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Query: EC:3.1.27.1 (
RNase
)
16,360
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The genetic compositions of two independently derived preparations of the Bratislava-77 strain (B77) of Rous sarcoma virus were analyzed after each was passaged seven or more times in duck embryo fibroblasts.
RNase
, T1-resistant oligonucleotide fingerprint analysis of virion RNA from both preparations of duck-passaged B77 revealed the presence of two large noncontiguous deletions. Approximately 75% of the RNAs contained a deletion which spans oligonucleotides 304 to 4 on the viral genome (about 3,500 nucleotides) and encompasses all of the B77 polymerase gene. More than 90% of the RNAs also contained a deletion which spans src-specific oligonucleotides 6 and 5(about 2,200 nucleotides) and is identical to the deletion observed in transformation-defective B77. Virion RNA from duck-passaged B77 also contained two oligonucleotides (D1 and D2) not observed in the RNA of B77 virus grown on chicken embryo fibroblasts. Analysis of the virion RNA of duck-passaged B77 by denaturing agarose gel electrophoresis revealed four major subunits with molecular weights of 3.40 x 10(6), 2.65 x 10(6), 2.25 x 10(6), and 1.55 x 10(6). Whereas the 3.40- and 2.65-megadalton (Mdal) RNA species comigrated with the nondefective and transformation-defective RNAs of B77 propagated on chicken embryo fibroblasts, no counterparts to the 2.25- and 1.55-Mdal RNAs were observed in the RNA of B77 grown on chicken embryo fibroblasts. Oligonucleotide fingerprint analysis of these RNA species revealed that the 2.65-Mdal RNA contains the src-specific deletion and that 2.25-Mdal RNA contains the polymerase region deletion; both of these deletions were observed in the 1.55-Mdal RNA, which was the major RNA subunit species detected in duck-passaged B77. The new oligonucleotides (D1 and D2) observed in the duck-passaged virus were present in the 2.25- and 1.55-Mdal RNA species in vitro and in vivo and directs the synthesis of a 130,000-dalton protein (p130). p130 contains antigenic determinants specific for p27 (
gag
gene) and gp85 (env gene) but does not contain sequences which cross-react with antisera directed against the alpha beta form of RNA-dependent DNA polymerase (pol gene). This RNA, therefore, is generated by a fusion of the
gag
and env genes of Rous sarcoma virus B77.
...
PMID:Deletion mutant of the Bratislava-77 strain of Rous sarcoma virus containing a fusion of the group-specific antigen and envelope genes. 9 86
The
RNase
-T1-resistant oligonucleotides of two Prague Rous sarcoma viruses with temperature-sensitive (ts) DNA polymerases (DNA nucleotidyltransferases), termed ts LA 337 and 335 of one leukosis virus, RAV-6, and 20 of their recombinant progeny have been mapped relative to the 3' poly (A) terminus of the viral RNA. The resulting oligonucleotide maps have been ocrrelated with markers of the four known viral genetic elements encoded in the RNA of 10,000 nucleotides. In accord with previous results recombinant RNAs contained (i) oligonucleotides characteristic of the src gene, coding for sarcoma formation, between the poly(A) end and 2000 nucleotides and (ii) olignucleotides characteristic of the env gene, coding for the envelope glycoprotein, between 2500 and 5000 nucleo tides from the poly(A) end. (iii) A cluster of four oligonucleotides that mapped between 6000 and 8000 nucleotides from the 3' poly(A) end of each RNA was shared by both parental viruses and all recombinants. Since all other map segments of our recombinants failed to segregate with the ts- or wild-type markers of the parental DNA polymerase gene (pol), it was concluded that the ts pol lesion maps in this RNA segment. (iv) The 5' segment of each recombinant RNA contained a cluster of four to five oligonucleotides whose parental origin correlated with an electrophoretic marker of one of the parental virion proteins, p27, a major product of the viral
gag
gene. The gene order 5'-
gag
-pol-env-src-poly(A) is consistent with our data.
...
