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Query: EC:3.1.26.3 (
RNase III
)
1,015
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Replication of RNA bacteriophages in the presence of rifamycin was studied in different Escherichia coli strains that vary in
RNase
content but are not isogenic: AB259 RNase+, Q13
RNase I
- PNPase-, AB105
RNase I
-
RNase III
-. It was found that rifamycin did not affect characteristics of phage replication such as the general pattern of viral RNA synthesis and intracellular development of the phage. These characteristics are strain specific and independent of the cell growth rate, which defines only phage release. The inhibition of cell division by rifamycin interfered with the release of the phage and thus produced an apparent effect of rifamycin on phage replication.
...
PMID:Replication of RNA bacteriophages in the presence of rifamycin. 36 77
Temperature-sensitive mutants were isolated from an rnc (
RNase III
-) strain of Escherichia coli, and their rRNA metabolism was analyzed on 3% polyacrylamide gels. One of these mutants was unable to produce 23S and 5S rRNAs at the nonpermissive temperature. When an rnc+ allele was introduced to this strain, it remained temperature sensitive. At the nonpermissive temperature, this strain could then produce 23S rRNA but was unable to make normal levels of 5S rRNA. In matings and transduction experiments, the defect in rRNA metabolism and temperature sensitivity behaved as a syndrome caused by a single point mutation, which was mapped at min 23.5 on the E. coli chromosome. This mutation probably affects an enzyme,
ribonuclease
E (RNase E), which introduces a cut in the nascent rRNA transcript between the 23S and the 5S rRNA cistrons. The mutation rne is recessive with respect to temperature sensitivity and the pattern of rRNA. Revertants able to grow at 43 degrees and with normal metabolism of rRNA were isolated; genetic analysis showed that they do not contain the original rne mutation, suggesting that they were true revertants. By combining the rne mutation with an rnc mutation, double rnc rne strains were synthesized, which behaved very similarly to the original rnc strain from which the rne mutation was isolated. Such strains have RNA metabolism that is similar to that of rnc strains at permissive temperatures, but at the nonpermissive temperature they fail to synthesize p23, m23, and 5S rRNAs. Thus, the experiments reported here, together with previous studies, suggest the existence of a new processing
ribonuclease
activity in Escherichia coli, which is called
ribonuclease
E.
...
PMID:Isolation, genetic mapping and some characterization of a mutation in Escherichia coli that affects the processing of ribonuleic acid. 36 43
Nucleoli of both chick embryos and mouse Ehrlich ascites cells contain an enzymatic activity that is very similar to
RNase
DII, an enzyme isolated from total chick embryos for its ability to degrade double-stranded RNA. The enzyme can be extracted by low salt/EDTA from nucleoli and is associated with pre-ribosomal 80-S and 55-S particles. Under ionic conditions which are inhibitory for the nucleolytic activity the transcript in vitro of nucleoli is not processed and sediments around 45 S. Under salt conditions which are optimal for the nucleolar enzyme the nucleolar transcripts are cleaved to distinct intermediate-sized molecules. Addition of the chicken
RNase
DII or
RNase III
to the nucleolar transcription system results in a similar shift of the chain length of the RNA molecules. It is concluded that a nucleolar
RNase
recognizing double-stranded regions in the pre-ribosomal RNA is involved in the maturation of ribosomal RNA.
...
PMID:Localisation of an endonuclease specific for double-stranded RNA within the nucleolus and its implication in processing ribosomal transcripts. 42 96
T4 Species I RNA, a molecule 140 nucleotides in length with some structural features very much like a tRNA, is specifically cleaved by an enzymatic activity in Escherichia coli extracts to give three segments with 19, 48 and 73 nucleotides. We report the purification and characterization of the E. coli
RNase
which cleaves two 3' phosphodiester bonds of T4 Species I RNA. This reaction has many properties in common with those catalyzed by E. coli
RNase III
, although the optimal salt conditions for T4 Species I RNA cleavage differ significantly from those for other
RNase III
-catalyzed reactions. The reaction is not catalyzed by extracts from an E. coli strain lacking
RNase III
activity. Furthermore, T4 Species I RNA is cleaved by highly purified E. coli
RNase III
to yield the same three specific fragments. We conclude that this specific cleavage is due to the action of
RNase III
, and that the requirement for lower ionic strength may reveal further important properties about this RNA processing enzyme.
