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)

We have investigated three aspects of RNA turmor virus replication and cell transformation: (1) the properties of the purified avian and mammalian viral RNA-directed DNA polumerase, (2) some characteristics of the viral 60-70S RNA genome, 30-40S RNA subunits and intracellular viral RNA species, and (3) the interaction of the viral DNA polymerase with its RNA template early during infection and cell transformation by the murine sarcoma-leukemia virus (MSV[MLV]). Avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV) contains two forms of RNA-directed DNA polymerase, alpha, consisting of a single polypeptide of molecular weight 65,000, and alphabeta, consisting of two polypeptides of molecular weights 65,000 and 105,000. The alpha and alphabeta forms of AMV DNA polymerase both possess RNase H activity that requires free end termini on the ribopolymer and can degrade the RNA of the RNA-DNA hybrid in the 3' to 5' and 5' to 3' directions. But, alpha and alphabeta possess a different mode of exoribonuclease activity. While alphabeta RNase H is a processive exoribonuclease that degrades the polynucleotide chain to a core residue before attacking a second chain, alpha RNase H is a random exoribonuclease that releases the polynucleotide after each scission. Highly purified Moloney-MSV(MLV) DNA polymerase has both RNase H activity and the ability to read viral 60-70S RNA. These activities comigrate through five different steps of purification and are present at levels comparable to those found in purified AMV DNA polymerase. The MSV(MLV) 60-70S RNA genome and 35S RNA subunits were shown by periodate oxidationtritiated borohydride reduction to contain adenosine as the major 3'-terminal nucleoside. Poly (A) segments were isolated from viral 60-70S and 35S RNA by treatment with RNase A or RNase T1 and purified by afinity chromatography and gel electrophoresis. Viral poly(A) was shown to be present at the 3' terminus as -G(C,U)A190AOH. The similar sequence reported for poly(A) present in mammalian mRNA suggests that similar mechanisma are involved in the transcription and processing of both cellular and viral DNA sequences. Within transformed cells replicating MSV(MLV), viral 35S and 20S RNA were found in membrane-bound polyribosomes, whereas only 35S RNA was detected in free polyribosomes. The origin and function of 20S RNA is unknown. The early events during rapid infection and cell transformation of mouse 3T6 cells by the Harvey strain of MSV(MLV) were studied. By both autoradiographic analysis and molecular hybridization, viral DNA synthesis was detected in the cytoplasm by 1 hour after infection, reached a maximum at 2 hours, and subsequently decreased. Cytological chase experiments produced evidence that cytoplasmic viral DNA was transported to the nucleus. In situ hybridization experiments using radioactive viral DNA product as a probe demonstrated the rapid association of viral DNA sequences with the chromocenters of interphase nuclei and with the centromeric heterochromatin regions of some chromosomes.
...
PMID:Properties of oncornavirus RNA-directed DNA polymerase, the RNA template, and the intracellular products formed early during infection and cell transformation. 5 Sep 2

Based on the observation that in vitro transcription of Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) RNA by avian myeloblastosis virus DNA polymerase renders the RNA PROGRESSIVELY MORE SENSITIVE TO Escherichia coli RNase H digestion, a new procedure for the in situ analysis of this process has been developed. In vitro transcription products of 32P-labeled RSV RNA are first treated with RNase H, the resistant fraction is then digested to completion with RNase T1, and the oligonucleotides are analyzed by a fingerprint technique. By using the established order of these oligonucleotides along the RNA molecule, a comparison of the yields of each oligonucleotide, before and after transcription, allows qualitative and quantitative in situ analyses of the transcription process. Using this new procedure, we find that upon transcription of purified RSV RNA, DNA synthesis occurs mainly at three sites, one near the 5' end and two near the center of the subunit RNA molecule, and that most of these RNA molecules are competent templates for limited transcription at these specific sites. We also show that purified RSV 70S RNA contains a low-molecular-weight DNA hybridized to a nucleotide sequence near the center of the subunit molecule. Furthermore , we find that the low-molecular-weight nucleic acid fraction extracted from purified RSV virions contains DNA that can hybridize to RSV 70S RNA and that the virion DNA in such hybrids can function as a primer for an extensive in vitro reverse transcription.
...
PMID:New procedure for the direct analysis of in vitro reverse transcription of Rous sarcoma virus RNA. 6 18

