Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

Bacteriophage T4 RNase H, which removes the RNA primers that initiate lagging strand fragments, has a 5'- to 3'-exonuclease activity on DNA.DNA and RNA.DNA duplexes and an endonuclease activity on flap or forked DNA structures (Bhagwat, M., Hobbs, L. J., and Nossal, N. J. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 28523-28530). It is a member of the RAD2 family of prokaryotic and eukaryotic replication and repair nucleases. The crystal structure of T4 RNase H, in the absence of DNA, shows two Mg2+ ions coordinated to the amino acids highly conserved in this family. It also shows a disordered region proposed to be involved in DNA binding (Mueser, T. C., Nossal, N. G., and Hyde, C. C. Cell (1996) 85, 1101-1112). To identify the amino acids essential for catalysis and DNA binding, we have constructed and characterized three kinds of T4 RNase H mutant proteins based on the possible roles of the amino acid residues: mutants of acidic residues coordinated to each of the two Mg2+ ions (Mg2+-1: D19N, D71N, D132N, and D155N; and Mg2+-2: D157N and D200N); mutants of conserved basic residues in or near the disordered region (K87A and R90A); and mutants of residues with hydroxyl side chains involved in the hydrogen bonding network (Y86F and S153A). Our studies show that Mg2+-1 and the residues surrounding it are important for catalysis and that Lys87 is necessary for DNA binding.
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PMID:Identification of residues of T4 RNase H required for catalysis and DNA binding. 935 15

Recently, we developed a simple analytical model based on local residue packing densities and the distribution of tertiary contacts for describing the conformational fluctuations of proteins in their folded state. This so-called Gaussian network model (GNM) is applied here to the interpretation of experimental hydrogen exchange (HX) behavior of proteins in their native state or under weakly denaturing conditions. Calculations are performed for five proteins: bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor, cytochrome c, plastocyanin, staphylococcal nuclease, and ribonuclease H. The results are significant in two respects. First, a good agreement is reached between calculated fluctuations and experimental measurements of HX despite the simplicity of the model and within computational times 2 or 3 orders of magnitude faster than earlier, more complex simulations. Second, the success of a theory, based on the coupled conformational fluctuations of residues near the native state, to satisfactorily describe the native-state HX behavior indicates the significant contribution of local, but cooperative, fluctuations to protein conformational dynamics. The correlation between the HX data and the unfolding kinetics of individual residues further suggests that local conformational susceptibilities as revealed by the GNM approach may have implications relevant to the global dynamics of proteins.
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PMID:Correlation between native-state hydrogen exchange and cooperative residue fluctuations from a simple model. 945 98

Poly(1-methyl-6-thioinosinic acid), or PMTI, is a single-stranded polyribonucleotide and is the first homopolyribonucleotide devoid of Watson-Crick hydrogen bonding sites to show potent human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) inhibition. PMTI was found to be active when evaluated against a variety of low passage clinical HIV isolates in fresh human peripheral blood cells, including T cell-tropic and monocyte-macrophage-tropic viruses, syncytium-inducing and non-syncytium-inducing viruses and viruses representative of the various HIV-1 clades (A through F). The compound was active against HIV-2, all nucleoside and non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase (RT) inhibitor drug-resistant virus isolates tested and interacted with AZT or ddl to synergistically inhibit HIV infection. In biochemical inhibition assays, PMTI was determined to be a potent inhibitor of HIV-1 and HIV-2 RT, including RTs with mutations that engender resistance to nucleoside and non-nucleoside RT inhibitors. PMTI inhibited both the polymerase and RNase H activities of HIV RT. PMTI did not inhibit HIV-1 protease or integrase. Cell-based mechanism of action assays indicated that PMTI also interfered with early events in the entry of HIV into target cells. Furthermore, PMTI inhibited the fusion of gp120-expressing and CD4-expressing cells, but at concentrations approximately 1 log10 greater than those that inhibited virus entry. These results suggest that the homopolyribonucleotide PMTI blocks HIV replication in human cells at its earliest stages by multiple mechanisms, inhibition of virus entry and inhibition of RT.
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PMID:PMTI, a broadly active unusual single-stranded polyribonucleotide, inhibits human immunodeficiency virus replication by multiple mechanisms. 1007 76

