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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)
Bovine pancreatic ribonuclease is a DNA "melting" protein, since it binds with greater overall affinity to the single-stranded than to the double-stranded form of natural and synthetic deoxyribose-containing polynucleotides. As such, the DNA-
RNase
system provides a simple model for the more complex and biologically relevant melting protein-nucleic acid systems. Aspects of the DNA-
RNase
interactions which are related to the quantitative assessment of this system as a melting protein model are investigated here. A boundary sedimentation velocity technique is used to measure thermodynamic parameters of the interaction; association constants (Kh and Kc) and site sizes (nh and nc) are determined for the interaction of
ribonuclease
with native (double helical) and denatured (random coil) DNA. It is shown that log Kh and log Kc are linear functions of log [Na+], binding decreasing with increasing Na+ concentration, with Kh about 2 orders of magnitude smaller than Kc at the ionic strengths studied, nh and nc are approximately 8 and approximately 11 nucleotide residues, respectively, indicating that potential binding sites overlap. Binding to both forms of DNA is non-cooperative. It is shown by CD and ultraviolet spectroscopy that the binding of
RNase
to single- and double-stranded DNA perturbs the conformations of these polynucleotide conformations very little relative to the unliganded structures. Hydrodynamic methods are used to show that
RNase
binds to native DNA without altering the overall solution structure of the latter; however conditons which permit binding to, and stabilization of, transiently exposed single-stranded sequences result in a
collapse
of the stiff native DNA structure. We demonstrate by melting transition studies that
ribonuclease
does bring about an equilibrium destabilization of native DNA and poly [d(A-T)] and, by applying a ligand-perturbed helic in equilibrium coil theory developed by McGhee (McGhee, J.D. (1976) Biopolymers 15, 1345-1375), it is shown that the extent of the observed destabilization is in semiquantitative accord with expectations based on the measured affinity constants and site sizes for
RNase
binding to both DNA conformations. Spectral methods are used to show that the relative stability of native DNA sequences of varying base composition is the same in the presence and absence of
ribonuclease
, strongly arguing that this "melting" ligand "traps" single-stranded sequences transiently exposed by thermal fluctuations.
RNase
also undergoes an order in equilibrium disorder conformational transition as a function of temperature (the denatured form of
RNase
stabilizes native DNA, while native
RNase
destabilizes the native double helix), and the coupled equilibria involved in these interacting conformational changes are interpreted and discussed as possible models of genome regulatory interactions.
...
PMID:DNA "melting" proteins. I. Effects of bovine pancreatic ribonuclease binding on the conformation and stability of DNA. 99 11
The kinetics of unfolding and refolding of porcine
ribonuclease
were investigated. The unfolded state of this protein was found to consist of a fast-refolding species (UF) and two slow-refolding species (UIS and UIIS). After the rapid
collapse
of the structure during the N (native)----UF unfolding reaction, UIS and UIIS are produced from UF by two independent slow isomerizations of the unfolded polypeptide chain, leading ultimately to a mixture of about 10% UF, 20% UIIS and 70% UIS molecules at equilibrium. This is at variance with all other ribonucleases investigated to date, which show a distribution of 20% UF, 60 to 70% UIIS and only 10 to 20% UIS. The two isomerizations of the unfolded porcine protein differ strongly in rate. The first process with tau = 250 seconds (10 degrees C) leads to an increase in the fluorescence of Tyr92 and was identified as cis in equilibrium trans isomerization of Pro93. At equilibrium, most unfolded molecules contain an incorrect trans Pro93. The second isomerization is much slower (tau = 1300 s at 10 degrees C) and leads to a predominance of the incorrect isomer as well. Like isomerization of Pro93, it is governed by an activation enthalpy of 22 kcal/mol (92 kJ/mol) and it was tentatively assigned to the Pro114-Pro115 sequence of porcine
ribonuclease
. Because of the wide separation in rate between the two reactions, molecules with an incorrect isomer only at Pro93 accumulate transiently after unfolding. These are the UIIS molecules. Most of them are finally converted to UIS by the 1300 second process. All molecules that have undergone this isomerization refold very slowly, i.e. the UIS molecules. The major fraction contains two incorrect isomers. A 1300 second isomerization after unfolding and a predominant very slow refolding reaction were observed only for the porcine protein. We suggest that these changes in the folding mechanism may be correlated with the presence of the Pro114-Pro115 sequence, which occurs only in porcine
ribonuclease
. The refolding pathway of porcine UIIS involves the rapid formation of a native-like intermediate with an incorrect trans Pro93 as was found previously for the bovine
ribonuclease
, where the UIIS species predominates in the unfolded state.