...
PMID:Cleavage of T4 species I ribonucleic acid by Escherichia coli ribonuclease III. 78 26
Double-stranded RNAs from Penicillium chrysogenum virus have been treated with RNAse III, pancreatic RNAse A and RNAse T1 and the degradation of the RNAs has been studied under different conditions. It was found that only the two former enzymes cut across both strands, RNase T1 cannot cleave double strands.
RNase III
was shown to digest double-stranded RNA by a two step process: an initial phase of specific cleavage is followed by random degradation. In the first phase the enzyme exhibited a definite preference for some specific base pattern. Partial or complete degradation with
pancreatic RNase
A could also be achieved in media with high salt concentration provided that the enzyme: substrate ratio was increased together with the salt concentration. By combining different assay techniques, the process of degradation was followed from the early stages to complete digestion and the breakdown products were characterised. It is suggested that a structural change in the enzyme molecules enables them to act on double-stranded RNA. RNAse T1, being unable to cleave double strands, provides a useful tool for studying the secondary structure of RNA molecules. Treatment with different nucleases yielded some new information on the structure of different RNA species in Penicillium stoloniferum virus.
...
PMID:Action of nucleases on double-stranded RNA. 81 98
A
RNase
from calf thymus, which specifically cleaves native or synthetic double-stranded RNA molecules endonucleolytically, has been isolated and purified from calf thymus. For optimal activity, the enzyme requires a sulfhydryl reagent and divalent cations; over 95 per cent of the activity is inhibited by 0.5 mm ethidium bromide. The degradation of [3H]poly(C)-poly(I) by purified enzyme preparations yields labeled dinucleotides and octanucleotides; the latter oligonucleotide contained 5'-phosphate and 3'-hydroxyl termini. The enzyme cleaves high molecular weight RNAs such as RNA products formed in vitro by T3 phage-induced RNA polymerase from T3 phage DNA, heterogeneous RNA isolated from duck reticulocyte nuclei, and 45 S RNA isolated from rat liver nucleoli. The mode of degradation of RNA in vitro with the double-stranded
RNase
is similar to that of Escherichia coli
RNase III
and appears to act endonucleolytically. The degradation of 45 S RNA with the enzyme results in the production of 29 S and 19 S RNA fragments. These findings suggest that the enzyme may be involved in the processing of high molecular weight precursor RNAs to mRNA or rRNAs in a manner analogous to that reported for
RNase III
of E. coli.
...
PMID:Isolation and purification of double-stranded ribonuclease from calf thymus. 83 40
the mutation that causes
ribonuclease III
(
RNase III
) deficiency in strain AB301-105 of Kindler et al. (1973) has been mapped by use of F' merodiploids, Hfr matings, and P1 transduction. This mutation, rnc-105, lies close to nadB, near 49 min on the genetic map of Escherichia coli. The rnc-105 mutation has been transferred from its original genetic background by transduction and conjugation, and these new strains have the same defects in ribonucleic acid processing reported previously for AB301-105. Strains that carry rnc-105 grow more slowly than parental rnc+ strains, but the difference in growth rate seems to depend on the genetic background of each strain. Bacteriophage T7 grows about equally well in
RNase
III+ and III- female strains of E. coli, even though the specific cuts that
RNase III
makes in T7 ribonucleic acid are not made in the
RNase III
- strains. A low-phosphate defined medium in which most E. coli strains seem to grow well was developed. This medium is equally useful for labeling ribonucleic acids with 32PO4 and as a selective medium for genetic manipulations. It was used to determine the growth requirements of strain AB301-105, which are biotin and succinate in addition to the methionine and histidine requirements of the parental strain. The biotin mutation lies near the position expected from known mutations of E. coli, but the succinate mutation apparently does not. The possibility that the succinate requirement could be due to the
RNase III
deficiency is discussed. A uraP mutation was isolated for use in transferring rnc-105 between strains by conjugation. It lies near 47 min, somewhat removed from the commonly accepted position for uraP.
...