The backbone dynamics of Escherichia coli ribonuclease H (RNase H) is studied by a recently developed off-lattice Monte Carlo/Metropolis simulation technique. A low-resolution model (virtual-bond model) is used together with knowledge-based potentials. The calculated mean-square fluctuations in alpha carbons are in good agreement with crystallographic temperature factors. The conformations generated around the native state are analyzed by time-dependent orientational and conformational correlation functions to study the internal motions of RNase at different time windows. A correlation between the free-energy changes for native-state hydrogen exchange (HX) and the extent of the autocorrelation in the rotations of the virtual bonds at long times has been observed. Cross-correlations between the rotations of the bonds, which are near-neighbor in the sequence, are effective in all time windows and help the secondary structures to preserve their kinetic stability. On the other hand, the existence of cross-correlations at long times help the tertiary contacts be maintained. The order parameter of NH bond vector for each residue has been calculated and compared with 15N-NMR relaxation measurements.
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PMID:Characterization of internal motions of Escherichia coli ribonuclease H by Monte Carlo simulation. 1008 65

Antisense technology is based on the ability to design potent, sequence-specific inhibitors. The G-clamp heterocycle modification, a cytosine analog that clamps on to guanine by forming an additional hydrogen bond, was rationally designed to enhance oligonucleotide/RNA hybrid affinity. A single, context-dependent substitution of a G-clamp heterocycle into a 15-mer phosphorothioate oligodeoxynucleotide (S-ON) targeting the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, p27(kip1), enhanced antisense activity as compared with a previously optimized C5-propynyl-modified p27(kip1) S-ON and functionally replaced 11 C5-propynyl modifications. Dose-dependent, sequence-specific antisense inhibition was observed at nanomolar concentrations of the G-clamp S-ONs. A single nucleotide mismatch between the G-clamp S-ON and the p27(kip1) mRNA reduced the potency of the antisense ON by five-fold. A 2-base-mismatch S-ON eliminated antisense activity, confirming the sequence specificity of G-clamp-modified S-ONs. The G-clamp-substituted p27(kip1) S-ON activated RNase H-mediated cleavage and demonstrated increased in vitro binding affinity for its RNA target compared with conventional 15-mer S-ONs. Furthermore, incorporation of a single G-clamp modification into a previously optimized 20-mer phosphorothioate antisense S-ON targeting c-raf increased the potency of the S-ON 25-fold. The G-clamp heterocycle is a potent, mismatch-sensitive, automated synthesizer-compatible antisense S-ON modification that will have important applications in the elucidation of gene function, the validation of gene targets, and the development of more potent antisense-based pharmaceuticals.
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PMID:A cytosine analog that confers enhanced potency to antisense oligonucleotides. 1009 67

To discover the physiological role of the Bacillus subtilis ExoA protein, which is similar in amino acid sequence to Escherichia coli exonuclease III, an exoA::Cm disruption was constructed in the chromosomal DNA of B. subtilis. There was no clear difference in tolerance to hydrogen peroxide and alkylating agents between the disruptant and the wild type strain. An expression plasmid of the ExoA in E. coli was constructed by inserting the exoA gene into the expression vector pKP1500. The purified ExoA was used to clarify enzymatic characterizations using synthetic DNA oligomers as substrates. A DNA oligomer containing a 1', 2'-dideoxyribose residue as an AP site, a DNA-RNA chimera oligomer, and a 3' end 32P-labeled oligomer were synthesized. It has been shown that the ExoA has AP endonuclease, 3'-5' exonuclease, ribonuclease H, and 3'-phosphomonoesterase activities. Thus, it has been confirmed that ExoA is a multifunctional DNA-repair enzyme in B. subtilis that is very similar to E. coli exonuclease III except that ExoA has lower 3'-5' exonuclease activity than that of E. coli exonuclease III.
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PMID:Characterization of Bacillus subtilis ExoA protein: a multifunctional DNA-repair enzyme similar to the Escherichia coli exonuclease III. 1054 Jul 38

