Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.26.4 (RNase H)
2,751 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Molecular genetic studies have revealed that the human hepatitis B viral (HBV) Pol protein, a polypeptide of about 94 kDa, contains four domains. These are the 5'-terminal protein, spacer, RNA reverse transcriptase/DNA polymerase, and RNase H, respectively, from the amino (N) to carboxy (C) terminus. No evidence indicates as yet the involvement of a specific protease in cleaving the Pol protein or the presence of protease-cutting sites in the Pol protein. An in vitro-translated Pol protein was shown to be cleaved by purified thrombin but not in the presence of its inhibitor, hirudin. Two thrombin-cutting sites, spanning 194 amino acids, were then deduced by thrombin digestion of Pol protein with various lengths of C-terminal deletion. These two putative cutting sites, one located in the spacer region and the other in the beginning of the polymerase region, were found to be conserved at similar positions in the Pol protein of all hepadnaviruses. By using a novel method called the LacZ localization assay (LLA), it was demonstrated that a tripartite fusion protein containing the nucleus localization sequence (NLS) of SV40 large T Ag, the putative thrombin cutting sequence (Ile-Arg-Ile-Pro-Arg320-Thr) of HBV Pol protein and the full length beta-galactosidase of E. coli, exhibited a lower percentage (approximately 53%) of targeting into the nucleus of transfected hepatoma cells when compared with a similar tripartite protein containing a single mutation (Arg320 residue into Trp320) of HBV Pol protein (approximately 78%) or with a bipartite protein of SV40 NLS-beta-galactosidase (approximately 90%). These results indicate that the putative thrombin-cutting site in the spacer region of HBV Pol protein could be cleaved by a cellular protease resulting in the separation of NLS sequence from the beta-galactosidase and rendering a lower frequency of X-gal staining in the nucleus.
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PMID:Demonstration of the presence of protease-cutting site in the spacer of hepatitis B viral Pol protein. 773 Apr 38

It has been reported recently that the human foamy virus (HFV) Pol polyprotein of 120 kDa is synthesized in the absence of the active HFV aspartic protease. To gain more information on how the 120-kDa Pro-Pol protein is synthesized, mutant HFV genomes were constructed and the resulting proviruses were analyzed with respect to HFV pol expression and infectivity. HFV proviruses that contain termination codons in the nucleocapsid domain of gag and thus lack a gag-pol overlap region assumed to be required for translational frameshifting, nevertheless expressed the 120-kDa Pro-Pol precursor, the 80-kDa reverse transcriptase/RNase H, and a 40-kDa integrase in amounts similar to those observed for wild-type genomes. Since a Gag-independent expression of authentic Pol proteins was detectable in cells transfected with eukaryotic HFV pol expression plasmids, the data indicate that the HFV Pol precursor of 120 kDa is expressed independently of Gag by a mechanism that does not rely on ribosomal frameshifting, since the postulated HFV Gag-Pol protein of 190 kDa was not detectable under the conditions used. Furthermore, replacement of the Met residue by Thr at position 9 in pol within the gag-pol overlap region resulted in strongly reduced HFV Pol polyprotein expression and infectivity of the resulting proviruses. This Met residue of pol conserved in foamy virus sequences is the likely candidate for translational initiation of the 120-kDa Pro-Pol polyprotein. trans complementation of the HFV mutant with the Met-to-Thr substitution in the pol gene by a eukaryotic plasmid that expressed the HFV Pro-Pol protein resulted in partial recovery of infectivity. When HFV pol was fused in frame to gag, an engineered 190-kDa Gag-Pol fusion protein was formed and the enzymatic activity of the HFV protease was partially retained. The results imply that HFV is the first retrovirus that expresses a Pol polyprotein without formation of a Gag-Pol fusion protein.
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PMID:The human foamy virus pol gene is expressed as a Pro-Pol polyprotein and not as a Gag-Pol fusion protein. 855 61

Hepadnavirus polymerases are multifunctional enzymes that play critical roles during the viral life cycle but have been difficult to study due to a lack of a well-defined panel of monoclonal antibodies (MAbs). We have used recombinant human hepatitis B virus (HBV) polymerase (Pol) expressed in and purified from baculovirus-infected insect cells to generate a panel of six MAbs directed against HBV Pol protein. Such MAbs were subsequently characterized with respect to their isotypes and functions in analytical and preparative assays. Using these MAbs as probes together with various deletion mutants of Pol expressed in insect cells, we mapped the B-cell epitopes of Pol recognized by these MAbs to amino acids (aa) 8 to 20 and 20 to 30 in the terminal protein (TP) region of Pol, to aa 225 to 250 in the spacer region, and to aa 800 to 832 in the RNase H domain. Confocal microscopy and immunocytochemical studies using various Pol-specific MAbs revealed that the protein itself appears to be exclusively localized to the cytoplasm. Finally, MAbs specific for the TP domain, but not MAbs specific for the spacer or RNase H regions of Pol, appeared to inhibit Pol function in the in vitro priming assay, suggesting that antibody-mediated interference with TP may now be assessed in the context of HBV replication.
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PMID:Properties of monoclonal antibodies directed against hepatitis B virus polymerase protein. 1019 15

