Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.1.27.1 (
RNase
)
16,360
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Bleomycin (BLM) exclusively affects thymidine-containing compounds such as DNA and polydeoxyribonucleotides by releasing free thymine and leaving aldehyde functions. Molecular morphology and base sequence of the DNA strongly influence BLM activity. High BLM concentrations, besides modifying DNA into oligothyminic or athyminic nucleic acids, cause strand scissions. Enzymatic DNA and RNA synthesis is strongly influenced by BLM. The inhibition in DNA-dependent DNA polymerase and DNA-dependent RNA polymerase assays is of the non-competitive type. Protein biosynthesis in in vitro systems is not affected by BLM even at high concentrations. BLM turns out to be a strong inhibitor of DNase I and of
DNase II
; the inhibition is of the competitive type. The enzymatic activities of nucleases using RNA as substrate (RNase A,
RNase
B, Rnase T1, venom phosphodiesterase I and spleen phosphodiesterase II) are not influenced by this antibiotic. The antibiotic reduces cell proliferation (L5178y mouse lymphoma cells) in vitro in low concentrations by cytostasis and at higher concentrations by cytotoxicity. In BLM-treated L5178y cells, DNA synthesis is strongly reduced, while RNA and protein synthesis are not affected. In vivo, using growing quail oviducts, cell proliferation and cytodifferentiation are markedly inhibited after BLM treatment. This is attributed to the observed inhibition of DNA synthesis. RNA and protein synthesis as well as gene expression are not influenced by BLM under the conditions used. The selective inhibition of DNA synthesis in vivo may be caused by the following mechanisms: (1) competition of BLM with RNA; (2) blocking of the accessibility of DNA in chromatin to BLM, and (3) dependence from the repair processes. BLM inhibits growth of sarcomas, induced by oncogenic RNA viruses in vivo; well-developed tumours show regression after BLM treatment. Transformation of chick embryo fibroblasts by oncogenic RNA viruses in vitro and growth of these viruses is blocked by BLM; the most sensitive period for BLM inhibition is the time during the first period (integration of viral genome into cellular genome?) after infection.
...
PMID:Effect of bleomycin on DNA, RNA, protein, chromatin and on cell transformation by oncogenic RNA viruses. 6 69
Author followed up the activity of the three enzymes involved in the catabolism of nucleic acids--acid deoxyribonulease (
DNase II
), alkaline ribonuclease (RNase I), and
acid ribonuclease
(
RNase II
)--in the denervated gastrocnemius and soleus muscles of rats for 28 postoperative days. The activity of both acid nucleases increased in both types of denervated muscles, compared with the respective controls. Up to the 14th postoperative day, the activity excess of both acid nucleases was more significant in the m. gastrocnemius than in the m. soleus. The RNase I ran below the control activity during the whole period in the m. soleus and up to the 14th day in the m. gastrocnemius. The role of nucleases and nuclease inhibitors in the changes of nucleic acid catabolism in neurogenic muscular atrophies is discussed.
...
PMID:Effect of neurectomy on nuclease activity in skeletal muscles of rats. 61 95
To clarify the relationship between changes in serum pancreatic enzymes and pathological changes in pancreatic parenchyma, this study was performed by using rat models with acute pancreatitis. The models were rats with edematous and necrotizing pancreatitis. Amylase, lipase,
ribonuclease
(
RNase
), and deoxyribonuclease (DNase I, II) in the serum were determined for 48 h after the development of pancreatitis. Amylase and lipase levels rose directly in both pancreatitis groups. These enzymes in the necrotizing pancreatitis group were higher than those in the edematous pancreatitis group, but there was no significant difference.
RNase
levels also rose markedly, but there was no obvious difference between either of the pancreatitis groups. On the other hand, DNase levels were high in the necrotizing pancreatitis group but low in the edematous pancreatitis group, with significant differences between the two groups, especially in the
DNase II
levels over a 36-h period (p less than 0.05-0.01). Therefore, these results suggest that serum DNase levels reveal the necrotizing changes in pancreatic parenchyma.
...
