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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)
Chemically synthesized yeast tRNA terminal fragments were reconstituted with natural tRNA fragments which were obtained by partial digestion with
RNase T1
. The synthetic 3'-nonanucleotide (I) accepted
alanine
(3% with respect to the intact tRNA) when combined with a 4-fold excess of the natural 5'-quarter and the chemically synthesized hexanucleotide (II) stimulated the aminoacylation of the natural 3'-half molecule.
...
PMID:Reconstitution of chemically synthesized ribooligonucleotides with naturally occurring tRNA fragments. 0 57
1. When
ribonuclease T1
[EC 3.1.4.8] (0.125% solution) was treated with a 760-fold molar excess of iodoacetamide at pH 8.0 and 37 degrees, about 90% of the original activity was lost in 24 hr. The half-life of the activity was about 8 hr. The binding ability for 3'-GMP was lost simultaneously. Changes were detected only in histidine and the amino-terminal
alanine
residues upon amino acid analyses of the inactivated protein and its chymotryptic peptides. The inactivation occurred almost in parallel with the loss of two histidine residues in the enzyme. The pH dependences of the rate of inactivation and that of loss of histidine residues were similar and indicated the implication of a histidine residue or residues with pKa 7.5 to 8 in this reaction. 3'-GMP and guanosine showed some protective effect against loss of activity and of histidine residues. The reactivity of histidine residues was also reduced by prior modification of glutamic acid-58 with iodoacetate, of lysine-41 with maleic or cis-aconitic anhydride or 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulfonate or of arginine-77 with ninhydrin. 2. Analyses of the chymotryptic peptides from oxidized samples of the iodoacetamide-inactivated enzyme showed that histidine-92 and histidine-40 reacted with iodoacetamide most rapidly and at similar rates, whereas histidine-27 was least reactive. Alkylation of histidine-92 was markedly slowed down when the Glu58-carboxymethylated enzyme was treated with iodoacetamide. On the other hand, alkylation of histidine-40 was slowed down most in the presence of 3'-GMP. These results suggest that histidine-92 and histidine-40 are involved in the catalytic action, probably forming part of the catalytic site and part of the binding site, respectively, and that histidine-27 is partially buried in the enzyme molecule or interacts strongly with some other residue, thus becoming relatively unreactive.
...
PMID:The structure and function of ribonuclease T1. XXI. Modification of histidine residues in ribonuclease T1 with iodoacetamide. 1 20
Dinucleoside diphosphates of the general type pGpN have been prepared enzymatically using
ribonuclease N1
. Alkylated uridines or cytidines, which are products of carcinogens acting on nucleic acids, were tested in dinucleoside diphosphates for their ability to stimulate the binding of
Ala
- or Val-tRNA to ribosomes. O2-Ethyl C and 3-methyl C functioned as U, but not as C. In contrast, 3-methyl U behaved as C, but not as U. Both O2 and O4-ethyl U could be recognized as C or U, although binding in both cases was weak. Thus, modifications of the hydrogen-bonding sites of U or C causes miscoding and could be considered to represent mutagenic reactions.
...
PMID:Synthesis and coding properties of dinucleoside diphosphates containing alky pyrimidines which are formed by the action of carcinogens on nucleic acids. 15 50
1. When
ribonuclease T1
[EC 3.1.4.8] was treated with trypsin [EC 3.4.21.4] at pH 7.5 and 37 degrees, activity was lost fairly slowly. At higher temperatures, however, the rate of inactivation was markedly accelerated. The half life of the activity was about 2.5 h at 50 degrees and 1 h at 60 degrees. 3'-GMP and guanosine protected the enzyme significantly from tryptic inactivation. 2. Upon tryptic digestion at 50 degrees, the Lys-Tyr (41-42) and Arg-Val (77-78) bonds were cleaved fairly specifically, yielding two peptide fragments. One was a 36 residue peptide comprizing residues 42 to 77. The other was a 68 residue peptide composed of two peptide chains cross-linked by a disulfide bond between half-cystines -6 and -103, comprizing residues 1 to 41 and 78 to 104. 3. When the trinitrophenylated enzyme, in which the alpha-amino group of
alanine
-1 and the episolone-amino group of lysine 41 were selectively modified, was treated with trypsin at 37 degrees, the activity was lost fairly rapidly with a half life of about 4 h. In this case, tryptic hydrolysis occurred fairly selectively at the single Arg-Val bond. Thus the enzyme could be inactivated by cleavage of a single peptide bond in the molecule, an indication of the importance of the peptide region involving the single arginine residue at position 77 in the activity of
ribonuclease T1
.