The polycytidylic acid [poly(C)] tract in foot and mouth disease virus RNA has been located about 400 nucleotides from the 5' end of the RNA by analysis of the products from the digestion of the RNA with RNase H in the presence of oligodeoxyguanylic acid [oligo(dG)]. This treatment produces a small fragment (S) containing the small protein covalently linked to the RNA and a large fragment (L) that migrates faster than untreated RNA on low-percentage polyacrylamide gels, lacks the poly(C) tract as shown by RNase T1 digestion and oligo(dG)-cellulose binding, and is no longer infective. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of fragment S suggests that it is about 400 nucleotides long, in agreement with the size estimated from the proportion of radioactivity in the fragment. Analysis of the RNase T1 digestion products of S shows that it contains only those oligonucleotides mapping close to the poly(C) tract that is situated near the 5' end of the virus RNA.
...
PMID:More precise location of the polycytidylic acid tract in foot and mouth disease virus RNA. 20 92

Foot and mouth disease virus RNA has been treated with RNase H in the presence of oligo (dG) specifically to digest the poly(C) tract which lies near the 5' end of the molecule (10). The short (S) fragment containing the 5' end of the RNA was separated from the remainder of the RNA (L fragment) by gel electrophoresis. RNA ligase mediated labelling of the 3' end of S fragment showed that the RNase H digestion gave rise to molecules that differed only in the number of cytidylic acid residues remaining at their 3' ends and did not leave the unique 3' end necessary for fast sequence analysis. As the 5' end of S fragment prepared form virus RNA is blocked by VPg, S fragment was prepared from virus specific messenger RNA which does not contain this protein. This RNA was labelled at the 5' end using polynucleotide kinase and the sequence of 70 nucleotides at the 5' end determined by partial enzyme digestion sequencing on polyacrylamide gels. Some of this sequence was confirmed from an analysis of the oligonucleotides derived by RNase T1 digestion of S fragment. The sequence obtained indicates that there is a stable hairpin loop at the 5' terminus of the RNA before an initiation codon 33 nucleotides from the 5' end. In addition, the RNase T1 analysis suggests that there are short repeated sequences in S fragment and that an eleven nucleotide inverted complementary repeat of a sequence near the 3' end of the RNA is present at the junction of S fragment and the poly(C) tract.
...
PMID:The nucleotide sequence at the 5' end of foot and mouth disease virus RNA. 23 62

Supercoiled rat liver mitochondrial DNA is relaxed by treatment with ribonucleases A, T1 or H. All the supercoiled mitochondrial DNA is sensitive to ribonuclease H and ribonuclease A, but only 35% of the supercoiled population is sensitive to ribonuclease T1. Removal of the ribonucleotides with calf thymus ribonuclease H, followed by denaturation of the mitochondrial DNA and analysis of the single-strand fragment lengths in the electron microscope, showed that the ribonucleotides were randomly located on both strands of the DNA. Endonuclease-S1 digestion of mitochondrial DNA after removal of the ribonucleotides reveals that no unique fragments are produced and ribonucleotides are randomly distributed with respect to one another. The average number of ribonucleotide sites per molecule was estimated to be between 8 and 13. Two possible mechanisms for the origin of ribonucleotide sites are discussed.
...
PMID:Localization of the ribonucleotide sites in rat liver mitochondrial deoxyribonucleic acid. 62 55