PMID:Relationship between pancreatic enzymes and pathological changes in the pancreas in acute pancreatitis. The significance of determination of serum deoxyribonuclease. 247 54
Phosphodiesterase I [EC 3.1.4.1] was purified from normal human urine in a highly purified state free from phosphodiesterase II,
RNase
, DNase I,
DNase II
, and phosphatase by column chromatographies of DEAE-Toyopearl, butyl-Toyopearl, Affi-Gel blue, and Sephadex G-150. The molecular weight of the enzyme was 1.9 x 10(5) and the pH optimum around 9.0 with p-nitrophenyl deoxythymidine 5'-phosphate as the substrate. The enzyme hydrolyzed the 3'-5' linkage of various dinucleoside monophosphates at approximately the same rate and the phosphodiester bonds of cyclic 3',5'-mononucleotides to produce mononucleoside 5'-phosphate. The enzyme also hydrolyzed ADP to 5'-AMP and Pi, ATP to 5'-AMP and PPi, and NAD+ to 5'-AMP and NMN. The enzyme activity was abolished by removal of metal ions with EDTA, and the metal-free enzyme was reactivated on the addition of Zn2+. The enzyme activity was also abolished by some reducing agents and the inhibition was reversed by Zn2+. The metal-free enzyme was less stable than the native enzyme, and Zn2+ and Co2+ restored the stability of the metal-free enzyme to the level of the native enzyme. The enzyme degraded oligonucleotides and high molecular nucleotides stepwise from the 3'-termini to give 5'-mononucleotides. The enzyme hydrolyzed single-stranded DNA more preferentially than double-stranded DNA. The enzyme also nicked superhelical covalently closed circular phi X174 DNA to yield first open circular DNA and then linear DNA.
...
PMID:Phosphodiesterase I in human urine: purification and characterization of the enzyme. 282 85
A macromolecule binding 3H-methylcholanthrene (3H-MCA) and 3H-benzo(a)pyrene (3H-BaP) and sedimenting in the 4-5 S region of sucrose gradient (4.5 S) was identified in rat liver cytosol. The binding was displaced by 100-fold molar excess unlabeled ligands whereas 2,3,7,8-tetrachloro-dibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) was ineffective. The dissociation constant for both polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) was of the order of 10(-8) M or lower. Both 3H-MCA and 3H-BaP bound to 4.5 S in a non covalent manner, since 92% of the bound radioactivity was extractable with ethyl ether. Furthermore the binding was strongly reduced by urea 8 M and by guanidine. HCl 4 M (99 and 70% respectively). Thin layer chromatography of the ethyl ether-solubilized radioactivity showed a peak comigrating with PAHs used as standards. When chromatographed on Sephadex G-200, 4.5 S was eluted as a sharp peak with an apparent molecular weight of 50-60,000 daltons. Enzyme treatment of liver cytosol showed that the 4.5 S binding sites were destroyed by micrococcal nuclease (92% of inhibition). Papain and phosphodiesterase I and II reduced the binding to 50%, whereas DNase I,
DNase II
,
RNase
, phospholipase A2 and C and trypsin were ineffective. These data suggest that the PAHs binding macromolecule of rat liver cytosol is a protein associated with a polynucleotide. The binding of both PAHs was enhanced by increasing the incubation temperature, the maximum being reached after 20-30 min at 37 degrees C. After 2.5 min at 65 degrees C, binding sites were completely destroyed. The same temperature-induced "activation" was obtained also by prewarming the cytosol at 37 degrees C in the absence of ligands.
...
PMID:Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon binding macromolecules. Identification, characterization and temperature activation of a 4.5 S binding nucleoprotein. 406 Feb 44
The acid deoxyribonucleases [
DNase II
; EC 3.1.4.6] in human urine were purified approximately 400- to 500-fold by phosphocellulose chromatography, gel filtration on Sephadex G-75 and isoelectric focusing, with a total recovery of 22%. The enzymes were present in a least three forms with different isoelectric points, pHs 6.4, 6.6, and 6.8. However, other properties were essentially similar. The enzymes did not require divalent cations for activity, and the optimal pHs were at 5.1 to 5.3 in 33 mM acetate buffer. They had a molecular weight of around 36,000, as estimated by gel filtration on Sephadex G-75. The enzymes were endonucleases which hydrolyzed native, double-stranded DNA about 5 to 15 times faster than thermally denatured DNA. The products formed from native DNA were 3'-phosphoryl- and 5'-hydroxy-terminated oligonucleotides. The average chain length of the limit digests with these enzymes was approximately 11 to 15, and the major fragments were longer than pentanucleotides. The final preparations were free of nonspecific acid and alkaline phosphatases and phosphodiesterase, but contained contaminating
ribonuclease
activity.
...
