Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.27.3 (RNase T1)
1,228 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A method for the isolation of RNA fragments originating from defined regions of bacteriophage Qbeta RNA minus strands is described. Large RNase T1 oligonucleotides were isolated on a preparative scale from Qbeta RNA. The nucleotide sequences (13 to 26 nucleotides) and map positions of these oligonucleotides were known from previous work (Billeter, M. A. (1978) J. Biol. Chem. 253, 8381-8389). After addition of AMP residues (50 in the average) using terminal adenylate transferase, these pure oligonucleotides were hybridized to 32P-labeled Qbeta RNA minus strands synthesized in vitro. Fragments in the size range of 100 to 500 nucleotides were then generated by partial digestion with RNase T1. Fragments hybridized to such oligonucleotides were recovered by chromatography on poly(U)-Sephadex and then resolved according to their size by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The specificity and reproducibility of the method as well as its suitability for the sequence analysis of Qbeta RNA was verified by using in particular a linker oligonucleotide derived from a Qbeta RNA region near the 3' end. The sequence catalogues of the RNase T1 and RNase A oligonucleotides of two fragments isolated in this way, 202 and 310 nucleotides in length, were established and all fragments isolated were shown to contain a sequence complementary to the linker oligonucleotide.
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PMID:A hybridization procedure for the isolation of specific RNA segments applied to the analysis of bacteriophage Qbeta RNA. 10 41

The genomic complexity of visna virus was measured by quantitative analysis of 18 RNase T1-resistant oligonucleotides from 60-70S RNA. T1-resistant oligonucleotides were separated by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Visna virus had a genomic complexity of 3.6 X 10(6) daltons, very close to the size of a single 30-40S RNA subunit. It was therefore concluded that the visna virus genome is largely polyploid. Visna virus 60-70S RNA polyadenylic acid segment was purified by T1 RNase digestion followed by oligodeoxythymidylic acid-cellulose column chromatography. It contained over 99% AMP and had a size of about 200 nucleotides. The binding capacities on oligodeoxythymidylic acid-cellulose of native 60-70S RNA and purified 30-40S RNA subunits were examined. It was concluded that two out of three intact subunits contain a polyadenylic acid segment.
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PMID:Complexity and polyadenylic acid content of visna virus 60-70S RNA. 18 72

2-Thiocytidine 5'-triphosphate, s2CTP, is able to replace CTP as a substrate for tRNA nucleotidyltransferase. s2CMP can be incorporated into both cytidine sites of the C-C-A terminus common to all tRNAs, and in the absence of ATP into at least two additional positions. This was shown by alkylation of the 2-thiocytidine residues with iodo[14C]acetamide, total nucleoside analysis, microgel electrophoresis and analysis of RNase T1 fragments of these tRNAs. The incorporation of the 3'-terminal AMP is not influenced by the additional s2CMP residues at pH 9.0. However, at pH 7.6 the additional s2CMP residues are hydrolysed and AMP can be incorporated into the normal position. Two different tRNAs with terminal 2-thiocytidine alkylated by iodoacetamide inhibit tRNA nucleotidyltransferase. This inhibition is significantly slower if an elongated species is used compared to a tRNA with alkylated 2-thiocytidine in the normal position 75. The addition of 2-mercaptoethanol reactivates the enzyme and leads to a cytidine containing tRNA. This reaction identifies the attacking nucleophile of the enzyme as cysteine residue, which is probably identical to a cysteine residue found in a similar experiment reported previously. The mechanism of the enzymatic and chemical reactions is discussed.
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PMID:Reversible inactivation of tRNA nucleotidyltransferase from baker's yeast by tRNAPhe containing iodoacetamide-alkylated 2-thiocytidine in normal and additional positions. 37 62

Purified rat liver mitochondria were shown to synthesize poly(adenylic acid) (poly(A)) in vitro. Detection of the poly(A) synthesizing activity was facilitated by addition of NaF to the reaction was shown to be poly(A) by its insensitivity to digestion with pancreatic RNase and RNase T1, its degradation by venom phosphodiesterase and its retention on poly (uridylic acid) 20-23 AMP units and it was covalently attached to the endogenous RNA in the mitochondria. Poly(A) synthesis required ATP and a divalent ion and was maximally active in the pH range of 7-8. The reaction was inhibited by atractyloside, cordycepin triphosphate, Rose Bengal, rifamycin derivative AF/103, sodium pyrophosphate, and N-ethylmaleimide. These studies indicate that the mitochondrial poly(A) polymerase previously described in our laboratory (Jacob, S.T., Rose, K.M., and Morris, H.P. (1974), Biochim. Biophys. Acta 361, 312-320) is involved in the posttranscriptional addition of poly(A) sequence to mitochondrial RNA.
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PMID:Poly(adenylic acid) synthesis in isolated rat liver mitochondria. 99 Feb 63

