthetases are also DNA-synthesizing mutants. More investigation in this area may be warranted.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:5',5'''-P1, P4 diadenosine tetraphosphate (Ap4A): a putative initiator of DNA replication. 299 23

A simian virus 40-based shuttle vector was used to characterize UV-induced mutations generated in mammalian cells. The small size and placement of the mutagenesis marker (the supF suppressor tRNA gene from Escherichia coli) within the vector substantially reduced the frequency of spontaneous mutations normally observed after transfection of mammalian cells with plasmid DNA; hence, UV-induced mutations were easily identified above the spontaneous background. UV-induced mutations characterized by DNA sequencing were found primarily to be base substitutions; about 56% of these were single-base changes, and 17% were tandem double-base changes. About 24% of the UV-induced mutants carried multiple mutations clustered within the 160-base-pair region sequenced. The majority (61%) of base changes were the G . C----A . T transitions; the other transition (A . T----G . C) and all four transversions occurred at about equal frequencies. Hot spots for UV mutagenesis did not correspond to hot spots for UV-induced photoproduct formation (determined by a DNA synthesis arrest assay); in particular, sites of TT dimers were underrepresented among the UV-induced mutations. These observations suggest to us that the DNA polymerase(s) responsible for mutation induction exhibits a localized loss of fidelity in DNA synthesis on UV-damaged templates such that it synthesizes past UV photoproducts, preferentially inserting adenine, and sometimes misincorporates bases at undamaged sites nearby.
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PMID:Sequence specificity of point mutations induced during passage of a UV-irradiated shuttle vector plasmid in monkey cells. 353 86

Outline of the steps in protein synthesis. Nature of the genetic code. The use of synthetic oligo- and polynucleotides in deciphering the code. Structure of the code: relatedness of synonym codons. The wobble hypothesis. Chain initiation and N-formyl-methionine. Chain termination and nonsense codons. Mistakes in translation: ambiguity in vitro. Suppressor mutations resulting in ambiguity. Limitations in the universality of the code. Attempts to determine the particular codons used by a species. Mechanisms of suppression, caused by (a) abnormal aminoacyl-tRNA, (b) ribosomal malfunction. Effect of streptomycin. The problem of "reading" a nucleic acid template. Different ribosomal mutants and DNA polymerase mutants might cause different mistakes. The possibility of involvement of allosteric proteins in template reading.
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PMID:Problems in protein biosynthesis. 533 60

Mutants of avian sarcoma virus which lack a functional DNA polymerase were found to be nonselective in the incorporation of host cell tRNA's into virus particles. In contrast, mutants which possess a functional DNA polymerase but lack the viral genome RNA contained a specific subset of the host cell tRNA population, indistinguishable from that of the wild-type virus. Thus the reverse transcriptase, and not the viral RNA, is probably the major factor determining which tRNA's are incorporated into avian sarcoma virus particles. Supporting evidence was obtained in an in vitro binding assay between purified reverse transcriptase and unfractionated cellular tRNA's. However, the subset of tRNA's which associated with the genome in the 70S complex was determined primarily by the viral RNA. In the absence of DNA polymerase, the 70S RNA complex in mature virus particles contained the normal complement of associated tRNA's with the exception of tRNATrp, the primer for RNA-directed DNA synthesis.
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PMID:Reverse transcriptase as the major determinant for selective packaging of tRNA's into Avian sarcoma virus particles. 616 35

The mechanism of action of the ribonuclease H (RNase H) activity associated with Moloney murine leukemia virus RNA-directed DNA polymerase (RNase H I) and the two-subunit (alpha beta) form of avian myeloblastosis virus DNA polymerase were compared by utilizing the model substrate (A)n.(dT)n and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in 7 M urea to analyze digestion products. Examination on 25% polyacrylamide gels revealed that a larger proportion of the RNase H I oligonucleotide products generated by limited digestion of [3H](A)(1100).(dT)n were acid insoluble (15-26 nucleotides long) than acid soluble (less than 15 nucleotides long), while the opposite was true for products generated by alpha beta RNase H. RNase H I was capable of attacking RNA in RNA.DNA in the 5' to 3' and 3' to 5' directions, as demonstrated by the use of [3H,3'- or 5'-32P](A)(380).(dT)n and cellulose--[3H](A)n.(dT)n. Both RNase H I and alpha beta RNase H degraded [3H]-(A)n.(dT)n with a partially processive mechanism, based upon classical substrate competition experiments and analyses of the kinetics of degradation of [3H,3'- or 5'-32P](A)(380).(dT)n. That is, both enzymes remain bound to a RNA.DNA substrate through a finite number of hydrolytic events but dissociate before the RNA is completely degraded. Both RNase H I and alpha beta RNase H were capable of degrading [14C](A)n in [3H](C)n-[14C](A)n-[32P](dA)n.(dT)n, suggesting that retroviral RNase H is capable of removing the tRNA primer at the 5' terminus of minus strand DNA at the appropriate time during retroviral DNA synthesis in vitro.
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PMID:Mechanism of action of Moloney murine leukemia virus RNA-directed DNA polymerase associated RNase H (RNase H I). 616 82

Sulfochlorantine containing active chlorine was shown to produce a general toxic action inactivating a number of Escherichia coli enzyme systems involved in protein biosynthesis. DNA synthesis catalysed by calf thymus DNA polymerase alpha was repressed by 50% and the synthesis of aminoacyl-tRNA catalysed by aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases was repressed by 70% in the cell-free systems at the lethal concentration of the bactericide (0.01% and higher). Sulfochlorantine produced the strongest inhibiting action on the ribosomal step of protein biosynthesis, inhibiting the poly(U)-directed polyphenylalanine formation by 95% at the sublethal concentration of the bactericide (0.005%).
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PMID:[Action of sulfochlorantine on cell-free systems of Escherichia coli]. 635 8


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