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Query: EC:3.1.21.1 (
DNase
)
7,655
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A protein kinase which is intimately associated with equine herpesvirus (equine abortion virus) was found by using adenosine triphosphate-gamma-(32)P as a phosphate donor and virus protein as an acceptor. Consistent demonstration of the activity requires prior removal of phosphohydrolase. The kinase activity requires Mg(2+), is not stimulated by cyclic adenosine monophosphate, but is enhanced by added protamine or arginine-rich histone. The labeled product is resistant to ribonuclease,
deoxyribonuclease
, and chloroform-methanol but is sensitive to Pronase. Other tests suggest that serine and
threonine
residues are the acceptor sites. In the in vitro reaction, the incorporation represents an average of approximately 4,500 phosphate residues per virion, and all 17 virus protein bands resolved by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis appear to be labeled.
...
PMID:Protein kinase activity in equine herpesvirus. 433 15
The attachment and eclipse of adenovirus have been studied with the aid of highly purified (14)C-
threonine
and (32)P-labeled adenovirus type 2 in KB cells in suspension cultures. Adenovirus particles and infectivity appear to attach at the same rate. The attachment rate appears to be highly dependent on the cell concentration and less dependent on virus concentration within the multiplicity range from 0.15 to 3 plaque-forming units per cell, probably corresponding to 4.5 to 90 particles per cell. Subsequent to attachment, 5 to 8% of the (14)C label is eluted from the cell at a structure level, corresponding to free hexon. The (32)P activity is rapidly associated with the cells and is converted within 20 to 30 min to 65 to 85%
deoxyribonuclease
-susceptible material. This process is unaffected by actinomycin and puromycin. The
deoxyribonuclease
-sensitive material is, however, associated with (14)C label for an extended period after infection, and does not sediment as free deoxyribonucleic acid in sucrose gradients. The implications of these findings on the penetration mechanism of animal viruses are discussed.
...
PMID:Attachment and eclipse of adenovirus. 562 83
The NH(2)-terminal amino acid sequences of the alpha and beta chains of avian myeloblastosis alphabeta DNA polymerase were determined by using microsequence analysis in the subnanomole range and were found to be identical up to 17 residues. The common sequence was as follows:
Thr
-Val-Ala-Leu-His-Leu-Ala-Ile-Pro-Leu-Lys-Trp-Lys-Pro-Asn-His-
Thr
-. This result provides convincing chemical evidence that the alpha chain is derived from the NH(2)-terminal region of the beta chain by proteolytic cleavage, whereas the amino acid composition for these alpha and beta subunits and p32
DNA endonuclease
suggests that the latter is derived from the carboxyl-terminal region of the beta chain.
...
PMID:Amino acid sequence analysis of reverse transcriptase subunits from avian myeloblastosis virus. 616 Feb 62
Phosphorylation of simian virus 40 (SV40) T antigen on
threonine
124 activates viral DNA replication in vivo and in vitro. We have manipulated the modification of T-antigen residue 124 both genetically and biochemically and have investigated individual replication functions of T antigen under conditions suitable for in vitro DNA replication. We find that the hexamer assembly, helicase, DNA polymerase alpha-binding, and transcriptional-autoregulation functions are independent of phosphorylation of
threonine
124. In contrast, neither T antigen with an alanine mutation of
threonine
124 made in human cells nor unphosphorylated T antigen made in Escherichia coli binds the SV40 replication origin as stably as phosphorylated wild-type T antigen does. Furthermore, modification of
threonine
124 is essential for complete unwinding of the SV40 replication origin. We conclude that phosphorylation of
threonine
124 enhances specific interactions of T antigen with SV40 origin DNA. Our findings do not exclude the possibility that phosphorylation of
threonine
124 may affect additional undefined steps in DNA replication. We also show that
DNase
footprinting and KMnO4 modification assays are not as stringent as immunoprecipitation and origin-dependent strand displacement assays for detecting defects in the origin-binding and -unwinding functions of T antigen. Differences in the assays may explain discrepancies in previous reports on the role of T-antigen phosphorylation in DNA binding.
...
