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)

A four-A electron density map was calculated for the monoclinic crystal of ribonuclease-S (RNase-S) based on two heavy-atom derivatives. Close geometrical similarity was found between the two crystallographically independent RNase-S molecules (called molecules ZA and ZB) in this crystal and that (called molecule Y) in the trigonal crystal. Using the rotational and translational parameters relating these three molecules, it was established that the crystallographic two-fold symmetry between the two molecules ZA in the monoclinic crystal was exactly identical to that between the two molecules Y in the trigonal crystal, suggesting the tendency of RNase-S molecules to associate in this way although the interaction is weak. The 4-A difference Fourier maps calculated for the monoclinic crystal established the following conclusions. (1) 4-Thiouridine-2'(3')-monophosphates binds to the B1 and R1 sites like other pyrimidine nucleoside-2'(3')-monophosphates as expected from previous spectrophotometric studies, but not to the B2 site even at the concentration of 20 mM. An attempt to visualize the photoproduct generated by irradiation of near-ultraviolet light in this complex failed. (2) p-Aminobenzoylglutamic acid, a fragment of folic acid, seems to bind to RNase-S with its benzene ring close to the B2 site and the alpha-carboxylate group close to the p1 site. The model is compatible with most of the chemical results obtained by Sawada et al. ((1977) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 479, 188-197).
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PMID:Crystal structure of monoclinic ribonuclease-S at 4 A resolution. The mode of binding of 4-thiouridylic acid and a fragment of folic acid, p-aminobenzoylglutamic acid. 30 95

The effect of polyamines on ribonucleases in the presence of various inhibitors (poly(G), heparin, and rat liver RNase inhibitor) has been studied. Bovine pancreatic RNas A and a ribonuclease from horse submaxillary gland (RNase HS) were inhibited by the inhibitors, but RNase T1 and RNase M were not inhibited. Polyamines were found to restore the activites of RNase A and RNase HS inhibited by poly(G) or heparin but not those activities inhibited by rat liver RNase inhibitor. When poly(U) and poly(C) were used as substrates, the inhibitory effects of poly(G) and heparin were greater with poly(U) than poly(C) as a substrate. However, when poly(C) was used as a substrate in the presence of either of the above inhibitors, the restoration of RNase activity by sperimine was more efficient. In fact, a stimulatory effect was observed. From the double-reciprocal plots, it was concluded that polyamines restored the activiities of RNases by increasing the availability of the substrate and enzyme to each other. The restoration of enzyme activity by polyamines occurred through the binding of the polyamines to the inhibitor and the subsequent release of enzyme from the inhibitor.
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PMID:Studies on the restoration of the activities of Ribonucleases by polyamines in the presence of various ribonuclease inhibitors. 40 77

Animal experiments have shown that malnutrition and protein deficiency states, respectively are associated with elevated tissue ribonuclease (RNase, E.C. 3.1.4.22) activities. The causal intracellular alterations are unknown. Assuming that increased tissue RNase activities are reflected by serum levels, a study was made of the serum RNase activities in 10 healthy controls eating a normal diet (group I), 7 patients on long-term parenteral nutrition (group II), 13 chronic hemodialysis patients (group III), and 9 patients with acute pancreatitis (group IV). In group I the serum RNase activity corresponded to 195.3 + or -58.8 U/ml. A significant (p less than 0.005) elevation was noted in groups II (314.6 +/- 95.3 U/ml) and III (374.1 +/- 102.1 U/ml), no difference being detected in group IV (295.1 +/- 191.9 U/ml).
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PMID:Serum ribonuclease activity in patients during parenteral nutrition, chronic hemodialysis and acute pancreatitis. 41 11