...
PMID:Folding mechanism of porcine ribonuclease. 380 74
An electron microscopy study has been made of the effects of dissolution of the plasma membrane of Escherichia coli with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) on the organization of the nucleoplasm and the cytoplasm. The alterations observed in time course experiments were related to absorbance changes and to release of macromolecules from the cells. As the cells became plasmolyzed, under the conditions used, the first visible effect of SDS was a
collapse
of the plasmolysis spaces. This was accompanied by a displacement of the nuclear material which then appeared in broad contact with the redeployed plasma membrane. This initial displacement of nuclear material to the cell border may indicate an association between the nucleoplasm and the plasma membrane. Upon further dissolution of the plasma membrane, the nuclear material receded from the cell margin and contracted into an axial filament. Meanwhile, the cytoplasm dissociated into an amorphous, Pronase-sensitive component and an electron-opaque, granular one sensitive to
ribonuclease
. The latter represented one continuous area of ribosomal structures surrounding the nucleoplasm, an organization which did not occur when the cells were inhibited with rifamycin before SDS treatment. During prolonged SDS interaction, approximately 65% of the cellular protein, 25% of the ribonucleic acid and 40% of the deoxyribonucleic acid were released from the cells concomitant with the disappearance of the amorphous cytoplasmic part, expansion of the ribosomal aggregate, and rearrangement of the nuclear material at the cell periphery. The observations support the contention that all ribosomal structures bear a direct relationship with the nucleoplasm.
...
PMID:Effects of treatment with sodium dodecyl sulfate on the ultrastructure of Escherichia coli. 455 30
Aldehyde-fixed rat tissues were variously dehydrated and impregnated in water-miscible 2-hydroxypropyl methacrylate (HPMA) containing 3 to 20 per cent water and 0.1 per cent alpha,alpha-azobisisobutyronitrile as catalyst for subsequent polymerization with ultraviolet light. Heat polymerization was also effective. Blocks of embedded tissue readily gave ultrathin sections, which required staining by uranyl acetate and/or lead stains to give adequate contrast for electron microscopy. The ultrastructure of pancreas, kidney, muscle, and intestine was well preserved by aldehyde fixation alone. Use of postfixation in osmium tetroxide or direct osmium tetroxide fixation was unsatisfactory. The fine structure of aldehyde-fixed liver from fasted rats was well preserved, whereas that from normal rats showed considerable disorganization and
collapse
, apparently because of extraction of glycogen during the embedding procedure. Enzymatic extraction of proteins by pepsin and of ribonucleic acid by
ribonuclease
after either formaldehyde or glutaraldehyde fixation was rapidly effected by direct treatment of ultrathin sections with solutions of the enzymes. In contrast, no digestion of chromatin by deoxyribonuclease could be detected. In spite of this present limitation, HPMA appears to have several advantages over earlier water-miscible embedding media for electron microscopy and to be particularly suitable for ultrastructural cytochemistry.
...
