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Query: EC:3.1.26.4 (
RNase H
)
2,751
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Reverse transcriptase isolated from avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV) and Rauscher murine
leukemia
virus (RLV) were examined for their ability to catalyze polymerization,
ribonuclease H
, pyrophosphate exchange, and pyrophosphorolysis reactions. A detailed characterization and a study of requirements for the expression of pyrophosphate exchange and pyrophosphorolysis reactions indicated that a variety of RNA and DNA template-primers supported these catalytic reactions. Furthermore, hydrogen bonding of template to primer was essential, although RNA:RNA template-primers, e.g. poly(rA) . (rU)9 or 70 S RNA . tRNA complex, were not utilized for these reactions. AMV enzyme required Mg2+, and RLV enzyme Mn2+, as the preferred divalent metal ion for the expression of these activities. Response of various catalytic reactions to site-specific inhibitors revealed that polymerization and pyrophosphate exchange reactions were susceptible to reagents that affected either the substrate or the template binding site, intrinsic zinc, or sulfhydryl groups.
RNase H
and pyrophosphorolysis activities, on the other hand, exhibited susceptibility only to the template site-specific reagent. We, therefore, conclude that
RNase H
and pyrophosphorolysis reactions are catalyzed through the template binding site while polymerization and pyrophosphate exchange reactions require additional participation of the substrate binding site, as well as that of intrinsic zinc and the presence of reactive sulfhydryl groups.
...
PMID:Enzymatic activities associated with avian and murine retroviral DNA polymerases. Catalysis of and active site involvement in pyrophosphate exchange and pyrophosphorolysis reactions. 615 89
An RNA-dependent DNA polymerase was isolated from purified virions of endogenous oncornaviruses released by the MOPC-315 murine myeloma cell line. Upon sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the purified enzyme was found to consist of two major polypeptides with molecular weights of about 28,000 and 26,500. The active enzyme had a molecular weight of approximately 56,000, as calculated from its sedimentation on glycerol density gradients, indicating that it is probably a dimer of the two subunit polypeptides. The isolated MOPC-315 virus polymerase exhibited all three activities known to be found in the DNA polymerase from oncornaviruses, namely, an RNA-dependent DNA polymerase, a DNA-dependent DNA polymerase, and an
RNase H
. The RNA-dependent polymerase activity showed a prounced preference for Mn2+ over Mg2+, whereas the DNA-dependent and
RNase H
reactions were catalyzed by these two cations to an almost equal extent. The purified polymerase was found to be immunologically related to the polymerase of Rauscher murine
leukemia
virus.
...
PMID:RNA-dependent DNA polymerase of an endogenous type C virus of mice: purification and partial characterization. 615 78
Polyguanylic acid was found to be a potent inhibitor of
RNase H
associated with mammalian viral reverse transcriptase, indicating a strong interaction between polyguanylic acid and the reverse transcriptase protein. Based on this observation, we have developed three simple procedures for the purification of mammalian viral reverse transcriptases. In the first procedure, a nucleic acid-free extract of Rauscher murine
leukemia
virus was applied to a column of phosphocellulose and the reverse transcriptase was eluted by a low concentration (50 microM) of polyguanylic acid. Polyadenylic acid and polyuridylic acid could not replace polyguanylic acid for the elution. In the second procedure, a polyuridylic acid-Sepharose column was substituted for phosphocellulose, and the elution was again achieved by polyguanylic acid. In the third affinity procedure, the reverse transcriptase in a nucleic acid-free viral extract was incubated in the cold with 50 microM polyguanylic acid and the complex was adsorbed onto a DEAE-cellulose column. After washing to remove uncomplexed and weakly complexed proteins, the reverse transcriptase was eluted in a concentrated form at 0.3 M NaCl with a recovery of greater than 70%. by polyacrylamide gel analysis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate, the enzyme appeared to be nearly pure.
...
PMID:Simple affinity procedure for the purification of mammalian viral reverse transcriptases. 616 Feb 61
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.
...
PMID:Mechanism of action of Moloney murine leukemia virus RNA-directed DNA polymerase associated RNase H (RNase H I). 616 82
The mechanism of action of Moloney murine
leukemia
virus
RNase H
III was studied, utilizing the model substrate (A)n. (dT)n and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to assay enzyme activity. Examination by electrophoresis on 15% polyacrylamide gels in 7 M urea and on DEAE-cellulose paper in 7 M urea revealed that, early in a reaction with [3H](A)n. (dT)n as substrate,
RNase H
III generated products ranging in length from 80 to 90 nucleotides to less than 10 nucleotides and that after extended incubation the limit digest products generated were 3 to 15 nucleotides long. Product oligomers were of the following configuration: [5'-P, 3'-OH](A)n.
RNase H
III was shown to be an exonuclease requiring free ends in its substrate for activity by the inability to degrade RNA inserted in Escherichia coli ColE1 plasmid DNA. The enzyme was capable of attacking RNA in RNA-DNA hybrids in the 5' to 3' and 3' to 5' directions as demonstrated by the use of [3H, 5'-32P](A)600. (dT)n and cellulose-[3H](A)n. (dT)n. Rnase H III was random in its mode of action because addition of excess unlabeled (A)n. (dT)n to an ongoing reaction with [3H](A)n. (dT)n as substrate resulted in immediate inhibition of enzyme activity.
...