PMID:cdc2 phosphorylation of threonine 124 activates the origin-unwinding functions of simian virus 40 T antigen. 839 45
The C heterogeneous ribonucleoprotein particle (hnRNP) protein bind to nascent pre-mRNA and may participate in assembly of the early prespliceosome. Ser/
Thr
phosphorylation of the C1 hnRNP protein in HeLa nuclear extracts regulates its binding to pre-mRNA (S. H. Mayrand, P. Dwen, and T. Pederson, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 90:7764-7768, 1993). We have now further investigated the phosphorylation cycle of the C1 hnRNP protein, with emphasis on its regulation. Pretreatment of nuclear extracts with micrococcal nuclease eliminated the phosphorylation of C1 hnRNP protein, but pretreatment with
DNase
did not, suggesting a dependence on RNA. Oligodeoxynucleotide-targeted RNase H cleavage of U1, U2, and U4 small nuclear RNAs did not affect the phosphorylation of C1 hnRNP protein. However, cleavage of nucleotides 78 to 95, but not other regions, of U6 small nuclear RNA resulted in an inhibition of the dephosphorylation step of the C1 hnRNP protein phosphorylation cycle. This inhibition was as pronounced as that seen with the serine/
threonine
protein phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid. C1 hnRNP protein dephosphorylation could be completely restored by the addition of intact U6 RNA. Add-back experiments with mutant RNAs further delineated the minimal region essential for C1 protein dephosphorylation as residing in nucleotides 85 to 92 of U6 RNA. These results illuminate a hitherto unanticipated function of U6 RNA: the modulation of a phosphorylation-dephosphorylation cycle of C1 hnRNP protein that influences the binding affinity of this protein for pre-mRNA. This newly revealed function of U6 RNA is likely to play a very early role in the prespliceosome assembly pathway, prior to U6 RNA's entry into the mature spliceosome's active center.
...
PMID:A discrete 3' region of U6 small nuclear RNA modulates the phosphorylation cycle of the C1 heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein particle protein. 862 68
A RecA/Rad51 homologue from Pyrococcus kodakaraensis KOD1 (Pk-REC) is the smallest protein among various RecA/Rad51 homologues. Nevertheless, Pk-Rec is a super multifunctional protein and shows a
deoxyribonuclease
activity. This
deoxyribonuclease
activity was inhibited by 3 mM or more ATP, suggesting that the catalytic centers of the ATPase and
deoxyribonuclease
activities are overlapped. To examine whether these two enzymatic activities share the same active site, a number of site-directed mutations were introduced into Pk-REC and the ATPase and
deoxyribonuclease
activities of the mutant proteins were determined. The mutant enzyme in which double mutations Lys-33 to Ala and
Thr
-34 to Ala were introduced, fully lost both of these activities, indicating that Lys-33 and/or
Thr
-34 are important for both ATPase and
deoxyribonuclease
activities. The mutation of Asp-112 to Ala slightly and almost equally reduced both ATPase and
deoxyribonuclease
activities. In addition, the mutation of Glu-54 to Gln did not seriously affect the ATPase,
deoxyribonuclease
, and UV tolerant activities. These results strongly suggest that the active sites of the ATPase and
deoxyribonuclease
activities of Pk-REC are common. It is noted that unlike Glu-96 in Escherichia coli RecA, which has been proposed to be a catalytic residue for the ATPase activity, the corresponding residual Glu-54 in Pk-REC is not involved in the catalytic function of the protein.
...
PMID:A unique DNase activity shares the active site with ATPase activity of the RecA/Rad51 homologue (Pk-REC) from a hyperthermophilic archaeon. 1006 83
The marine bacterium Pseudoalteromonas sp. strain A28 was able to kill the diatom Skeletonema costatum strain NIES-324. The culture supernatant of strain A28 showed potent algicidal activity when it was applied to a paper disk placed on a lawn of S. costatum NIES-324. The condensed supernatant, which was prepared by subjecting the A28 culture supernatant to ultrafiltration with a 10,000-M(w)-cutoff membrane, showed algicidal activity, suggesting that strain A28 produced extracellular substances capable of killing S. costatum cells. The condensed supernatant was then found to have protease and
DNase
activities. Two Pseudoalteromonas mutants lacking algicidal activity, designated NH1 and NH2, were selected after N-methyl-N'-nitrosoguanidine mutagenesis. The culture supernatants of NH1 and NH2 showed less than 15% of the protease activity detected with the parental strain, A28. The protease was purified to homogeneity from A28 culture supernatants by using ion-exchange chromatography followed by preparative gel electrophoresis. Paper-disk assays revealed that the purified protease had potent algicidal activity. The purified protease had a molecular mass for 50 kDa, and the N-terminal amino acid sequence was determined to be Ala-
Thr
-Pro-Asn-Asp-Pro. The optimum pH and temperature of the protease were found to be 8.8 and 30 degrees C, respectively, by using succinyl-Ala-Ala-Pro-Phe-p-nitroanilide as a substrate. The protease activity was strongly inhibited by phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, diisopropyl fluorophosphate, antipain, chymostatin, and leupeptin. No significant inhibition was detected with EDTA, EGTA, phenanthroline or tetraethylenepentamine. These results suggest that Pseudoalteromonas sp. strain A28 produced an extracellular serine protease which was responsible for the algicidal activity of this marine bacterium.