The crystal structure of a mutant ribonuclease T1 (Y45W) complexed with a non-cognizable ribonucleotide, 2'AMP, has been determined and refined to an R-factor of 0.159 using X-ray diffraction data at 1.7 A resolution. A specific complex of the enzyme with 2'GMP was also determined and refined to an R-factor of 0.173 at 1.9 A resolution. The adenine base of 2'AMP was found at a base-binding site that is far apart from the guanine recognition site, where the guanine base of 2'GMP binds. The binding of the adenine base is mediated by a single hydrogen bond and stacking interaction of the base with the imidazole ring of His92. The mode of stacking of the adenine base with His92 is similar to the stacking of the guanine base observed in complexes of ribonuclease T1 with guanylyl-2',5'-guanosine, reported by Koepke et al., and two guanosine bases, reported by Lenz et al., and in the complex of barnase with d(GpC), reported by Baudet & Janin. These observations suggest that the site is non-specific for base binding. The phosphate group of 2'AMP is tightly locked at the catalytic site with seven hydrogen bonds to the enzyme in a similar manner to that of 2'GMP. In addition, two hydrogen bonds are formed between the sugar moiety of 2'AMP and the enzyme. The 2'AMP molecule adopts the anti conformation of the glycosidic bond and C-3'-exo sugar pucker, whereas 2'GMP is in the syn conformation with C-3'-endo-C'-2'-exo pucker. The mutation enhances the binding of 2'GMP with conformational changes of the sugar ring and displacement of the phosphate group towards the interior of the catalytic site from the corresponding position in the wild-type enzyme complex. Comparison of two crystal structures obtained provides a solution to the problem that non-cognizable nucleotides exhibit unexpectedly strong binding to the enzyme, compared with high specificity in nucleolytic activity. The results indicate that the discrimination of the guanine base from the other nucleotide bases at the guanine recognition site is more effective than that estimated from nucleotide-binding experiments so far.
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PMID:Three-dimensional structure of a mutant ribonuclease T1 (Y45W) complexed with non-cognizable ribonucleotide, 2'AMP, and its comparison with a specific complex with 2'GMP. 131 85

Phosphorescence and ODMR measurements have been made on ribonuclease T1 (RNase T1), the mutated enzyme RNase T1 (Y45W), and their complexes with 2'GMP and 2'AMP. It is not possible to observe the phosphorescence of Trp45 in RNase T1 (Y45W). Only that of the naturally occurring Trp59 is seen. The binding of 2'GMP to wild-type RNase T1 produces only a minor red shift in the phosphorescence and no change in the ODMR spectrum of Trp59. However, a new tryptophan 0,0-band is found 8.2 nm to the red of the Trp59 0,0-band in the 2'GMP complex of the mutated RNase T1 (Y45W). Wavelength-selected ODMR measurements reveal that the red-shifted emission induced by 2'GMP binding, assigned to Trp45, occurs from a residue with significantly different zero-field splittings than those of Trp59, a buried residue subject to local polar interactions. The phosphorescence red shift and the zero-field splitting parameters demonstrate that Trp45 is located in a polarizable environment in the 2'GMP complex. In contrast with 2'GMP, binding of 2'AMP to RNase T1 (Y45W) induces no observable phosphorescence emission from Trp45, but leads only to a minor red shift in the phosphorescence origin of Trp59 in both the mutated and wild-type enzyme. The lack of resolved phosphorescence emission from Trp45 in RNase T1 (Y45W) implies that the emission of this residue is quenched in the uncomplexed enzyme. We conclude that local conformational changes that occur upon binding 2'GMP remove quenching residues from the vicinity of Trp45, restoring its luminescence.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Phosphorescence and optically detected magnetic resonance measurements of the 2'AMP and 2'GMP complexes of a mutant ribonuclease T1 (Y45W) in solution: correlation with X-ray crystal structures. 132 71

On the basis of molecular dynamics and free-energy perturbation approaches, the Glu46Gln (E46Q) mutation in the guanine-specific ribonuclease T1 (RNase T1) was predicted to render the enzyme specific for adenine. The E46Q mutant was genetically engineered and characterized biochemically and crystallographically by investigating the structures of its two complexes with 2'AMP and 2'GMP. The ribonuclease E46Q mutant is nearly inactive towards dinucleoside phosphate substrates but shows 17% residual activity towards RNA. It binds 2'AMP and 2'GMP equally well with dissociation constants of 49 microM and 37 microM, in contrast to the wild-type enzyme, which strongly discriminates between these two nucleotides, yielding dissociation constants of 36 microM and 0.6 microM. These data suggest that the E46Q mutant binds the nucleotides not to the specific recognition site but to the subsite at His92. This was confirmed by the crystal structures, which also showed that the Gln46 amide is hydrogen bonded to the Phe100 N and O atoms, and tightly anchored in this position. This interaction may either have locked the guanine recognition site so that 2'AMP and 2'GMP are unable to insert, or the contribution to guanine recognition of Glu46 is so important that the E46Q mutant is unable to function in recognition of either guanine and adenine.
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PMID:RNase T1 mutant Glu46Gln binds the inhibitors 2'GMP and 2'AMP at the 3' subsite. 135 Jun 42