PMID:Mapping oligonucleotides of Rous sarcoma virus RNA that segregate with polymerase and group-specific antigen markers in recombinants. 18 81
HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) viraemia in serum or plasma of HIV-infected individuals was investigated by the polymerase chain reaction assay (PCR) in combination with reverse transcription to detect HIV-1 genomic RNA. Before PCR, plasma or serum was ultracentrifuged, precipitated virions were then treated with a
RNase
-free DNase, and a cDNA from the HIV-1 genomic RNA was synthesized. Thirty-three fresh plasma and seven sera from either HIV-1 antibody-positive individuals or patients treated with AZT were tested. Plasma from three patients were assayed 3 or 6 months apart. Twelve sera from HIV-1 antibody-negative individuals were used as negative control. PCR was performed with primers in LTR,
gag
and env regions: 11 of 40 samples were positive with three primer pairs, 16 with two primer pairs and 11 with only one primer pair. PCR on HIV-1 genomic cDNA was positive in 38 out of the 40 plasma or serum samples (95%), regardless of the clinical stage of the infection: HIV-1 was detected in 14 of the 15 untreated subjects and in 24 of the 25 AZT-treated patients. HIV p24 antigen was detected in the serum of 38% of subjects (15 of 40). The results suggest that this method is suitable for the detection of viral particles in plasma or serum from HIV-1-infected individuals irrespective of antiviral treatment.
...
PMID:The polymerase chain reaction for the detection of HIV-1 genomic RNA in plasma from infected individuals. 171 16
The RNA- and DNA-dependent DNA polymerase activities of two point mutants of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase lacking ribonuclease H activity have been compared to the wild-type enzyme activities using substrates consisting of an oligodeoxynucleotide primer hybridized to either a RNA or a DNA template. The RNase H phenotype had a negligible effect on the steady-state kinetics and processivity of reverse transcription of a homopolymer template-primer [poly(A).oligo(dT)]. However, analysis of the distribution of DNA products indicated that the ability of the mutants to reverse-transcribe a specifically primed 345-nucleotide heteropolymeric RNA template derived from the
gag
region of HIV-1 was impaired relative to the wild-type enzyme. Although the wild-type and mutant enzymes shared the same pause sites of synthesis along the RNA template, certain prematurely terminated nascent primer chains were poorly extended by the mutant enzymes and hence accumulated, suggesting that a catalytically functional
RNase
domain facilitated reinitiation of DNA synthesis at specific pause sites along a heteropolymer template. In contrast, the processivity and product distribution of DNA synthesis directed by a heteropolymer
gag
DNA template of the same nucleotide sequence were not significantly influenced by the RNase H phenotype of the mutants.
...
PMID:Analysis of the RNA- and DNA-dependent DNA polymerase activities of point mutants of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase lacking ribonuclease H activity. 171 22
A novel endogenous retroviral sequence (ERV-9) has been isolated from a human embryonal carcinoma cDNA library by hybridization to a probe containing a recently described human repetitive element. DNA sequence analysis of the 4kb cDNA insert (pHE.1) revealed the presence of ORFs potentially coding for putative retrovirus-related
gag
, pol and env proteins. Northern blot and
RNase
protection experiments showed that RNA homologous to the pHE.1 insert is detected only in embryonal carcinoma cells as a 8 kb mRNA, and its expression is negatively regulated during retinoic acid induced differentiation of the human teratocarcinoma cell line NT2/D1. Using a pol specific probe we have isolated a genomic locus containing the ERV-9 sequences. Characterization by restriction enzyme analysis and DNA sequencing allowed us to define LTR-like sequences, that are composed by a complex array of subrepetitive elements. In addition we show that ERV-9 LTR sequences are capable to drive expression of linked CAT gene in a cell specific manner as LTR promoter activity has been detected only in NT2/D1 cells.
...