Messenger RNA molecules 30-35 bases long, with sequences related to the 5'-region of cro-mRNA from lambda-phage, were prepared by T7 transcription from synthetic DNA templates. Each mRNA contained five or six internal uridine residues, which were transcribed using a mixture of UTP and thio-UTP. Initiation complexes were formed with Escherichia coli 30S ribosomes in the presence or absence of tRNA(fMet), and cross-linking of the thio-U residues was induced by UV irradiation at wavelengths greater than 300 nm. The cross-linked ribosomal proteins were identified immunologically, and cross-linked regions of the 16S RNA were isolated by excision with ribonuclease H and suitable deoxyoligonucleotides. In both cases, the particular thio-U residue involved in the cross-link was identified by ribonuclease T1 fingerprinting of the (radioactive) mRNA in the isolated cross-linked complex. The principal results were that, at thio-U positions upstream of the AUG codon, specific cross-linking occurred to protein S7 and to the 3'-terminus of the 16S RNA, in agreement with similar experiments using 70S ribosomes. Less specific cross-linking was observed to proteins S1, S18 and S21 at various positions within the mRNA. Six bases downstream from the AUG codon, a tRNA-dependent cross-link was found to position approximately 1050 of the 16S RNA, but--in contrast to similar experiments with 70S ribosomes--no cross-linking was found to the 1390-1400 region.
...
PMID:The location of mRNA in the ribosomal 30S initiation complex; site-directed cross-linking of mRNA analogues carrying several photo-reactive labels simultaneously on either side of the AUG start codon. 165 Dec 32

We have used photoaffinity labelling to examine the chloroplast RNA polymerase components which come into contact with nascent transcripts during the in vitro transcription of plastid DNA. The transcripts were synthesized in the presence of a photoactive analogue (4-thio UTP) and alpha-32P-ATP, using enriched pea chloroplast RNA polymerase preparation and a recombinant plasmid containing the plastid 16S rRNA promoter. Brief irradiation of the transcriptional complex crosslinked the photoactive nascent RNA to proximal proteins. Labelling of the transcriptional complex was dependent on 4-thio UTP and template DNA. Two polypeptides of 51 and 54 kDa were consistently crosslinked to the nascent transcripts; about 60% of the total radioactivity of the crosslinked RNA was associated with these polypeptides. In some experiments, two additional polypeptides of 38 and 75 kDa were also found to be associated with about 13% and 17% of the total crosslinked RNA radioactivity, respectively. The UV-crosslinked transcriptional complexes were stable to either DNase or S1 nuclease hydrolysis but partially sensitive to RNase T1. Insensitivity of the complex to hydrolysis with RNase H suggested that the nascent transcripts were not crosslinked to the template. The complexes could also be hydrolysed by proteinase K and thermolysin. No crosslinkage was observed when labelled RNA molecules containing 4-thio UMP residues were added after synthesis to the polymerase preparation. This suggested that the method identified only those polypeptides which came into close contact with the transcript during its synthesis. Antibodies raised against the RNA-protein complex confirmed the presence of the polypeptides in the chloroplast RNA polymerase preparation on Western blots. Preincubation of these antibodies with the chloroplast RNA polymerase inhibited plastid DNA transcription. These data showed that the transcript-binding polypeptides were functional components of the chloroplast transcriptional complex.
...
PMID:Photoaffinity labelling of the pea chloroplast transcriptional complex by nascent RNA in vitro. 171 36

