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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)
Analytical high-pressure anion-exchange chromatography on RPC-5 has been used to study the behaviour of a good primer, d(pT-T-A-G), and a poor primer, d(pT-T-T-T-T-T) in the E. coli
polynucleotide phosphorylase
-catalysed reactions of
dADP
, dCDP, dGDP and dTDP where the primer is extended, predominantly, by one or two nucleotides. The experiments provide some generalizations for obtaining optimal yields in preparative reactions. In the course of the experiments, examples of anomalous behaviour of oligonucleotides on RPC-5 were encountered and these are discussed.
...
PMID:Enzymatic synthesis of oligodeoxyribonucleotides of defined sequence. Polynucleotide phosphorylase catalysed addition of deoxyribonucleotides to primers which are good or poor acceptors. 35 63
Poly(A) synthesis and degradation have been examined in Escherichia coli cells made permeable to nucleotides by treatment with toluene. Although newly synthesized poly(A) is normally rapidly degraded in this system, extraction of the soluble portion of the cell effectively eliminates this process without affecting poly(A) synthesis. Poly(A) synthesis in this system displays many properties associated with poly(A) synthesis by purified poly(A) polymerase in vitro including a lag in polymerization, stimulation by increased ionic strength, and a low Mg2+ optimum. As with the purified enzyme, this system uses both ADP and ATP as substrates, requires conversion of ATP to ADP, and is strongly inhibited by
dADP
, orthophosphate, and pyrophosphate. In contrast to the purified poly(A) polymerase, the permeable cell system displays some properties suggestive of in vivo poly(A) metabolism. Thus, the permeable cells require an endogenous RNA primer for activity, the poly(A) product remains with the cells, and the reaction is greatly stimulated by polyamines. This system should prove extremely useful for studies of poly(A) metabolism in E. coli. A surprising feature of these studies was the finding that mutant strains deficient in
polynucleotide phosphorylase
were unable to synthesize poly(A). The possible roles of
polynucleotide phosphorylase
and poly(A) in E. coli are discussed.
...
PMID:Synthesis and degradation of poly(A) in permeable cells of Escherichia coli. 35 56
Polyriboadenylate polymerase was isolated from Escherichia coli PR7 (RNase I-, pnp) in good yield and high purity. The enzyme catalyzes the polymerization of ATP and ADP. These polymerizations show an initial lag which can be removed by the addition of poly(A). However, poly(A) does not function as a primer. UDP and CDP can also serve as substrates but with decreased efficiency. The polymerization of CDP is enhanced by the presence of an oligonucleotide which again does not function as a primer. Polymerization of [gamma-32P]ATP or [beta-32P]ADP result in products with no radioactivity. The product formed from [alpha-32P]ATP on hydrolysis with alkali yields labeled pAp and 2',3'-AMP; thus the enzyme synthesizes poly(A) chains de novo. During the polymerization of ATP, no burst of free ADP can be detected and the time course of phosphate release from ATP ro ADP follows very closely the kinetics of polymerization. dATP and
dADP
are effective inhibitors of poly(A) synthesis from either ATP or ADP. Sulfhydryl reagents inhibit only the polymerization of ATP and the inhibition is fully reversed by dithiothreitol. However, the enzyme can be protected from sulfhydryl reagents by preincubation with either ATP or ADP in the absence of Mg2+ which is required for polymerization. Studies using acrylamide gel electrophoresis indicate that the polymerization activity with either ATP or nucleoside diphosphates resides in the same protein. The enzyme catalyzes the following exchanges: 32Pi into ADP, 32Pi into ATP, and [14C] ADP into ATP in the presence of phosphate. While the enzyme catalyzes the phosphorolysis of its own product, (pAp-(Ap)nA), it fails to cleave the dephosphorylated product, (Ap(Ap)nA), or ribosomal RNA or tRNA in the presence of inorganic phosphate. The differences and similarities between poly(A) polymerase and
polynucleotide phosphorylase
are discussed. Based on the 32P exchange studies and other properties of poly(A) polymerase, a plausible mechanism for its action is proposed.