PMID:Identification and characterization of novel human endogenous retroviral sequences prefentially expressed in undifferentiated embryonal carcinoma cells. 202 59
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) has been implicated in the generation of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-associated neurological dysfunction, and it is believed that the presence of CD4 in the nervous system may be involved in the susceptibility of selected neural cell populations to HIV-1 infection. We previously demonstrated (B. Wigdahl, R. A. Guyton, and P. S. Sarin, Virology 159:440-445, 1987) that glial cells derived from human fetal dorsal root ganglion (DRG) are susceptible to HIV-1 infection and subsequently express at least a fraction of the virus genome. In contrast to HIV-1 infection of CD4+ lymphocytes, which can be blocked by treatment with monoclonal antibodies directed against the HIV-1-binding region of CD4 (T4A epitope), treatment of human fetal DRG glial cells with similar antibodies resulted in only a slight reduction in HIV-1-specific
gag
antigen expression. In addition, preincubation of the HIV-1 inoculum prior to infection with HIV-1-neutralizing antiserum did not reduce HIV-1
gag
antigen expression in these cells. Furthermore, we were unable to detect the synthesis or accumulation of the CD4 molecule in neural cell populations derived from DRG. However, a protected CD4-specific RNA fragment was detected in RNA isolated from human fetal DRG and spinal cord tissue by an
RNase
protection assay with a CD4-specific antisense RNA probe. RNA blot hybridization analysis of total cellular RNA isolated from human fetal DRG and spinal cord demonstrated specific hybridization to an RNA species that comigrated with the mature 3.0-kilobase CD4 mRNA as well as two unique CD4 RNA species with relative molecular sizes of approximately 5.3 and 6.7 kilobases. Furthermore, all three CD4-related RNA species were polyadenylated when isolated from human fetal spinal cord tissue. These data suggest that HIV-1 infection of human fetal DRG glial cells may proceed via a mechanism of viral entry independent of the T4A epitope of CD4.
...
PMID:Infection of human fetal dorsal root ganglion glial cells with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 involves an entry mechanism independent of the CD4 T4A epitope. 247 71
High molecular weight DNA of up to 20 kbp and, additionally, an
RNase
-insensitive RNA of more than 60 b were isolated from plasmapheresis fluids taken from patients with active systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Similar nucleic acids could not be demonstrated in the plasma samples from patients with Waldenstroem's disease, rheumatoid arthritis, myasthenia gravis, and other diseases including active systemic disorders. The purified nucleic acids were analyzed in several ways; they proved to be immunogenic by inducing polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies to natural DNA as well as to synthetic polynucleotides (e.g. polyguanylic acid) after injection into experimental animals (rabbits or mice respectively). Biochemical and molecular cloning analysis of the DNA revealed features like high levels of CpG-dinucleotides, usually not observed in common human DNA. A possible exogenous origin was substantiated by comparative sequence studies of cloned plasma DNA, which showed homologies to human retroviruses, e.g. PL1 (85%/60 b) and the sequences of the
gag
and pol genes of human immunodeficiency virus type I (85%/157 b). Experiments applying isolated plasma nucleic acids in transfection experiments showed the induction of morphological changes in an EBV-immortalized B-cell line drawn from a healthy human donor, such as vacuolization and syncitia formation. Northern blot analysis demonstrated, exclusively in the transfected cell line, the expression of mRNA homologous to the cloned plasma DNA. Using this clone as a probe, homologous sequences could be demonstrated by Northern blot analysis in EBV-immortalized cell lines from SLE patients only and, by means of DNA amplification, in peripheral blood lymphocytes from SLE and AIDS patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Are retroviruses involved in the pathogenesis of SLE? Evidence demonstrated by molecular analysis of nucleic acids from SLE patients' plasma. 269 25
A transformation-defective (td) deletion mutant of Moloney murine sarcoma virus (td Mo-MSV) and a transforming component termed Mo-MSV 3 were cloned from a stock of clone 3 Mo-MSV. To define the defect of the transforming function, the RNA of td Mo-MSV was compared with those of Mo-MSV 3 and of another transforming variant termed Mo-MSV 124 and with helper Moloney murine leukemia virus (Mo-MuLV). The RNA monomers of td Mo-MSV and Mo-MSV 3 comigrated on polyacrylamide gels and were estimated to be 4.8 kilobases (kb) in length. In agreement with previous analyses, the RNA of Mo-MSV 124 measured 5.5 kb and that of Mo-MuLV measured 8.5 kb. The interrelationships among the viral RNAs were studied by fingerprinting and mapping of