PMID:Mechanism of action of Moloney murine leukemia virus RNase H III. 616 72
Three potential inhibitors of reverse transcriptase activities, phosphonoformate (PF), phosphonoacetate (PAA), and ethyl-diethyl phosphonoformate (Et-PF), were compared in this study. Only PF was found to inhibit the DNA polymerase activity of the purified reverse transcriptase of Moloney murine
leukemia
virus (M-MuLV) and avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV). The degree of DNA polymerase inhibition was linear with PF concentration; 50% inhibition was achieved at 10 muM. Whereas PF inhibited both the RNA and DNA dependent DNA polymerase activities, the
RNase H
activity of the reverse transcriptase was unaffected. Both the endogenous DNA polymerase activity in detergent disrupted virus and the activity of the purified enzyme with the isolated virus genome 70S RNA were inhibited by PF. However, higher concentrations of PF were needed to inhibit the endogenous reaction. The inhibition by PF appeared to be reversible and noncompetitive with respect to the substrate deoxythymidine triphosphate (dTTP). Addition of PF after the initiation of DNA synthesis immediately arrested the reaction.
...
PMID:Differential inhibition of DNA polymerase and RNase H activities of the reverse transcriptase by phosphonoformate. 617 13
The single-stranded DNA containing the Moloney murine
leukemia
virus origin for plus-strand synthesis was cloned in M13mp2 and used as a template for avian myeloblastosis virus reverse transcriptase in the presence of Moloney RNA which had been treated with pancreatic RNase A. The RNA pieces containing the polypurine stretch near the plus-strand origin were processed, presumably by
RNase H
, to generate primers for DNA synthesis which initiated both at the correct origin site and at one nucleotide downstream from the correct site. Approximately 50% of the labeled DNA fragments synthesized under these conditions retained the priming RNA on their 5' ends. When the isolated fragments were hybridized back to the template DNA and again treated with the reverse transcriptase, all of the RNA was removed from the labeled DNA. By using 5'-end-labeled pancreatic RNase A-resistant fragments, it was possible to show that the RNA primers were removed intact. It appears from these results that the
RNase H
activity associated with the enzyme shows a preference for cutting at the junction between the RNA and DNA moieties of such complexes and therefore is ideally suited for removing RNA primers.
...
PMID:Mechanism of RNA primer removal by the RNase H activity of avian myeloblastosis virus reverse transcriptase. 619 10
A 190-base-pair DNA-RNA hybrid containing the Moloney murine
leukemia
virus origin of plus-strand DNA synthesis was constructed and used as a source of template-primer for the reverse transcriptase in vitro. Synthesis was shown to initiate precisely at the known plus-strand origin. The observation that some of the origin fragments retained ribonucleotide residues on their 5' ends suggests that the primer for chain initiation is an RNA molecule left behind by
RNase H
during the degradation of the RNA moiety of the DNA-RNA hybrid. If the
RNase H
is responsible for creating the correct primer terminus, then it must possess a specific endonucleolytic activity capable of recognizing the sequence in the RNA where plus strands are initiated. The 16-base RNase A-resistant fragment which spans the plus-strand origin can also serve as a source of the specific plus-strand primer RNA. Evidence is presented that some of the plus-strand origin fragments synthesized in the endogenous reaction contain 5' ribonucleotides, suggesting that specific RNA primers for plus-strand initiation may be generated during reverse transcription in vivo as well.
...
PMID:RNA-primed initiation of Moloney murine leukemia virus plus strands by reverse transcriptase in vitro. 620 82
In the presence of Mn2+, reverse transcriptase of both human immunodeficiency virus and murine
leukemia
virus hydrolyzes duplex RNA. However, designating this novel activity RNase D conflicts with Escherichia coli RNase D, which participates in tRNA processing. On the basis of its location in the
RNase H
domain, we propose that this novel retroviral activity be redesignated RNase H*.
...
PMID:Redesignation of the RNase D activity associated with retroviral reverse transcriptase as RNase H. 750 4
The natural product of the Red Sea sponge Verongia sp., identified as 3,5,8-trihydroxy-4-quinolone, was found to be a potent inhibitor of the RNA-directed DNA synthesis of the reverse transcriptases (RTs) of human immunodeficiency viruses type 1 and type 2 (HIV-1 and HIV-2, respectively). This inhibition was unaffected by the nature of the primer template used for DNA synthesis. The DNA-dependent DNA polymerase activity was inhibited to a lesser extent, whereas the
ribonuclease H
(
RNase H
) function associated with both HIV RTs was only slightly inhibited. The inhibition by the trihydroxyquinolone is reversible and noncompetitive with respect to both substrates--dTTP and the template primer poly(rA)n.oligo(dT)12-18. The inhibitor binds HIV-1 RT with a high affinity (Ki = 0.46 microM). This compound was shown also to inhibit the catalytic activities of the RT of murine
leukemia
virus, establishing the general inhibitory effect on retroviral RTs. Introductions of acetyl or methoxy moieties at positions with potential activity have generated three synthetic analogs of the natural compound. Only one analog, 5,8-dimethoxy-4-quinolone, exhibited an inhibition potency similar to that of the unmodified compound. Analysis of the three analogs has led us to the conclusion that the hydroxyl group at the ortho position to the carbonyl group in the pyridinone ring is a key structural element for the inhibitory activity. Thus, it could well be that the inhibitor interacts with the enzyme through a hydrogen bond of this hydroxyl group. We hope that the identification of the inhibitory site of the compound might be an important step toward the rational design of new potent anti-HIV RT drugs.
...
PMID:3,5,8-Trihydroxy-4-quinolone, a novel natural inhibitor of the reverse transcriptases of human immunodeficiency viruses type 1 and type 2. 751 Sep 44
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