...
PMID:Further studies on the isolation and properties of polyriboadenylate polymerase from Escherichia coli PR7 (RNase I-, pnp). 78 66
The kinetics of the phosphorolysis of polynucleotide (as differentiated from oligonucleotide) by
polynucleotide phosphorylase
of Micrococcus luteus has been investigated. Double reciprocal plots of initial velocity against either inorganic phosphate or polynucleotide concentration are linear, and furthermore, the affinity of the enzyme for either substrate is unaffected by the presence of the other.
dADP
, an analogue of ADP product, is a competitive inhibitor with respect to Pi and polynucleotidy. (Ap)tA-cyclic-p is a competitive inhibitor with respect to Pi. The results are almost identical with both primer-independent (Form-I) and primer-dependent (Form-T) enzymes, although the various kinetic constants differ. On the vasis of these data a rapid equilibrium random Bi Bi mechanism is proposed. The demonstration of two different inhibitor constants for
dADP
and the difference between the Michaelis and the inhibitor constant for polyadenylic acid in polynucleotide phosphorolysis indicate at least two binding sites for polyadenylic acid and
dADP
on M. luteus
polynucleotide phosphorylase
. Its is suggested that in the phosphorolysis of long chain polymers the second binding site permits the polynucleotide to snap right back into position after removal of I mononucleotide unit and thus leads to the observed processive degradation. A general discussion of oligonucleotide and polynucleotide phosphorolysis and the differences between Form-I and Form-T enzymes in de novo synthesis and degradation of polynucleotides is presented.
...
PMID:Kinetic studies on the phosphorolysis of polynucleotides by polynucleotide phosphorylase. 107 70
As a starting point for the study of the biosynthesis of polyadenylated RNA in bacteria, the characteristics of RNA synthesis by cells of Escherichia coli B made permeable to small molecules by treatment with toluene were examined. Such cells mediated the incorporation of radiolabeled ribonucleoside triphosphates into RNA in a reaction that was sensitive to inhibitors of RNA polymerase and required the simultaneous presence of the four ribonucleoside triphosphates. Between 10 to 15% of the RNA synthesized under these conditions was polyadenylated as shown by affinity chromatography on oligo(dT)-cellulose. The presence of orthophosphate or
dADP
, inhibitors of
polynucleotide phosphorylase
, had no effect on the reaction and the rate of RNA synthesis was indistinguishable in the
polynucleotide phosphorylase
-deficient strain PR-7 and in its otherwise isogenic parent strain PR-100. The poly(A) tracts associated with the newly synthesized RNA could be isolated after exhaustive digestion with pancreatic and T1 ribonucleases and accounted for 14% of the poly(A)-RNA. At least 74% of the poly(A) sequences were located at the 3' ends of RNA molecules and their weight-average length was 48 nucleotide residues. The size distribution of total RNA and poly(A)-RNA synthesized in the toluenized cell system was similar to that of the corresponding pulse-labeled fractions derived from growing cultures. The sequence complexity of poly(A)-RNA and unadenylated RNA synthesized in toluenized cells with [alpha-32P]CTP as the labeled substrate was analyzed by hybridization to fragments of Escherichia coli B DNA generated by digestion with EcoRI restriction endonuclease and immobilized on nitrocellulose sheets. Both RNA fractions hybridized with many DNA fractions, the hybridization patterns being similar with poly(A)-RNA and unadenylated RNA. This indicated that many different types of RNA transcripts synthesized in toluenized cells were subject to polyadenylation, but that polyadenylation was incomplete so that each transcript was present in both an adenylated and an unadenylated state.
...
PMID:Synthesis of polyadenylate-containing RNA in vitro in permeable cells of Escherichia coli B. 619 64