Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.7.8 (polynucleotide phosphorylase)
723 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A second poly(A) polymerase (PAP II) has been identified in Escherichia coli using a strain carrying a deletion of pcnB (the structural gene for PAP I; Cao and Sarkar, 1992b) and pnp-7 (a null mutation in the structural gene for polynucleotide phosphorylase). While PAP I has a M(r) of 53,000, PAP II is a smaller protein with a native M(r)-35,000. PAP II differs from PAP I in preferring poly(A) over tRNA primers and being more thermolabile. The presence of multiple poly(A) polymerases in E. coli raises interesting questions regarding the role of polyadenylation in mRNA synthesis and decay.
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PMID:Identification of a second poly(A) polymerase in Escherichia coli. 790 63

The hok/sok system of plasmid R1, which mediates plasmid stabilization by the killing of plasmid-free cells, codes for two RNA species, Sok antisense RNA and hok mRNA. Sok RNA, which is unstable, inhibits translation of the stable hok mRNA. The 64nt Sok RNA folds into a single stem-loop domain with an 11 nt unstructured 5' domain. The initial recognition reaction between Sok RNA and hok mRNA takes place between the 5' domain and the complementary region in hok mRNA. In this communication we examine the metabolism of Sok antisense RNA. We find that RNase E cleaves the RNA 6nt from its 5' end and that this cleavage initiates Sok RNA decay. The RNase E cleavage occurs in the part of Sok RNA that is responsible for the initial recognition of the target loop in hok mRNA and thus leads to functional inactivation of the antisense. The major RNase E cleavage product (denoted pSok-6) is rapidly degraded by polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase). Thus, the RNase E cleavage tags pSok-6 for further rapid degradation by PNPase from its 3' end. We also show that Sok RNA is polyadenylated by poly(A) polymerase I (PAP I), and that the poly(A)-tailing is prerequisite for the rapid 3'-exonucleolytic degradation by PNPase.
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PMID:Sok antisense RNA from plasmid R1 is functionally inactivated by RNase E and polyadenylated by poly(A) polymerase I. 938 56

Previous work has implicated poly(A) polymerase I (PAP I), encoded by the pcnB gene, in the decay of a number of RNAs from Escherichia coli. We show here that PAP I does not promote the initiation of decay of the rpsT mRNA encoding ribosomal protein S20 in vivo; however, it does facilitate the degradation of highly folded degradative intermediates by polynucleotide phosphorylase. As expected, purified degradosomes, a multi-protein complex containing, among others, RNase E, PNPase, and RhlB, generate an authentic 147-residue RNase E cleavage product from the rpsT mRNA in vitro. However, degradosomes are unable to degrade the 147-residue fragment in the presence of ATP even when it is oligoadenylated. Rather, both continuous cycles of polyadenylation and PNPase activity are necessary and sufficient for the complete decay of the 147-residue fragment in a process which can be antagonized by the action of RNase II. Moreover, both ATP and a non-hydrolyzable analog, ATPgammaS, support the PAP I and PNPase-dependent degradation of the 147-residue intermediate implying that ATPase activity, such as that which may reside in RhlB, a putative RNA helicase, is not necessarily required. Alternatively, the rpsT mRNA can be degraded in vitro by a second 3'-decay pathway which is dependent on PAP I, PNPase and ATP alone. Our results demonstrate that a hierarchy of RNA secondary structures controls access to exonucleolytic attack on 3' termini. Moreover, decay of a model mRNA can be reconstituted in vitro by a small number of purified components in a process which is more dynamic and ATP-dependent than previously imagined.
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PMID:Reconstitution of the degradation of the mRNA for ribosomal protein S20 with purified enzymes. 964 84

RNA decay in bacteria is carried out by a number of enzymes that participate in the coordinated degradation of their substrates. Endo- and exonucleolytic cleavages as well as polyadenylation are generally involved in determining the half-life of RNAs. Small, untranslated antisense RNAs are suitable model systems to study decay. A study of the pathway of degradation of CopA, the copy number regulator RNA of plasmid R1, is reported here. Strains carrying mutations in the genes encoding RNase E, polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase), RNase II and poly(A) polymerase I (PcnB/PAP I)--alone or in combination--were used to investigate degradation patterns and relative half-lives of CopA. The results obtained suggest that RNase E initiates CopA decay. Both PNPase and RNase II can degrade the major 3'-cleavage product generated by RNase E. This exonucleolytic degradation is aided by PcnB, which may imply a requirement for A-tailing. RNase II can partially protect CopA's 3'-end from PNPase-dependent degradation. Other RNases are probably involved in decay, since in rnb/pnp double mutants, decay still occurs, albeit at a reduced rate. Experiments using purified RNase E identified cleavage sites in CopA in the vicinity of, but not identical to, those mapped in vivo, suggesting that the cleavage site specificity of this RNase is modulated by additional proteins in the cell. A model of CopA decay is presented and discussed.
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PMID:Degradation pathway of CopA, the antisense RNA that controls replication of plasmid R1. 969 24