PMID:Purification and properties of deoxyribonuclease II from human urine. 624 3
The effects of steroid-induced modifications of chromatin structure on the extent and sites of chloroethylnitrosourea binding to chromatin were studied using log-phase HeLa cells. The cells were exposed to 0.1 to 2.0 microM hydrocortisone for 22 hr; this resulted in depressed DNA synthesis while transcriptional activity was stimulated. Hydrocortisone had no effect upon cellular or nuclear uptake of the two nitrosoureas under study, 0.6 mM chlorozotocin or 1-(2-chloroethyl-3-cyclohexyl-1-nitrosourea). Both drugs were found to alkylate transcriptional chromatin preferentially, as demonstrated by
DNase II
and DNase I digestion. This alkylation was stimulated 2-fold by the same micromolar concentrations of hydrocortisone, 0.1 to 2.0 microM, which stimulated transcription. The extent of nuclear RNA alkylation, determined using
RNase T2
as a probe, was found to contribute less than 20% of total chromatin alkylation and was unaffected by steroid pretreatment. Instead, the increased alkylation within these chromatin subfractions was attributed to a steroid-induced alteration of chromatin structure. Electron microscopic examination of HeLa nuclear morphology revealed a hydrocortisone-induced disaggregation of nuclear membrane-associated heterochromatin resulting in a more heterogeneous, less condensed distribution of chromatin. Such data are consistent with a relaxation of the supercoiled chromatin structure, resulting in increased transcription and increased accessibility of potential target sites for nitrosourea alkylation.
...
PMID:Influence of hydrocortisone on the binding of nitrosoureas to nuclear chromatin subfractions. 743 52
The activities and androgenic regulation of seven lysosomal enzymes viz. acid phosphatase, N-acetyl hexosaminidase, alpha-mannosidase, beta-glucuronidase,
DNase II
,
RNase II
and phospholipase A was established in caput, corpus and cauda segments of monkey epididymis. Estimation of enzyme activities in the the epididymis of control, castrated and castrated-androgen replaced monkeys revealed that all the enzymes except
RNase II
showed higher activity in caput and corpus as compared to cauda. The enzymes were reduced markedly after castration and on subsequent androgen replacement there was a significant stimulation of the repressed activities, but the control levels were not restored.
RNase II
showed highest activity in cauda which was further elevated after castration. The possible role of these enzymes in sperm maturation and disposal is discussed.
...
PMID:Activities and androgenic regulation of lysosomal enzymes in the epididymis of rhesus monkey. 858 24
Research into the use of new genetic markers is difficult and costly, but it is necessary for more accurate criminal individualization and paternity testing as well as for analysis of genetic diseases. Recently, we discovered that human
ribonuclease
(
RNase
), deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) and deoxyribonuclease II (
DNase II
) are characteristic markers showing genetic polymorphism and useful for forensic investigation. DNase I is particularly well suited to practical use, since it shows a well-balanced gene frequency, a high concentration in several body fluids (blood, sweat, urine, breast milk and semen) and tissues (pancreas, liver and kidney), stability against severe conditions (exposure of test samples to high temperature, high humidity and long-term storage), and easy and accurate detectability.
...
PMID:[Discovery of genetic polymorphism of human nucleases]. 895 29
Topo II alpha is considered an important constituent of the nuclear matrix, serving as a fastener of DNA loops to the underlying filamentous scaffolding network. To further define a mechanism of drug resistance to topo II poisons, we studied the quantity of topo II alpha associated with the nuclear matrix in drug-resistant SMR16 and parental cells in the presence and absence of VP-16. Nuclear matrices were prepared from nuclei isolated in EDTA buffer, followed by nuclease digestion with
DNase II
in the absence of
RNase
treatment and extraction with 2 M NaCl. Whole-mount spreading of residual structures permits, by means of isoform-specific antibody and colloidal-gold secondary antibodies, an estimate of the amount of topo II alpha in individual nuclear matrices. There are significant variations in topo II alpha amounts between individual nuclear matrices due to the cell cycle distribution. The parental cell line contained eight to ten times more nuclear matrix-associated topo II alpha than the resistant cell line matrices. Nuclear matrix-associated topo II alpha from wild-type and resistant cell lines correlated well with the immunofluorescent staining of the enzyme in nuclei of intact cells. The amount of DNA associated with residual nuclear structures was five times greater in the resistant cell line. This quantity of DNA was not proportional to the quantity of topo II alpha in the same matrix; in fact they were inversely related. In situ whole-mount nuclear matrix preparations were obtained from cells grown on grids and confirmed the results from labeling of isolated residual structures.
...
PMID:Quantitative immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy of the topoisomerase II alpha associated with nuclear matrices from wild-type and drug-resistant chinese hamster ovary cell lines. 932 45
1
2
Next >>