Destabilizing events required for subsequent cotranslational disassembly of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) particles in vitro were studied. Brief treatment of U-32P-labelled TMV (strain vulgare or U2) with 1% SDS exposed only 2.5% of the RNA (160 5' nucleotides) in a susceptible subpopulation of virions. Limited uncoating occurred almost immediately and appeared to be synchronous because the amount of 5' oligonucleotide marker (omega) recovered remained constant throughout a 15 min period in SDS. Additional RNase T1-sensitive oligonucleotides were exposed only after 1 to 2 min in SDS. Coat protein (CP) subunits released from virions 'destabilized' by ultracentrifugation at between pH 7.2 and 9.2 were quantified using L-[35S]methionine-labelled particles of TMV strain U2. CP recovery and virus particle translation results were consistent with increasing numbers of virions uncoating for approximately 200 nucleotides. In the presence of sparsomycin (SPN), the TMV strain vulgare 5' leader and the first AUG codon can bind two 80S ribosomes. Electron microscopy of pH 7.5-treated TMV particles incubated in SPN-treated wheatgerm extract or rabbit reticulocyte lysate, showed that approximately 10% of virions complexed with one ribosome and approximately 10% with two bound ribosomes, confirming that omega at least had been uncoated. Nucleocapsids in these complexes were shorter than untreated TMV by 9 to 10 nm (i.e. equivalent to 192 to 217 nucleotides exposed). The template activities of virions pretreated at pH 7.2 to 9.2 were destroyed by RNase H when short cDNAs were hybridized to sequences at, or immediately 3' to, the first AUG codon. We propose that the complete 5' leader of TMV RNA interacts weakly with CP subunits and that this micro-instability is due to the absence of G residues and is essential for initiation of cotranslational virus disassembly.
...
PMID:Complete uncoating of the 5' leader sequence of tobacco mosaic virus RNA occurs rapidly and is required to initiate cotranslational virus disassembly in vitro. 184 66

Stable association of U2 snRNP with the branchpoint sequence of mammalian pre-mRNAs requires binding of a non-snRNP protein to the polypyrimidine tract. In order to determine how U2 snRNP contacts this protein, we have used an RNA containing the consensus 5' and the (Py)n-AG 3' splice sites but lacking the branchpoint sequence so as to prevent direct U2 snRNA base pairing to the branchpoint. Different approaches including electrophoretic separation of RNP complexes formed in nuclear extracts, RNase T1 protection immunoprecipitation assays with antibodies against snRNPs and UV cross-linking experiments coupled to immunoprecipitations allowed us to demonstrate that at least three splicing factors contact this RNA at 0 degree C without ATP. As expected, U1 snRNP interacts with the region comprising the 5' splice site. A protein of approximately 65,000 molecular weight recognizes the RNA specifically at the 5' boundary of the polypyrimidine tract. It could be either the U2 auxiliary factor (U2AF) (Zamore and Green (1989) PNAS 86, 9243-9247), the polypyrimidine tract binding protein (pPTB) (Garcia-Blanco et al. (1989) Genes and Dev. 3, 1874-1886) or a mixture of both. U2 snRNP also contacts the RNA in a way depending on p65 binding, thereby further arguing that the latter may correspond to the previously characterized U2AF and pPTB. Cleavage of U2 snRNA sequence by a complementary oligonucleotide and RNase H led us to conclude that the 5' terminus of U2 snRNA is required to ensure the contact between U2 snRNP and p65 bound to the RNA. More importantly, this conclusion can be extended to authentic pre-mRNAs. When we have used a human beta-globin pre-mRNA instead of the above artificial substrate, RNA bound p65 became precipitable by anti-(U2) RNP and anti-Sm antibodies except when the 5' end of U2 snRNA was selectively cleaved.
...
PMID:The 5' end domain of U2 snRNA is required to establish the interaction of U2 snRNP with U2 auxiliary factor(s) during mammalian spliceosome assembly. 185 Jan 27

Evidence for capped poly(A) leaders of variable lengths located immediately upstream of the translation initiation codon was obtained by direct analyses of a major late mRNA species. A decapping-recapping method was used to specifically substitute a radioactively labeled phosphate for an unlabeled one within the cap structure. RNase H-susceptible sites were made by hybridizing synthetic oligodeoxyribonucleotides to the mRNA encoding a late major structural protein of 11 kilodaltons. Sequences of the type m7G(5')pppAmp (Ap)nUpG. . ., where n varies from a few to more than 40 nucleotides, were deduced by analysis of the length and sequence of RNase H, RNase T1, and RNase U2 digestion products.
...
PMID:Capped poly(A) leaders of variable lengths at the 5' ends of vaccinia virus late mRNAs. 246 59


1 2 3 Next >>