The denaturant-dependence of the major, observable relaxation rates for folding (kobs) of ribonuclease HI from Escherichia coli (RNase H) and phage T4 lysozyme (T4L) reveal that, for both proteins, folding begins with the rapid and transient accumulation of intermediate species in a "burst phase" which precedes the rate-limiting formation of the native state; this is evidenced by a "rollover" in the folding limb of the rate profiles (kobs versus denaturant, or chevron plot). These rate profiles are most simply described by a three-state mechanism (unfolded-to-intermediate-to-native), which implies that the burst phase represents a transition between two distinct thermodynamic states. It is shown here that the equilibrium properties of these burst phase reactions can be equally well modeled by a mechanism involving a continuum of states where the free energy of each state is linearly related to its m-value (the parameter describing the linear relationship between free energy and denaturant). A numerical model is also developed to describe the time evolution of such a system, which exhibits nearly perfect exponential behavior. Both models emphasize how a continuum of states operating under a linear free energy relationship may behave like a two state system. Such a scheme finds experimental justification from an interpretation of recent native state hydrogen exchange data. The analytical model described for a continuum can account for the observed kinetic profiles of several other model proteins. The results, however, appear context specific, suggesting that burst phase reactions are not entirely random and non-specific. The results reported in this study have important implications for the concept of cooperativity in protein folding reactions.
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PMID:The cooperativity of burst phase reactions explored. 1054 95

Stability parameters for individual residues in Thermus thermophilus cysteine-free RNase H were determined by native state hydrogen exchange, thus providing a unique comparison of regional thermodynamics between thermophilic and mesophilic homologues. The general distribution of stability in the thermophilic protein is similar to that of its mesophilic homologue, with a proportional increase in stability for almost all residues. As a consequence, the residue-specific stabilities of the two proteins are remarkably similar under conditions where their global stabilities are the same. These results indicate that T. thermophilus RNase H is stabilized in a delocalized fashion, preserving a finely tuned balance of stabilizing interactions throughout the structure. Therefore, although protein stability can be altered by single amino acid substitution, evolution for optimal function may require more subtle and delocalized mechanisms.
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PMID:Structural distribution of stability in a thermophilic enzyme. 1057 Jan 31

Based on results from both equilibrium and kinetic hydrogen exchange studies of Escherichia coli ribonuclease HI (RNase H), a fragment of RNase H (eABCD) was designed. The sequence of eABCD contains less than half of the protein's primary sequence and includes the regions that were shown to be the most protected from hydrogen exchange in all previous studies of RNase H. This core fragment of RNase H encodes a well-ordered protein with native-like properties. When isolated from the full-length monomeric protein, the eABCD fragment forms a stable dimer. However, we show indirectly that the monomeric form of eABCD is folded and has an overall secondary structure similar to the dimeric form.
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PMID:Folding of an isolated ribonuclease H core fragment. 1059 28

DNA.RNA hybrid duplexes are substrates of RNase H and reverse transcriptase. The crystal structure of a hybrid duplex, d(5'-CTCTTCTTC-3').r(5'-gaagaagag-3') (the uppercase letters indicate DNA and lowercase letters RNA), with a polypurine RNA strand and a complementary DNA strand has been determined at 1.8 A resolution. The structure was refined first at 1.9 A by XPLOR and subsequently by CNS at 1.8 A. The hybrid is found in a standard A-form conformation with all the sugars in the C3'-endo puckering. The 5'-terminal base dC of the DNA strand was clearly visible in the electron density map of the present structure, in contrast to the previously reported structure d(TTCTTBr(5)CTTC).r(gaagaagaa) where the 5'-terminal base dT was not visible, leaving the terminal rA unpaired. Thus, the comparison of the terminal base pairs, C.g versus T.a, in the two hybrid crystal structures provides information on the stability of these base pairs in hydrogen bonding (three versus two) and base stacking interactions. The differences in the terminal base pairs produce different kinks in the two structures. Minor groove widening is observed in the present structure at a distinctive kink in the lower half of the duplex, in contrast to the small widening of the minor groove and a very slight bend in the upper half of the T.a structure.
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PMID:Crystal structure of a DNA.RNA hybrid duplex with a polypurine RNA r(gaagaagag) and a complementary polypyrimidine DNA d(CTCTTCTTC). 1077 88


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