The complete amino acid sequence of mouse pancreatic ribonuclease has been determined by analysis of tryptic, chymotryptic, thermolytic and CNBr peptides and by automatic sequence analysis of the intact protein. The sequence of mouse RNase differs in 20--30% of the positions from other RNase sequences. Three unique or neraly unique substitutions were found, viz. Gly-68 leads to Arg-68, Arg-85 leads to His-85 and Ser-123 leads to Thr-123. All these three residues might be involved in interactions with substrate molecules. A most parsimonious tree of the myomorph rodent RNase shows that after the divergence of rat and mouse, the ribonuclease of rat accumulated substitutions at a rate 2.5--4.3 times as high as the rates in other branches of the tree and 23 times as high as the average rate in the Bovidae ribonuclease evolution. These extreme fluctuations in substitution rate are difficult to reconcile with the hypothesis of the evolutionary clock. The high evolution rate of rat ribonuclease is thought to be caused by positive selection, leading to new functional properties of the enzyme.
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PMID:The amino acid sequence of mouse pancreatic ribonuclease. Extremely rapid evolutionary rates of the myomorph rodent ribonucleases. 55 67

Bull seminal vesicle ribonuclease, when added in vitro to the suspension of ascitic leukaemic cells EL-4 and BP-8 for 2 hours at 37 degrees C and then transplanted to the abdominal cavities of mice, inhibitied the proliferation of these cells in vivo. When the temperature of the medium was decreased to 25 degrees C, AS RNase was bound to the leukaemic cell surfaces, but it exerted no inhibitory effect on BP-8 cells and showed a partial effect on EL-4 cells even after 24 hours. AS RNase administered to mice with leukaemic cells in diffusion chambers significantly decreased the number of cells inside the chambers as compared to the controls. The number of ascites cells was also significantly reduced after the injection of AS RNase for 1 week into mice with leukaemic cells implanted in the abdominal cavities. The reduction of cells in ascitic fluid did not cause a significant prolongation of survival of experimental mice. Only mice with transplanted BP-8 cells had significantly less cells in ascitic fluid and their survival was prolonged to 48 days in comparison with 25 days' survival in control mice after administration of pure AS RNase. In addition, AS RNase depressed the growth of solid tumours BP-8 and EL-4. AS RNase did not change the weight of body organs except the testes. Absorption experiments showed increased absorption of AS RNase by leukaemic cells BP-8 and EL-4 and by testes and spleen homogenates as compared with other body organs.
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PMID:Action of bull seminal vesicle ribonuclease on mouse leukaemic cells BP-8 and EL-4. 55 22

A soluble ribonuclease inhibitor from the human placenta has been purified 4000-fold by a combination of ion exchange and affinity chromatography. The inhibitor has been isolated in 45% yield (about 2 mg/placenta) as a protein that is homogeneous by sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis. In common with the inhibitors of pancreatic ribonuclease from other tissues that have been studied earlier, the placental inhibitor is an acidic protein of molecular weight near 50,000; it forms a 1:1 complex with bovine pancreatic RNase A and is a noncompetitive inhibitor of the pancreatic enzyme, with a Ki of 3 X 10(-10) M. The amino acid composition of the protein has been determined. The protein contains 30 half-cystine plus cysteine residues determined as cysteic acid after performic acid oxidation. At pH 8.6 the nondenatured protein alkylated with iodoacetic acid in the presence of free thiol has 8 free sulfhydryl groups. The inhibitor is irreversibly inactivated by sulfhydryl reagents and also by removal of free thiol from solutions of the protein. Inactivation by sulfhydryl reagents causes the dissociation of the RNase - inhibitor complex into active RNase and inactive inhibitor.
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PMID:Ribonuclease inhibitor from human placenta. Purification and properties. 56 Mar 77

