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:3.1.27.3 (
RNase T1
)
1,228
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two regulatory mutants in orthophosphate-regulated cyclic phosphodiesterase (cPDase), cpd-3 and cpd-4, were isolated and mapped proximal to arg-1 on L.G. IC and distal to arg-12 on L.G. IIR, respectively. cpd-3 showed short aerial hyphae with dense formation of conidia. The morphology was very similar to that of cr-1, cpd-3 and cr-1 had reduced levels of cyclic 3',5'-AMP, adenylate cyclase and cPDases (CPDase I, II and III in low phosphate condition) but had elevated levels of cyclic 3',5'-GMP. Although cr-1 showed an enhanced level and enhanced activation of heat activated cyclic phosphodiesterase (ha-PDE), this enzyme was not activated in cpd-3. cpd-4, nuc-1 and nuc-2 produced neither cPDase I, II, III,
alkaline phosphatase
nor
ribonuclease N1
in low phosphate media. These mutants did not produce aerial hyphae or conidia when grown in low phosphate liquid medium. Activation of ha-PDE occurred in cpd-4, but not in nuc-1 and nuc-2.
...
PMID:Mutations affecting cyclic phosphodiesterases and adenylate cyclase in Neurospora. 283 77
By means of in situ hybridization using biotinylated oncogene probes and the immunohistochemical reaction of avidin-biotin complex-
alkaline phosphatase
with substrate, we investigated expression of c-myc oncogene in the formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections from seven patients with squamous cell carcinoma (six cases) and small cell carcinoma (one case) of primary lung origin. The expression of c-myc oncogene was greatly enhanced in all cases studied, with individual and cell-to-cell variation. In contrast, all of the specimens incubated with deoxyribonuclease after the standard pretreatment with
ribonuclease T1
were negative for the expression of c-myc oncogene. The in situ hybridization permits estimation of a heterogeneous amplification of c-myc oncogene that may be related to secondary alterations occurring during the progression of the malignant lung tumors.
...
PMID:Oncogene expression detected by in situ hybridization in human primary lung cancer. 305 56
A number of molecular agents that can efficiently quench the room temperature phosphorescence of tryptophan were identified, and their ability to quench the phosphorescence lifetime of tryptophan in nine proteins was examined. For all quenchers, the quenching efficiency generally follows the same sequence, namely, N-acetyltryptophanamide (NATA) greater than parvalbumin approximately lactoglobulin approximately
ribonuclease T1
greater than liver alcohol dehydrogenase greater than aldolase greater than Pronase approximately edestin greater than azurin greater than
alkaline phosphatase
. Quenching rate constants for O2 and CO are relatively insensitive to protein differences, while H2S and CS2 are somewhat more sensitive. These small molecule agents appear to act by penetrating into the proteins. However, penetration to truly buried tryptophans is less favorable than previously suggested; in five proteins studied, quenching efficiency by O2 is 20-1000 times lower than for NATA, and up to 10(5) lower for H2S and CS2. Larger and more polar quenchers--including organic thiols, conjugated ketones and amides, and anionic species--were also studied. The efficiency of these quenchers does not correlate with quencher size or polarity, the quenching reaction has low energy of activation, and quenching rates are insensitive to solvent viscosity. These results indicate that the larger quenchers do not approach the buried tryptophans by penetrating into the proteins, even on the long phosphorescence time scale, and are also inconsistent with a mechanism in which quencher encounter with the tryptophan occurs in free solution, as in a protein-opening reaction. The results obtained suggest that the quenching process involves a long-range radiationless transfer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Quenching of room temperature protein phosphorescence by added small molecules. 324 96
Procedures are described for identification of very infrequent in vivo 3'-ends of RNA. After purification by filter hybridization, the 3'-ends were labeled with [5'-32P] cytosine-3'-P in the RNA ligase reaction. Significantly fewer counts were incorporated in the ligase reaction than in the polynucleotide kinase reaction to label 5'-ends. The incorporation was increased by increasing the RNA concentration 5-10 fold by using only one round of filter hybridization. Non-specific RNA binding could be eliminated by RNase A treatment of the filter if a great excess of denatured heterologous DNA was immobilized along with the DNA probe. Significant amounts of DNA were released when eluting the hybrid RNA from such filters. DNA inhibited the ligase reaction, while its DNase products were even more inhibitory. Treatment of the DNase products with
alkaline phosphatase
completely eliminated the inhibition. We detected no spurious 5'- or 3'-ends generated in the hybrid RNA by RNase A activity used to reduce the non-specific RNA. Also,
RNase T1
could be used in place of RNase A to eliminate non-specific RNA binding, but about 25 times more
RNase T1
(microgram/microgram) was needed. We used partial alkali digestion to sequence 3'-ends. A major (one hit) and minor (two hit) set of products were produced which could be distinguished from each other by
alkaline phosphatase
treatment and homochromatography of the products.
...