The modes of binding of adenosine 2'-monophosphate (2'-AMP) to the enzyme ribonuclease (RNase) T1 were determined by computer modelling studies. The phosphate moiety of 2'-AMP binds at the primary phosphate binding site. However, adenine can occupy two distinct sites--(1) The primary base binding site where the guanine of 2'-GMP binds and (2) The subsite close to the N1 subsite for the base on the 3'-side of guanine in a guanyl dinucleotide. The minimum energy conformers corresponding to the two modes of binding of 2'-AMP to RNase T1 were found to be of nearly the same energy implying that in solution 2'-AMP binds to the enzyme in both modes. The conformation of the inhibitor and the predicted hydrogen bonding scheme for the RNase T1-2'-AMP complex in the second binding mode (S) agrees well with the reported x-ray crystallographic study. The existence of the first mode of binding explains the experimental observations that RNase T1 catalyses the hydrolysis of phosphodiester bonds adjacent to adenosine at high enzyme concentrations. A comparison of the interactions of 2'-AMP and 2'-GMP with RNase T1 reveals that Glu58 and Asn98 at the phosphate binding site and Glu46 at the base binding site preferentially stabilise the enzyme-2'-GMP complex.
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PMID:Modes of binding of 2'-AMP to RNase T1. A computer modeling study. 152 9

Ribonuclease T1 was purified from an Escherichia coli overproducing strain and co-crystallized with adenosine 2'-monophosphate (2'-AMP) by microdialysis against 50% (v/v) 2-methyl-2,4-pentanediol in 20 mM sodium acetate, 2 mM calcium acetate, pH 4.2. The crystals have orthorhombic space group P2(1)2(1)2(1), with cell dimensions a = 48.93(1), b = 46.57(4), c = 41.04(2) A; Z = 4 and V = 93520 A3. The crystal structure was determined on the basis of the isomorphous structure of uncomplexed RNase T1 (Martinez-Oyanedel et al. (1991) submitted for publication) and refined by least squares methods using stereochemical restraints. The refinement was based on Fhkl of 7,445 reflections with Fo greater than or equal to 1 sigma (Fo) in the resolution range of 10-1.8 A, and converged at a crystallographic R factor of 0.149. The phosphate group of 2'-AMP is tightly hydrogen-bonded to the side chains of the active site residues Tyr38, His40, Glu58, Arg77, and His92, comparable with vanadate binding in the respective complex (Kostrewa, D., Choe, H.-W., Heinemann, U., and Saenger, W. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 7592-7600) and different from the complex with guanosine 2'-monophosphate (Arni, R., Heinemann, U., Tokuoka, R., and Saenger, W. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 15358-15368) where the phosphate does not interact with Arg77 and His92. The adenosine moiety is not located in the guanosine recognition site but stacked on Gly74 carbonyl and His92 imidazole, which serve as a subsite, as shown previously (Lenz, A., Cordes, F., Heinemann, U., and Saenger, W. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266, 7661-7667); in addition, there are hydrogen bonds adenine N6H . . . O Gly74 (minor component of three-center hydrogen bond) and adenosine O5' . . . O delta Asn36. These binding interactions readily explain why RNase T1 has some affinity for 2'-AMP. The molecular structure of RNase T1 is only marginally affected by 2'-AMP binding. Its "empty" guanosine-binding site features a flipped Asn43-Asn44 peptide bond and the side chains of Tyr45, Glu46 adopt conformations typical for RNase T1 not involved in guanosine binding. The side chains of amino acids Leu26, Ser35, Asp49, Val78 are disordered. The disorder of Val78 is of interest since this amino acid is located in a hydrophobic cavity, and the disorder appears to be correlated with an "empty" guanosine-binding site. The two Asp15 carboxylate oxygens and six water molecules coordinate a Ca2+ ion 8-fold in the form of a square antiprism.
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PMID:Crystal structure of ribonuclease T1 complexed with adenosine 2'-monophosphate at 1.8-A resolution. 165 20

Complex of a mutant ribonuclease T1 (Y45W) with a non-cognizable ribonucleotide, 2'AMP, has been determined and refined by X-ray diffraction at 1.7 A resolution. The 2'AMP molecule locates at a new base-binding site which is remote from the guanine-recognition site, where 2'GMP was found to be bound. The nucleotide adopts the anti conformation of the glycosidic bond and C3'-exo sugar pucker. There exists a single hydrogen bond between the adenine base and the enzyme, and, therefore, the site found is apparently a non-specific binding site. The results indicate that the binding of 2'AMP to the guanine-recognition site is weaker than that to the new binding site.
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PMID:Non-cognizable ribonucleotide, 2'AMP, binds to a mutant ribonuclease T1 (Y45W) at a new base-binding site but not at the guanine-recognition site. 165 33


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