PMID:Genetic mapping of a mutation that causes ribonucleases III deficiency in Escherichia coli. 110 Jun 5
The 77-nucleotide OOP antisense RNA of bacteriophage lambda complements lambda cII-O mRNA in a region that includes 55 nucleotides at the 3' end of the cII gene and 22 nucleotides in the intercistronic region between the cII and O genes. OOP RNA, produced from multicopy plasmids, inhibits lambda cII gene expression by approximately 100-fold through an
RNase III
-dependent mechanism. Using primer extension analysis of cellular RNA isolated from an induced lambda lysogen that contains an OOP DNA plasmid, we have identified a cleavage site in cII-O mRNA within the region of complementarity with OOP RNA, at 13 nucleotides from the 3' end of that region. Ribonuclease protection experiments demonstrate that almost all cII-O mRNA in this overlap region is cleaved when OOP RNA is overproduced in
RNase
III+ cells but not in
RNase III
- cells. RNA fragments are detected that extend into the O gene from the cleavage sites, while the sister fragments that extend into the cII gene cannot be detected and must be eliminated by additional hydrolytic events. Differences in levels of uncleaved mRNA between
RNase
III+ and
RNase III
- cells are much less at several hundred nucleotides to either side of the target region. An alternate OOP RNA-dependent hydrolytic process occurs in
RNase III
- cells that results in cleavages in one of two regions, one close to the cleavage site observed in
RNase
III+ cells, and the second several nucleotides beyond the end of the complementary region between OOP RNA and cII-O mRNA. In this latter case, the fragments that extend into the cII gene are stable, while the sister O gene fragments are destroyed, in direct contrast to the
RNase III
-dependent process.
...
PMID:RNase III-dependent hydrolysis of lambda cII-O gene mRNA mediated by lambda OOP antisense RNA. 214 37
Three ribonucleases,
RNase I
, RNase II and
RNase III
, were purified from the 109,000 X g supernate of detergent-treated Tetrahymena pyriformis strain W. RNases I and II act optimally at pH 5.5-6.0 and are inhibited by increasing concentrations of salts of monovalent cations.
RNase III
acts optimally at pH 7.5 and is activated 1.5-fold by millimolar concentrations of ZnSO4 and 5-fold by 50 mM KCl. RNases II and III are activated approximately 100% in the presence of 3 M and 5 M urea respectively. All enzymes are heat-sensitive and acid-resistant. They are endonucleases forming 2',3'-cyclic products. Their base specificity, as tested against ribosomal RNAs of known sequence, is as follows:
RNase I
hydrolyzes preferentially YpN and secondarily GpN bonds, RNase II is highly specific for RpN bonds, though the preparation can also hydrolyze the UpU sequence. Finally the principal targets of
RNase III
are YpR sequences and secondarily YpY sequences. A shorthand visualization of base specificity of nucleases in the form of right isosceles triangles is presented. The triangles are constructed by subdividing each of the two perpendicular sides in as many units as the maximum number of times the most abundant dinucleotide appears in all substrates employed and plotting the frequency of hydrolysis of each dinucleotide sequence by the enzyme under study. The proximity of each dinucleotide sequence to the hypotenuse or to one of the perpendicular sides is indicative of its susceptibility or resistance to the enzyme's action.
...
PMID:Specificity and other properties of three ribonucleases of Tetrahymena pyriformis. 311 47
The gene for the double-stranded RNA (dsRNA)-specific
RNase III
of Escherichia coli was expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae to examine the effects of this
RNase
activity on the yeast. Induction of the
RNase III
gene was found to cause abnormal cell morphology and cell death. Whereas double-stranded killer RNA is degraded by
RNase III
in vitro, killer RNA, rRNA, and some mRNAs were found to be stable in vivo after induction of
RNase III
. Variants selected for resistance to
RNase III
induction were isolated at a frequency of 4 X 10(-5) to 5 X 10(-5). Ten percent of these resistant strains had concomitantly lost the capacity to produce killer toxin and M dsRNA while retaining L dsRNA. The genetic alteration leading to
RNase
resistance was localized within the
RNase III
-coding region but not in the yeast chromosome. These results indicate that S. cerevisiae contains some essential RNA which is susceptible to E. coli
RNase III
.
...
PMID:Expression of double-stranded-RNA-specific RNase III of Escherichia coli is lethal to Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 329 Jan 93
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