The selective packaging of the primer tRNA(Lys3) into HIV-1 particles is dependent upon the viral incorporation of the Pr160gag-pol precursor protein. In order to map a tRNA(Lys3) binding site within this precursor, we have studied the effects of mutations in Pr160gag-pol upon the selective incorporation of tRNA(Lys3). Many of these mutations were placed in a protease-negative HIV-1 proviral DNA to prevent viral protease degradation of the mutant Gag-Pol protein. C-terminal deletions of protease-negative Gag-Pol that removed the entire integrase sequence and the RNase H and connection subdomains of reverse transcriptase did not inhibit the incorporation of either the truncated Gag-Pol or the tRNA(Lys3), indicating that these regions are not required for tRNA(Lys3) binding. On the other hand, larger C-terminal deletions, which also remove the thumb subdomain sequence, did prevent tRNA(Lys3) packaging, without inhibiting viral incorporation of the truncated Gag-Pol, indicating a possible interaction between thumb subdomain sequences and tRNA(Lys3). While point mutations K249E, K249Q, and R307E in the primer grip region of the thumb subdomain have been reported to inhibit the in vitro interaction of mature reverse transcriptase with the anticodon loop of tRNA(Lys3), we find that these mutations do not inhibit tRNA(Lys3) packaging into the virus, which supports other work indicating that the anticodon loop of tRNA(Lys3) is not involved in interactions with Pr160gag-pol during tRNA(Lys3) packaging.
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PMID:Sequences within Pr160gag-pol affecting the selective packaging of primer tRNA(Lys3) into HIV-1. 1086 Jul 20

The Pol protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) harbours the viral enzymes critical for viral replication; protease (PR), reverse transcriptase (RT), and integrase (IN). PR, RT and IN are not functional in their monomeric forms and must come together as either dimers (PR), heterodimers (RT) or tetramers (IN) to be catalytically active. Our knowledge of the tertiary structures of the functional enzymes is well advanced, and substantial progress has recently been made towards understanding the precise steps leading from Pol protein synthesis through viral assembly to the release of active viral enzymes. This review will summarise our current understanding of how the Pol proteins, which are initially expressed as a Gag-Pol fusion product, are packaged into the assembling virion and discuss the maturation process that results in the release of the viral enzymes in their active forms. Our discussion will focus on the relationship between structure and function for each of the viral enzymes. This review will also provide an overview of the current status of inhibitors against the HIV-1 Pol proteins. Effective inhibitors of PR and RT are well established and we will discuss the next generation inhibitors of these enzymes as well recent investigations that have highlighted the potential of IN and RNase H as antiretroviral targets.
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PMID:The packaging and maturation of the HIV-1 Pol proteins. 1563 25

RNA viruses have been used as model systems to understand the patterns and processes of molecular evolution because they have high mutation rates and are genetically diverse. Human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1), the etiological agent of acquired immune deficiency syndrome, is highly genetically diverse, and is classified into several groups and subtypes. However, it has been difficult to use its diverse sequences to establish the overall phylogenetic relationships of different strains or the trends in sequence conservation with the construction of phylogenetic trees. Our aims were to systematically characterize HIV-1 subtype evolution and to identify the regions responsible for HIV-1 subtype differentiation at the amino acid level in the Pol protein, which is often used to classify the HIV-1 subtypes. In this study, we systematically characterized the mutation sites in 2,052 Pol proteins from HIV-1 group M (144 subtype A; 1,528 subtype B; 380 subtype C), using sequence similarity networks. We also used spectral clustering to group the sequences based on the network graph structures. A stepwise analysis of the cluster hierarchies allowed us to estimate a possible evolutionary pathway for the Pol proteins. The subtype A sequences also clustered according to when and where the viruses were isolated, whereas both the subtype B and C sequences remained as single clusters. Because the Pol protein has several functional domains, we identified the regions that are discriminative by comparing the structures of the domain-based networks. Our results suggest that sequence changes in the RNase H domain and the reverse transcriptase (RT) connection domain are responsible for the subtype classification. By analyzing the different amino acid compositions at each site in both domain sequences, we found that a few specific amino acid residues (i.e., M357 in the RT connection domain and Q480, Y483, and L491 in the RNase H domain) represent the differences among the subtypes. These residues were located on the surface of the RT structure and in the vicinity of the amino acid sites responsible for RT enzymatic activity or function.
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PMID:Evolutionary Analysis of HIV-1 Pol Proteins Reveals Representative Residues for Viral Subtype Differentiation. 2916 35