Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.26.9 (ribonuclease)
6,589 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The major RNA species present in the purified mitochondrial fraction of the Walker carcinoma were investigated in order to determine which of them are located in the mitochondria and coded by the organelle DNA. The subcellular distribution of these RNA's and the in vivo sensitivity of the transcription process to selective inhibitors were examined. Among the different species separated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, only the 21 and 16 Se RNA's were found exclusively in the purified mitochondria, approximately Se being the S value estimated from the relative electrophoretic mobility of the RNA. A bifid peak observed in the 16-15 Se region was shown to be an artifact caused by the ribonuclease inhibitor, naphthalene disulfonate. Ethidium bromide at high doses inhibited the incorporation in vivo of 32P into 21, 16, and 4 Se RNA, but the nuclear transcription of cytoplasmic RNA was also inhibited to the same extent. No significant effect was observed at lower doses. In contrast, actinomycin D exerted a differential inhibition of the synthesis of 28 and 18 Se RNA from both the cytoplasmic and the mitochondrial fractions, practically without affecting the transcription of the 21 and 16 Se species. The incorporation of 32P into mitochondrial 4 Se RNA was also considerably more resistant to the drug than the synthesis of the cytoplasmic tRNA. It is concluded that the 21, 16, and Se RNA's are the only major discrete species transcribed from mitochondrial DNA present in the Walker carcinoma.
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PMID:Identification of the products of mitochondrial transcription in the walker corcinosarcoma by the use of actinomycin D and ethidium bromide. 126 33

The phenanthridinium dye, ethidium bromide (EB), selectively intercalates into double-stranded regions of nucleic acids with a large and specific increase in fluorescence. When used for the staining of fixed tissue sections, the dye stains cellular nuclei with excellent resolution of microscopic detail. In some fixed tissues, particularly pancreatic acini, cytoplasm stains intensely and this staining can be abolished by digestion with trypsin and ribonuclease. The orange fluorescence of EB can be easily distinguished from the green fluorescence of fluorescein and EB is thus an excellent counterstain for immunofluorescence. Ethidium bromide is a useful and practical stain for the fluorescence microscopy of tissue sections and, in combination with enzymatic digestion of RNA, provides a simple way to differentially localize DNA and RNA.
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PMID:Ethidium bromide: a nucleic acid stain for tissue section. 616 60