To help understand the role of polyadenylation in Escherichia coli RNA metabolism, we constructed an IPTG-inducible pcnB [poly(A) polymerase I, PAP I] containing plasmid that permitted us to vary poly(A) levels without affecting cell growth or viability. Increased polyadenylation led to a decrease in the half-life of total pulse-labelled RNA along with decreased half-lives of the rpsO, trxA, lpp and ompA transcripts. In contrast, the transcripts for rne (RNase E) and pnp (polynucleotide phosphorylase, PNPase), enzymes involved in mRNA decay, were stabilized. rnb (RNase II) and rnc (RNase III) transcript levels were unaffected in the presence of increased polyadenylation. Long-term overproduction of PAP I led to slower growth and irreversible cell death. Differential display analysis showed that new RNA species were being polyadenylated after PAP I induction, including the mature 3'-terminus of 23S rRNA, a site that was not tailed in wild-type cells. Quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) demonstrated an almost 20-fold variation in the level of polyadenylation among three different transcripts and that PAP I accounted for between 94% and 98.6% of their poly(A) tails. Cloning and sequencing of cDNAs derived from lpp, 23S and 16S rRNA revealed that, during exponential growth, C and U residues were polymerized into poly(A) tails in a transcript-dependent manner.
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PMID:Analysis of the function of Escherichia coli poly(A) polymerase I in RNA metabolism. 1059 33

Poly(A) tails in Escherichia coli are hypothesized to provide unstructured single-stranded substrates that facilitate the degradation of mRNAs by ribonucleases. Here, we have investigated the role that such nucleases play in modulating polyadenylation in vivo by measuring total poly(A) levels, polyadenylation of specific transcripts, growth rates and cell viabilities in strains containing various amounts of poly(A) polymerase I (PAP I), polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase), RNase II and RNase E. The results demonstrate that both PNPase and RNase II are directly involved in regulating total in vivo poly(A) levels. RNase II is primarily responsible for degrading poly(A) tails associated with 23S rRNA, whereas PNPase is more effective in modulating the polyadenylation of the lpp and 16S rRNA transcripts. In contrast, RNase E appears to affect poly(A) levels indirectly through the generation of new 3' termini that serve as substrates for PAP I. In addition, whereas excess PNPase suppresses polyadenylation by more than 70%, the toxicity associated with increased poly(A) levels is not reduced. Conversely, toxicity is significantly reduced in the presence of excess RNase II. Overproduction of RNase E leads to increased polyadenylation and no reduction in toxicity.
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PMID:Polynucleotide phosphorylase, RNase II and RNase E play different roles in the in vivo modulation of polyadenylation in Escherichia coli. 1084 84

Poly(A) polymerases are centrally involved in the process of mRNA 3' end formation in eukaryotes. In animals and yeast, this enzyme works as part of a large multimeric complex to add polyadenylate tracts to the 3' ends of precursor RNAs in the nucleus. Plant nuclear enzymes remain largely uncharacterized. In this report, we describe an initial analysis of plant nuclear poly(A) polymerases (nPAPs). An enzyme purified from pea nuclear extracts possesses many features that are seen with the enzymes from yeast and mammals. However, the pea enzyme possesses the ability to polyadenylate RNAs that are associated with polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNP), a chloroplast-localized enzyme involved in RNA turnover. Similar behavior is not seen with the yeast poly(A) polymerase (PAP). A fusion protein consisting of glutathione-S-transferase and the active domain of an Arabidopsis-encoded nuclear poly(A) polymerase was also able to utilize PNP, indicating that the activity of the pea enzyme was due to an interaction between the pea nPAP and PNP, and not to other factors that might copurify with the pea enzyme. These results suggest the existence, in plant nuclei, of factors related to PNP, and an interaction between such factors and poly(A) polymerases.
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PMID:Nuclear and chloroplast poly(A) polymerases from plants share a novel biochemical property. 1087 23