...
PMID:Involvement of an extracellular protease in algicidal activity of the marine bacterium Pseudoalteromonas sp. strain A28. 1101 Aug 78
Bovine DNase I contains two potential N-linked glycosylation sites with the sequences Asn(18)-Ala-
Thr
and Asn(106)-Asp-Ser. A previous report established that
pancreatic DNase
I has only one sugar chain at Asn(18) [Liao, Salnikow, Moore and Stein (1973) J. Biol. Chem. 248, 1489-1495]. We found, however, that bovine DNase I expressed in COS-1 cells was glycosylated about 70% at Asn(106) in addition to being completely glycosylated at Asn(18). Glycosylation of Asn(106) increased to 97% when Asp(107) was mutated to Glu or when Ser(108) was mutated to
Thr
. Mutation of Asp(107) to Trp had no effect, whereas a substitution with Pro at this position abolished glycosylation of Asn(106). Analysis of the state of glycosylation of DNase I purified from a variety of bovine tissues revealed that DNase I from spleen, submaxillary gland, lung and adrenal had two sugar chains, whereas enzyme from pancreas and kidney had only one sugar chain. These findings demonstrate a major difference in the ability of various tissues to utilize N-linked glycosylation signals that contain suboptimal residues in the second and third positions.
...
PMID:The efficiency of N-linked glycosylation of bovine DNase I depends on the Asn-Xaa-Ser/Thr sequence and the tissue of origin. 1125 70
Cytolethal distending toxin (CDT) is a heterotrimeric protein toxin produced by several bacterial pathogens. Cells exposed to CDT die from either activation of the mitotic checkpoint cascade or apoptosis. Introduction of the purified CdtB subunit, a homologue of mammalian type I
DNase
, into cells mimics the action of the CDT holotoxin. Mutant CdtBs lacking
DNase
activity are devoid of biological activity. Chromosomal DNA appears to be the CDT target; thus, nuclear translocation of CdtB must precede cytolethal activity. Examination of the CdtB sequence indicates the presence of putative candidate bipartite nuclear localization signals (NLS). Here, we examine the functionality of the two potential NLS sequences found in the Escherichia coli CdtB-II. Nuclear translocation of EcCdtB-II was examined by monitoring the localization of an EcCdtB-II-EGFP fusion in Cos-7 cells. Our results indicated that EGFP-EcCdtB-II localized to the nucleus. The candidate EcCdtB-II-II NLS sequences were modified by site-directed mutagenesis such that tandem arginine residues were changed to
threonine
and serine respectively. Mutation of both putative NLS sequences had no effect on EcCdtB-II-associated
DNase
activity; however, cell cycle arrest and nuclear localization were significantly impaired in cells that received CDT reconstituted from the EcCdtB-II-DeltaNLS mutants. When HeLa cells were electroporated with the EcCdtB-II-DeltaNLS1 and the EcCdtB-II-NLS double mutants, toxicity was not observed, whereas the activity of EcCdtB-II-DeltaNLS2 was similar to that of wild-type EcCdtB-II. These data indicate that the putative NLS sequences are important for CDT-mediated action arrest and that they are likely to function in the nuclear translocation of EcCdtB-II.
...
PMID:Nuclear localization of the Escherichia coli cytolethal distending toxin CdtB subunit. 1505 15
We purified
pancreatic deoxyribonuclease
I (DNase I) from the shark Heterodontus japonicus using three-step column chromatography. Although its enzymatic properties resembled those of other vertebrate DNases I, shark DNase I was unique in being a basic protein. Full-length cDNAs encoding the DNases I of two shark species, H. japonicus and Triakis scyllia, were constructed from their total pancreatic RNAs using RACE. Nucleotide sequence analyses revealed two structural alterations unique to shark enzymes: substitution of two Cys residues at positions 101 and 104 (which are well conserved in all other vertebrate DNases I) and insertion of an additional
Thr
or Asn residue into an essential Ca(2+)-binding site. Site-directed mutagenesis of shark DNase I indicated that both of these alterations reduced the stability of the enzyme. When the signal sequence region of human DNase I (which has a high alpha-helical structure content) was replaced with its amphibian, fish and shark counterparts (which have low alpha-helical structure contents), the activity expressed by the chimeric mutant constructs in transfected mammalian cells was approximately half that of the wild-type enzyme. In contrast, substitution of the human signal sequence region into the amphibian, fish and shark enzymes produced higher activity compared with the wild-types. The vertebrate DNase I family may have acquired high stability and effective expression of the enzyme protein through structural alterations in both the mature protein and its signal sequence regions during molecular evolution.
...
PMID:Molecular evolution of shark and other vertebrate DNases I. 1556 Jul 84
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