PMID:Isolating and sequencing the infrequent 3'-ends of a specific mRNA. 331 56
The distribution of termination and initiation sites in a 5081-nucleotide minute virus of mice DNA template being copied by a highly purified mouse DNA polymerase alpha-DNA primase complex in the presence of GTP has been examined. The 3'-hydroxyl termini (17 in all) were clustered at six sites that were located 2-14 nucleotides upstream of C2A2C2, C2AC3, or C2A2T2 sequences. When either [alpha-32P]- or [gamma-32P]GTP was included in the DNA polymerase reaction mixtures, nascent DNA became radiolabeled. Analysis of the 32P-labeled material following treatment of the DNA with tobacco acid pyrophosphatase, bacterial
alkaline phosphatase
, or
ribonuclease T1
revealed the presence of oligoribonucleotide chains averaging 5-7 nucleotides long and beginning with 5' GTP residues. Eight presumptive DNA primase initiation sites were located opposite C4 or C5 sequences 3-9 nucleotides upstream of one of the three closely related hexanucleotides C2A2C2, C2AC3, and C2A2T2. RNA-DNA junctions were found 3-10 nucleotides downstream of DNA primase initiation sites. The results indicate that hexanucleotides having the general formula C2A1-2(C2-3/T2), herein referred to as psi, are involved in promoting termination of DNA synthesis and/or de novo initiation of RNA-primed DNA chains by DNA polymerase alpha-primase.
...
PMID:Mouse DNA polymerase alpha-primase terminates and reinitiates DNA synthesis 2-14 nucleotides upstream of C2A1-2(C2-3/T2) sequences on a minute virus of mice DNA template. 385 59
The 5'-terminal sequence of hen ovalbumin mRNA was investigated using a novel labeling method. Ovalbumin mRNA was purified by hybridization to complementary DNA coupled to cellulose. The mRNA thus purified was shown to be 97.9% pure by hybridization with plasmid DNA containing sequences to the messengers coding for conalbumin and ovomucoid, the next two most abundant messengers of oviduct. After digestion with
RNase T1
and
alkaline phosphatase
, 5'-terminal capped oligonucleotides were selected by binding to anti-m7G-Sepharose. These were then labeled using RNA ligase and [5'-32P]pCp, separated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, and sequenced by partial digestion with base-specific ribonucleases. A nested set of three capped oligonucleotides was identified. Their structures and relative abundances were m7GpppAUACAG, 3% m7GpppACAUACAG, 61+; and m7GpppGUACAUACAG, 36%.
...
PMID:Heterogeneity of the 5' terminus of hen ovalbumin messenger ribonucleic acid. 678 28
In exploring the dynamic properties of protein structure, numerous studies have focussed on the dependence of structural fluctuations on solvent viscosity, but the emerging picture is still not well defined. Exploiting the sensitivity of the phosphorescence lifetime of tryptophan to the viscosity of its environment we have used the delayed emission as an intrinsic probe of protein flexibility and investigated the effects of glycerol as a viscogenic cosolvent. The phosphorescence lifetime of alcohol dehydrogenase,
alkaline phosphatase
, apoazurin and
RNase T1
, as a function of glycerol concentration was studied at various temperatures. Flexibility data, which refer to rather rigid sites of the globular structures, point out that, for some concentration ranges glycerol, effects on the rate of structural fluctuations of alcohol dehydrogenase and
RNase T1
do not obey Kramers' a power law on solvent viscosity and emphasize that cosolvent-induced structural changes can be important, even for inner cores of the macromolecule. When the data is analyzed in terms of Kramers' model, for the temperature range 0-30 degrees C one derives frictional coefficients that are relatively large (0.6-0.7) for
RNase T1
, where the probe is in a flexible region near the surface of the macromolecule and much smaller, less than 0.2, for the rigid sites of the other proteins. For the latter sites the frictional coefficient rises sharply between 40 and 60 degrees C, and its value correlates weakly with molecular parameters such as the depth of burial or the rigidity of a particular site. For
RNase T1
, coupling to solvent viscosity increases at subzero temperatures, with the coefficient becoming as large as 1 at -20 degrees C. Temperature effects were interpreted by proposing that solvent damping of internal protein motions is particularly effective for low frequency, large amplitude, structural fluctuations yielding highly flexible conformers of the macromolecule.
...
PMID:Glycerol effects on protein flexibility: a tryptophan phosphorescence study. 836 22
The effects of heavy water (D(2)O) on internal dynamics of proteins were assessed by both the intrinsic phosphorescence lifetime of deeply buried Trp residues, which reports on the local structure about the triplet probe, and the bimolecular acrylamide phosphorescence quenching rate constant that is a measure of the average acrylamide diffusion coefficient through the macromolecule. The results obtained with several protein systems (
ribonuclease T1
, superoxide dismutase, beta-lactoglobulin, liver alcohol dehydrogenase,
alkaline phosphatase
, and apo- and Cd-azurin) demonstrate that in most cases D(2)O does significantly increase the rigidity the native structure. With the exception of
alkaline phosphatase
, the kinetics of the structure tightening effect of deuteration are rapid compared with the rate of H/D exchange of internal protons, which would then assign the dampening of structural fluctuations in D(2)O to a solvent effect, rather than to stronger intramolecular D bonding. Structure tightening by heavy water is generally amplified at higher temperatures, supporting a mostly hydrophobic nature of the underlying interaction, and under conditions that destabilize the globular fold.
...
PMID:Effect of heavy water on protein flexibility. 1202 48
<< Previous
1
2