The molecular mechanism of mRNA degradation in the chloroplast consists of sequential events including endonucleolytic cleavage, the addition of poly(A)-rich sequences to the endonucleolytic cleavage products, and exonucleolytic degradation by polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase). In Escherichia coli, polyadenylation is performed mainly by poly(A)-polymerase (PAP) I or by PNPase in its absence. While trying to purify the chloroplast PAP by following in vitro polyadenylation activity, it was found to copurify with PNPase and indeed could not be separated from it. Purified PNPase was able to polyadenylate RNA molecules with an activity similar to that of lysed chloroplasts. Both activities use ADP much more effectively than ATP and are inhibited by stem-loop structures. The activity of PNPase was directed to RNA degradation or polymerization by manipulating physiologically relevant concentrations of P(i) and ADP. As expected of a phosphorylase, P(i) enhanced degradation, whereas ADP inhibited degradation and enhanced polymerization. In addition, searching the complete Arabidopsis genome revealed several putative PAPs, none of which were preceded by a typical chloroplast transit peptide. These results suggest that there is no enzyme similar to E. coli PAP I in spinach chloroplasts and that polyadenylation and exonucleolytic degradation of RNA in spinach chloroplasts are performed by one enzyme, PNPase.
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PMID:Polynucleotide phosphorylase functions as both an exonuclease and a poly(A) polymerase in spinach chloroplasts. 1146 23

In Escherichia coli the poly(A) tails of messenger and rRNAs are a major determinant of RNA stability. These tails are formed primarily by poly(A) polymerase I (PAP I) in wild-type strains or by polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase) in PAP I-deficient strains. In Streptomyces coelicolor it has been shown that mycelial RNAs display biochemical characteristics consistent with the presence of poly(A) tails. To confirm the occurrence of polyadenylation, rRNA and mRNA transcripts from S. coelicolor were isolated by oligo(dT)-dependent RT-PCR followed by cDNA cloning. One of the clones obtained was polyadenylated at a site corresponding to the mature 3' terminus of 16S rRNA, while two 23S rRNA cDNA clones were polyadenylated at precursor processing sites. Other clones identified polyadenylation sites internal to the coding regions of both 16S and 23S rRNAs, and redD and actII-orf4 mRNAs. While most rRNA cDNA clones displayed adenosine homopolymer tails, the poly(A) tails of three rRNAs and all the redD and actII-orf4 clones consisted of a variety of heteropolymers. These results suggest that the enzyme primarily responsible for polyadenylation in S. coelicolor is PNPase rather than a PAP I homologue.
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PMID:cDNA cloning confirms the polyadenylation of RNA decay intermediates in Streptomyces coelicolor. 1198 16

Bacteriophage P4 immunity is controlled by a small stable RNA (CI RNA) that derives from the processing of primary transcripts. In previous works, we observed that the endonuclease RNase P is required for the maturation of CI RNA 5'-end; moreover, we found that polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase), a 3' to 5' RNA-degrading enzyme, is required for efficient 5'-end processing of CI RNA, suggesting that 3'-end degradation of the primary transcript might be involved in the production of proper RNase P substrates. Here, we demonstrate that another Escherichia coli nuclease, RNase E, would appear to be involved in this process. We found that transcripts of the P4 immunity region are modified by the post-transcriptional addition of short poly(A) tails and heteropolymeric tails with prevalence of A residues. Most oligoadenylated transcripts encompass the whole cI locus and are thus compatible as intermediates in the CI RNA maturation pathway. On the contrary, in a polynucleotide phosphorylase (PNPase)-defective host, adenylation occurred most frequently within cI, implying that such transcripts are targeted for degradation. We did not find polyadenylation in a pcnB mutant, suggesting that the pcnB-encoded polyadenyl polymerase I (PAP I) is the only enzyme responsible for modification of P4 immunity transcripts. Maturation of CI RNA 5'-end in such a mutant was impaired, further supporting the idea that processing of the 3'-end of primary transcripts is an important step for efficient maturation of CI RNA by RNase P.
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PMID:RNase E and polyadenyl polymerase I are involved in maturation of CI RNA, the P4 phage immunity factor. 1205 40


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