PMID:Hydroxypropyl methacrylate, a new water-miscible embedding medium for electron microscopy. 585 16
A cytochemical and electron microscope study has been made of leaves of sugar beet infected with beet yellows virus. Inclusions of particles, which agree in size with beet yellows virus particles isolated by other investigators, have been localized in the ground cytoplasm, in the chloroplasts, and in the nuclei. These particles are circa 100 A in diameter and have an electron-transparent core of 30 to 40 A. Use of acridine orange, azure B, and pyronine Y has revealed that the cytoplasmic inclusion bodies, which consist wholly of the elongate particles, have a strong RNA reaction removable by
RNase
pretreatment. Particles observed in the chloroplasts may or may not be associated with lipid spheres. If they are, the particles are confined to the periphery of the spheres. In this position the particles are arranged tangentially and are further arranged parallel into groups which lie at various angles to one another. Within the groups the particles are regularly spaced in a three dimensional lattice. Particles located free in the stromal regions are often arranged regularly in curved rows which lie parallel to one another so that a three dimensional lattice is formed. The dispersed and compact forms of virus inclusions are described and related to the condition of the associated cytoplasm. The ground cytoplasm of cells associated with the sieve elements contains numerous ribosomes. A decrease in the number of ribosomes is concomitant with the increase in size of virus aggregations in a cell. Vesiculation of some component of the cytoplasm occurs during the period of virus replication. The vesicles are approximately 100 mmicro in diameter and could be derived from the dictyosomes. At later stages of infection these vesicles
collapse
and convoluted membranous material appears.
...
PMID:Ultrastructural features of Beta leaves infected with beet yellows virus. 597 43
Heat shock induces changes in G1 CHO cell nuclear matrix (NM) ultrastructure that may be related to heat-induced nuclear protein accumulation (Wachsberger and Coss, 1993, J. Cell. Physiol., 155:615-634). The present study quantitates recovery of alterations in NM fine structure in CHO cells heated in G1 and compares structural recovery with recovery of bulk RNA synthesis and surviving fraction (SF). Morphology of NM preparations was quantified 30 min and 20 hr following heat shock by 1) measurement of the number of fiber anastomosing points per unit area per NM, and 2) measurement of the length of fibers between points of anastomoses within individual NMs. Architectural recovery was nearly complete within 20 hr in cells heated at 43 degrees C or 45 degrees C with SFs of 0.27 or greater. No recovery of architecture was observed in heated cells with SFs of approximately 0.01 or less. The residual damage to NMs was associated with RNA-containing fiber networks as determined by means of
RNase
gold labeling. Recovery from inhibition of RNA synthesis following heat shock was related to recovery of NM architecture. It is suggested that 1) repair of NM architecture does not require full recovery of bulk RNA synthesis, and 2) partial or complete irreversible
collapse
of the NM may be responsible, in part, for heat-induced, interphase cell death.
...
PMID:Recovery of nuclear matrix ultrastructure of interphase CHO cells after heat shock. 751 8
Hydrogen-deuterium exchange of 39 amide protons of Bacillus amyloliquefaciens
ribonuclease
(barnase) was analyzed by two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance in the presence of micromolar concentrations of the molecular chaperones GroEL and SecB. Both chaperones bound to native barnase under physiological conditions and catalyzed exchange of deeply buried amide protons with solvent. Such exchange required complete unfolding of barnase, which occurred in the complex with the chaperones. Subsequent
collapse
of unfolded barnase to the exchange-protected folding intermediate was markedly slowed in the presence of GroEL or SecB. Thus, both chaperones have the potential to correct misfolding in proteins by annealing.
...