...
PMID:The structure and function of ribonuclease T1. XXII. Tryptic cleavages of the single lysyl and arginyl bonds in ribonuclease T1. 19 42
Acid carboxypeptidase (EC 3.4.12.-) crystallized from culture filtrate of Penicillium janthinellum has been investigated for its use in carboxy-terminal sequence determination of Z-Gly-Pro-Leu-Gly, Z-Gly-Pro-Leu-Gly-Pro, angiotensin I, native lysozyme, native
ribonuclease T1
, and reduced S-carboxy-methyl-lysozyme. The examination indicated that proline and glycine were liberated from Z-Gly-Pro-Leu-Gly-Pro. At high enzyme concentration, the enzyme catalyzed complete sequential release of amino acids from the carboxy-terminal leucine to the amino-terminal aspartic acid of angiotensin I. The enzyme released the carboxy-terminal leucine from native lysozyme, however, no release of the threonine from native
ribonuclease T1
was observed after a prolonged period of incubation with the enzyme. The sequence of the first nine carboxy-terminal residues of denatured lysozyme, leucine, arginine, S-carboxymethyl-cysteine, glycine, arginine, isoleucine, tryptophane,
alanine
, and glutamine, could be deduced unequivocally from a time release plot of an incubation mixture with the enzyme.
...
PMID:Action of crystalline acid carboxypeptidase from Penicillium janthinellum. 23 51
A 70-residue analog of RNase S-protein was synthesized by the solid phase method. It was obtained by omitting the NH2 terminus from positions 21 to 25 and the segments 36 to 40, 58 to 73, 87 to 96, and 113 to 114. Four residues were inserted to link the ends formed by the deletions. Half-cystine residues that had not been part of the deletions were replaced by
alanine
or leucine residues. The synthetic polypeptide was separated by gel filtration into a dimer and a monomer. Both fractions were purified further by ion exchange chromatography. The dimeric 70-residue S-protein analog had a specific activity of approximately 4% using RNA as substrate. It also cleaved other substrates of RNase A such as 5'-(3'-cytidylyl)-guanosine, 5'-(3'-uridylyl)-guanosine, and polycytidylic acid. The monomer of the 70-residue analog was less active but showed the same substrate specificity as the dimer. It was found that both fractions of the synthetic S-protein analog catalyzed only the transphosphorylation step of the RNase A mechanism and had very little if any activity in the hydrolysis step. Addition of natural S-peptide or S-protein did not increase the activity in the transphosphorylation reaction but greatly enhanced the reaction rate of the hydrolysis step. IN THE PRESENCE OF S-peptide, both monomeric and dimeric 70-residue S-protein, both monomeric and dimeric 70- residue S-protein analog had approximately 8% activity using cyclic cytidine 2':3'-monophosphate as substrate. The mixtures of monomer and dimer of the synthetic S-protein analog with natural S-protein generated even higher activities (151 and 74%, respectively) against this substrate despite the fact that the NH2-terminal portion of the natural enzyme (including His 12) was missing in both components of the two complexes. The 70-residue S-protein analog was completely inactive against DNA and (with one exception) against substrates for
RNase T1
. The close agreement of the substrate specificity of the synthetic analog with that of native RNase A in the transphosphorylation step suggested a remarkable conservation of the configuration of the active site despite drastic changes of the primary structure of the parent molecule. Possible implications of these results for the mechanism of action of RNase A are discussed.
...
PMID:A synthetic 70-amino acid residue analog of ribonuclease S-protein with enzymic activity. 111 95
Hydrophobic effects on binding of
ribonuclease T1
to guanine bases of several ribonucleotides have been proved by mutating a hydrophobic residue at the recognition site and by measuring the effect on binding. Mutation of a hydrophobic surface residue to a more hydrophobic residue (Tyr45----Trp) enhances the binding to ribonucleotides, including mononucleotide inhibitor and product, and a synthetic substrate-analog trinucleotide as well as the binding to dinucleotide substrates and RNA. Enhancements on binding to non-substrate ribonucleotides by the mutation have been observed with free energy changes ranging from -2.2 to -3.9 kJ/mol. These changes are in good agreement with that of substrate binding, -2.3 kJ/mol, which is calculated from Michaelis constants obtained from kinetic studies. It is shown, by comparing the observed and calculated changes in binding free energy with differences in the observed transfer free energy changes of the amino acid side chains from organic solvents to water, that the enhancement observed on guanine binding comes from the difference in the hydrophobic effects of the side chains of tyrosine and tryptophan. Furthermore, a linear relationship between nucleolytic activities and hydrophobicity of the residues (
Ala
, Phe, Tyr, Trp) at position 45 is observed. The mutation could not change substantially the base specificity of
RNase T1
, which exhibits a prime requirement for guanine bases of substrates.