The heterogeneous nuclear RNA-protein (hnRNP) fibers in HeLa cell nuclei are visualized by a nuclear subfractionation technique which removes 96% of the chromatin in a single step and 99% in a two-step elution but leaves the bulk of the hnRNA complexed with the remnant nuclear structure or lamina. Both steady-state and newly synthesized (approximately 15-s label) hnRNA are associated with the remnant nuclei to about the same extent. This association does not appear to depend on the presence of chromatin and exists in addition to any possible association of hnRNP with chromatin itself. Electron microscopy of partially purified nuclear hnRNA complexes shows that the hnRNP fibers form a ribonucleoprotein network throughout the nucleus, whose integrity is dependent on the RNA. Autoradiography confirms that hnRNA is a constituent of the fibers. The RNA network visualized in these remnant nuclei may be similar to RNA networks seen in intact cells. The hnRNA molecules appear to be associated with the nuclear lamina, at least in part, by unusual hnRNA sequences. More than half of the recovered poly(A) and double-stranded hnRNA regions remains associated with the nuclear structures or the laminae after digestion with RNase and elution with 0.4 M ammonium sulfate. In contrast, the majority of oligo(A), another ribonuclease resistant segment, is released together with most of the partially digested but still acid-precipitable single-stranded hnRNA and the hnRNP proteins not eluted by the ammonium sulfate alone. These special RNA regions appear to be tightly bound and may serve as points of attachment of the hnRNA to nuclear substructures. It is suggested that hnRNA metabolism does not take place in a soluble nucleoplasmic compartment but on organized structures firmly bound to the nuclear structure.
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PMID:Heterogeneous nuclear RNA-protein fibers in chromatin-depleted nuclei. 70 54

Steady state inactivation data on dilute aqueous solutions of RNase show that all water radicals, e-aq, OH, and H are responsible for the inactivation, but the most efficient radical is H atom, only about 4 of them being required for one inactivating event. The data are, therefore, more in agreement with the conclusions of Mee et al. (1972). In the transient absorption spectra of pulse irradiated ribonuclease different components derived by the individual radicals are observed. Organic and inorganic selenium-containing compounds offer a great protection of the enzyme activity, in agreement with the data obtained in other chemical and biological systems. In particular the effects of two new secondary radicals (CNSe)-2 and SeO-3 are in good accord with the known structure of ribonuclease.
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PMID:Further investigation on the radiation induced inactivation of ribonuclease and the radioprotective effect of some selenium-containing compounds. 92 59

The present paper describes intracellular changes in ribonuclease specific activity during Ca2+-induced sporangium formation in the water mold Achyla bisexualis. The enzymes undergo a decrease in activity prior to crosswall formation followed by an increase in activity during spore cleavage. As spore discharge occurs the RNase activity again decreases. A large percentage of the nuclease activity is associated with a lysosomal-like fraction of the cell, but there is also considerably activity associated with nuclear and microsomal fractions. Addition of cycloheximide or actinomycin D at various times during development prevents further decrease or increase in the enzyme activity. Mixing of cell extracts from different developmental stages provides evidence that inhibitors or activators of the enzyme activity are not responsible for the activity levels evident at the different stages. There is a change in the total levels of presumptive mRNA during Ca2+-induced sporangial formation which appears to be associated with the patterns of RNase activity. Utilizing total cellular RNA and Poly(A)+ RNA with the crude ribonuclease preparations, no substrate specificity could be ascertained.
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PMID:The development patterns of lysosomal enzyme activities during Ca2+-induced sporangium formation in Achyla bisexualis. III. Ribonucleases. 98 98

The genome of infectious pancreatic necrosis virus consists of two segments of dsRNA, in equimolar amounts, with molecular weights of 2.5 X 10(6) and 2.3 X 10(6) daltons, as determined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography. The viral RNA was resistant to ribonuclease, and in sucrose gradient it co-sedimented at 14S with RNase resistant RNA from virus infected cells. Upon denaturation in 98% formamide, the viral genome sedi-mented at 24S in formamide sucrose gradient and became sensitive to RNase. Denatured 24S viral RNA did revert to its undenatured 14S form upon recentrifugation in aquaeous sucrose gradient (0.1 M NaCL), but co-sedimented with the denatured large size class of reovirus 25S RNA. The same results were obtained if the native viral RNA was pre-treated with ribonuclease before denaturation, indicating the absence of exposed single strainded regions in the viral genome. Since infectious pancreatic necrosis virus contains only two dsRNA segments it does not belong to the family Reoviridae and may represent a new group of viruses.
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PMID:Size and structure of the genome of infectious pancreatic necrosis virus. 98 79


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