PMID:Catalysis of amide proton exchange by the molecular chaperones GroEL and SecB. 857 Nov 25
Pressure denaturation of Escherichia coli
ribonuclease
HI (
RNase
HI) was studied by Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) and two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy at pD* 3.0 and 25 degrees C. A reversible transition in the pressure range of 0.1-1090 MPa was observed with second-derivative FTIR experiments. A cooperative and gradual denaturation, involving both the secondary and tertiary structures, was observed between 240 and 450 MPa. The two peaks at 1629 and 1652 cm(-1), due to beta-strands and alpha-helices, respectively, did not fully disappear after the denaturation, and are different from the spectra of the random coil peptides. The hydrogen-deuterium exchange rates of the individual backbone amide protons were determined by heteronuclear NMR combined with the pressure-jump technique at 500, 650, and 850 MPa. Although most of the amides protected in the native structure are also highly protected in the pressure-denatured state, the rate constants (0.048 +/- 0.007 min(-1)) for the amide protons at 500 MPa are similar regardless of their locations, which is an indication of the EX1 mechanism of hydrogen-deuterium exchange. The pressure-denatured state of
RNase
HI at 500 MPa represents a novel denatured state, which is different from a typical molten globule state at atmospheric pressure (0.1 MPa), from the viewpoint of the homogeneous rate constants. The observations at 650 MPa are essentially the same as those at 500 MPa. However, at 850 MPa, the amide exchange rates for the highly hydrophobic C-terminal half of alpha-helix I are significantly slower than those for the other part of the protein, which can be interpreted as a hydrophobic
collapse
centered at the C-terminal half of alpha-helix I.
...
PMID:Pressure-denatured state of Escherichia coli ribonuclease HI as monitored by Fourier transform infrared and NMR spectroscopy. 992 68
Using quantitative immunoelectron microscopy we show here that when the nuclear matrix is isolated from rat hepatocytes in the presence of an inhibitor of
RNase
activity both lamins and the nuclear mitotic apparatus protein (NuMA) preferentially localize within the electron-dense domains of the internal nuclear matrix (INM). After RNA digestion NuMA undergoes a sharp depletion, while labeling by an antibody against lamins A and C within the electron-transparent regions increases, suggesting that a subset of lamin epitopes is masked by the interaction with RNA. We were able to explain this result by visualizing for the first time a thin web of lamin protofibrils which connects the electron-dense regions. Confirmation of these changes has been obtained by immunoblot analysis and confocal microscopy. As RNA digestion results both in the release of NuMA and in the
collapse
of the INM, we propose that a fraction of nuclear RNA brings about the association of NuMA islands with a lamin scaffold and that this interaction is required to maintain the latter in a state of high molecular dispersion.
...
PMID:Unraveling the organization of the internal nuclear matrix: RNA-dependent anchoring of NuMA to a lamin scaffold. 1224 46
Pear (Pyrus pyrifolia L.) has a S-
RNase
-based gametophytic self-incompatibility (SI) mechanism, and S-
RNase
has also been implicated in the rejection of self-pollen and genetically identical pollen. No studies, however, have examined the extent of organelle alterations during the SI response in Pyrus pyrifolia. Consequently, this study focused on the alterations to mitochondria and nuclear DNA in incompatible pollen tubes of the pear. Methylthiazolyldiphenyl-tetrazolium bromide was used to evaluate the viability of pollen tubes under S-
RNase
challenge. The results showed that the viability of the control and compatible pollen tubes decreased slightly, but that of the incompatible pollen and pollen tubes began to decline at 30 min. The mitochondrial membrane potential (Delta psi(mit)) was also tested with rhodamine 123 30 min after SI challenge, and was shown to have collapsed in the incompatible pollen tubes after exposure to S-
RNase
. Western blotting 2 h after SI challenge confirmed that the Delta psi(mit)
collapse
induced leakage of cytochrome c into the cytosol. Swollen mitochondria were detected by transmission electron microscopy as early as 1 h after SI challenge and the degradation of nuclear DNA was observed by both 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole and transferase-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling. These diagnostic features of programmed cell death (PCD) suggested that PCD may specifically occur in incompatible pollen tubes.
...
PMID:S-RNase triggers mitochondrial alteration and DNA degradation in the incompatible pollen tube of Pyrus pyrifolia in vitro. 1878 82
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