...
PMID:Hydrophobic effects on protein/nucleic acid interaction: enhancement of substrate binding by mutating tyrosine 45 to tryptophan in ribonuclease T1. 172 96
For 30 years, the prevailing view has been that the hydrophobic effect contributes considerably more than hydrogen bonding to the conformational stability of globular proteins. The results and reasoning presented here suggest that hydrogen bonding and the hydrophobic effect make comparable contributions to the conformational stability of
ribonuclease T1
(
RNase T1
). When
RNase T1
folds, 86 intramolecular hydrogen bonds with an average length of 2.95 A are formed. Twelve mutants of
RNase T1
[Tyr----Phe (5), Ser----
Ala
(3), and Asn----
Ala
(4)] have been prepared that remove 17 of the hydrogen bonds with an average length of 2.93 A. On the basis of urea and thermal unfolding studies of these mutants, the average decrease in conformational stability due to hydrogen bonding is 1.3 kcal/mol per hydrogen bond. This estimate is in good agreement with results from several related systems. Thus, we estimate that hydrogen bonding contributes about 110 kcal/mol to the conformational stability of
RNase T1
and that this is comparable to the contribution of the hydrophobic effect. Accepting the idea that intramolecular hydrogen bonds contribute 1.3 +/- 0.6 kcal/mol to the stability of systems in an aqueous environment makes it easier to understand the stability of the "molten globule" states of proteins, and the alpha-helical conformations of small peptides.
...
PMID:Contribution of hydrogen bonding to the conformational stability of ribonuclease T1. 173 29
Using an Escherichia coli overproducing strain secreting Aspergillus oryzae
RNase T1
, we have constructed and characterized mutants where amino acid residues in the catalytic center have been substituted. The mutants are His40----Thr, Glu58----Asp, Glu58----Gln, His92----
Ala
and His92----Phe. His92----
Ala
and His92----Phe mutants are inactive. On the basis of their kcat/Km values, the mutants Glu58----Asp and Glu58----Gln show 10% and 7% residual activity, relative to wild-type
RNase T1
, whereas the His40----Thr mutant shows 2% activity. The effect of amino acid substitutions on the enzymatic activity of
RNase T1
lends further support for a mechanism where Glu58 (possibly activated by His40 and His92 act as general base and acid respectively; this is discussed in terms of the known three-dimensional structure of the enzyme.
...
PMID:Studies on RNase T1 mutants affecting enzyme catalysis. 190 90
The pK values of the histidine residues in
ribonuclease T1
(
RNase T1
) are unusually high: 7.8 (His-92), 7.9 (His-40), and 7.3 (His-27) [Inagaki et al. (1981) J. Biochem. 89, 1185-1195]. In the
RNase T1
mutant Glu-58----
Ala
, the first two pK values are reduced to 7.4 (His-92) and 7.1 (His-40). These lower pKs were expected since His-92 (5.5 A) and His-40 (3.7 A) are in close proximity to Glu-58 at the active site. The conformational stability of
RNase T1
increases by over 4 kcal/mol between pH 9 and 5, and this can be entirely accounted for by the greater affinity for protons by the His residues in the folded protein (average pK = 7.6) than in the unfolded protein (pk approximately 6.6). Thus, almost half of the net conformational stability of
RNase T1
results from a difference between the pK values of the histidine residues in the folded and unfolded conformations. In the Glu-58----
Ala
mutant, the increase in stability between pH 9 and 5 is halved (approximately 2 kcal/mol), as expected on the basis of the lower pK values for the His residues in the folded protein (average pK = 7.1). As a consequence,
RNase T1
is more stable than the mutant below pH 7.5, and less stable above pH 7.5. These results emphasize the importance of measuring the conformational stability as a function of pH when comparing proteins differing in structure.
...
PMID:Contribution of histidine residues to the conformational stability of ribonuclease T1 and mutant Glu-58----Ala. 198 Feb 7
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