RNase
T(1)-resistant oligonucleotides (T(1)-oligonucleotides) and by identification of T(1)-oligonucleotides present in hybrids formed by a given viral RNA with cDNA's made from another virus. The nontransforming td Mo-MSV RNA lacked most of the Mo-MSV-specific sequence, i.e., the four 3'-proximal T(1)-oligonucleotides of the six T(1)-oligonucleotides that are shared by the Mo-MSV-specific sequences of Mo-MSV 3 and Mo-MSV 124. The remaining two Mo-MSV-specific oligonucleotides identified td Mo-MSV as a deletion mutant of MSV rather than a deletion mutant of Mo-MuLV. td Mo-MSV and Mo-MSV 124 exhibited similar deletions of
gag
, pol, and env sequences which were less extensive than those of Mo-MSV 3. Hence, td Mo-MSV is not simply a deletion mutant of Mo-MSV 3. In addition to their MSV-specific sequences, all three MSV variants, including td Mo-MSV, shared the terminal sequences probably encoding the proviral long terminal repeat, which differed from their counterpart in Mo-MuLV. This may indirectly contribute to the oncogenic potential of MSV. A comparison of td Mo-MSV sequences with either Mo-MSV 124 or Mo-MSV 3 indicated directly, in a fashion similar to the deletion analyses which defined the src gene of avian sarcoma viruses, that Mo-MuLV-unrelated sequences of Mo-MSV are necessary for transformation. A definition of transformation-specific sequences of Mo-MSV by deletion analysis confirmed and extended previous analyses which have identified Mo-MuLV-unrelated sequences in Mo-MSV RNA and other studies which have described transformation of mouse 3T3 fibroblasts upon transfection with DNAs containing the Mo-MSV-specific sequence.
...
PMID:Isolation of a transformation-defective deletion mutant of Moloney murine sarcoma virus. 707 52
We have previously demonstrated the presence of a reverse transcriptase-like enzyme in retroviral particles from patients with essential thrombocythemia, polycythemia vera, and chronic myelogenous leukemia. It was subsequently shown that the human genome contains 50 copies of HERV-K. HERV-K is a human endogenous class I retroviral element that contains
gag
, pol, and env open reading frames. Using both reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and
ribonuclease
protection assays, it is demonstrated that the HERV-K pol is expressed in human blood leukocytes. The data indicates that this expression is restricted in CML white cells and is the result of gene regulation.
...
PMID:Expression of human endogenous retrovirus (HERV-K) in chronic myeloid leukemia. 750 41
When designed to cleave a target RNA in trans, the hammerhead ribozyme contains two antisense flanks which form helix I and helix III by pairing with the complementary target RNA. The sequences forming helix II are contained on the ribozyme strand and represent a major structural component of the hammerhead structure. In the case of an inhibitory 429 nucleotides long trans-ribozyme (2as-Rz12) which was directed against the 5'-leader/
gag
region of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), helix II was not pre-formed in the single-stranded molecule. Thus, major structural changes are necessary before cleavage can occur. To study whether pre-formation of helix II in the non-paired 2as-Rz12 RNA could influence the observed cleavage rate in vitro and its inhibitory activity on HIV-1 replication, we extended the 4 base pair helix II of 2as-Rz12 to 6, 10, 21, and 22 base pairs respectively. Limited
RNase
cleavage reactions performed in vitro at 37 degrees C and at physiological ion strength indicated that a helix II of the hammerhead domain was pre-formed when its length was at least six base pairs. This modification neither affected the association rate with target RNA nor the cleavage rate in vitro. In contrast to this, extension of helix II led to a significantly decreased inhibition of HIV-1 replication in human cells. Together with the finding of others that shortening of helix II to less than two base pairs reduces the catalytic activity in vitro, this observation indicates that the length of helix II in the naturally occurring RNAs with a hammerhead domain is already close or identical to the optimal length for catalytic activity in vitro and in vivo.
...
PMID:Extension of helix II of an HIV-1-directed hammerhead ribozyme with long antisense flanks does not alter kinetic parameters in vitro but causes loss of the inhibitory potential in living cells. 752 30
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