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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)
1.
Ribonuclease
T1 [EC 3.1.4.8] was inactivated by reaction with tosylglycolate (carboxymethyl rho-toluenesulfonate). At pH 5.5 and 8.0, alkylation of the gamma-carboxyl group of glutamic acid-58 appeared to be the predominant reaction and the major cause of inactivation by tosylglycolate, as in the case of the iodoacetate reaction, although the rate of inactivation was slower than that by iodoacetate. At pH 8.0, histidine residues were also alkylated to some extent. 2. The maximal rate of inactivation was observed at around pH 5.5 and the pH dependence of the rate of inactivation suggested the implication of two groups in the reaction, with apparent pKa values of about 3-4 (possibly histidine residue(s)). 3. In the presence of substrate analogs,
ribonuclease T1
was markedly protected from inactivation by tosylglycolate at pH 5.5. The extent of protection corresponded to the binding strength of the substrate analog, except for guanosine.
Ribonuclease
T1 was much less protected from inactivation by guanosine than by 3'-AMP or 3'-CMP, which has a lower binding strength toward
ribonuclease T1
. This may indicate that glutamic acid-58 is situated in the catalytic site, at which the phosphate moiety of these nucleotides directly interacts. 4. Enzyme which had been extensively inactivated with tosylglycolate at pH 5.5 scarcely reacted with iodoacetate at pH 5.5, suggesting that these reagents react at the same site, i.e. glutamic acid-58. On the other hand, enzyme which had been inactivated almost completely with tosylglycolate at pH 8.0 still reacted with iodoacetate to some extent at pH 8.0, and the modes of reaction of tosylglycolate and iodoacetate toward
ribonuclease T1
appeared to be somewhat different.
...
PMID:The structure and function of ribonuclease T1. XX. Specific inactivation of ribonuclease T1 by reaction with tosylglycolate. 1 19
1. 3'-Guanylyl-ethanol, 3'-guanylyl-propanol, and 3'-guanylyl-alpha-glycerol were synthesized by
ribonuclease N1
[EC 3.1.4.8] using guanosine 2',3'-cyclic phosphate as a phosphate donor and various alcohols as phosphate acceptors. The yields of these phosphodiesters were 15%, 13.5%, 38.2%, respectively, with respect to phosphate donor under the optimum conditions. No phosphodiester was synthesized when 2-propanol was used as a phosphate acceptor. Thus, primary alcoholic hydroxyl groups may be regarded as the preferred phosphate acceptor. 2. 3'-Guanylyl-glucose and 3'-guanylyl-ribose were synthesized using glucose and ribose as phosphate acceptors. Under the optimum conditions, the yields of guanylyl-glucose amounted to 52.0%, while that of guanylyl-ribose was much lower. The guanylyl-glucose can be regarded as 3'-guanylyl-6-glucopyranose, based on the results of periodate oxidation. 3. Neither hydroxyamino acids (serine and threonine) nor N-acetylserinamide could be phosphorylated under the conditions used for the above phosphorylations. 4. 3'-Guanylyl-glycerol obtained as above was hydrolyzed by snake venon phosphodiesterase to produce glycerol 3-phosphate. The latter consisted of L-glycerol 3-phosphate (ca 17%) and the D-isomer (ca. 83%).
Ribonuclease
N1 thus catalyzes an asymmetric synthesis.
...
PMID:Synthesis of various phosphodiesters and phosphomonoesters with ribonuclease N. 18 80
Basal bodies, purified from Chlamydomonas and Tetrahymena, were exposed to various enzymatic treatments and then assayed for their ability to nucleate aster formation upon injection into eggs of Xenopus laevis. Untreated basal bodies injected into frog eggs act as centrioles and induce the formation of asters. The aster-inducing activity of basal bodies was eliminated by treatment with proteolytic enzymes and ribonucleases. Aster-inducing activity was not affected by DNAse and a number of other enzymes. The effect of proteolytic digestion on aster-inducing activity appeared to be directly correlated with the degree of structural damage to the basal body. Low concentrations of pancreatic ribonuclease A,
ribonuclease T1
, and S1 nuclease also completely abolished aster-inducing activity, although these enzymes had no effect on basal body structure.
Ribonuclease
-treated basal bodies remained capable of supporting microtubule elongation in vitro. Preliminary evidence indicates that basal bodies from Chlamydomonas and Tetrahymena contain about 5 x 10(-16) g of RNA which co-band with basal bodies and aster-inducing activity by equilibrium density gradient sedimentation. We conclude first, that centrioles contain RNA which is required for initiation of aster formation, and second, that the centriole activity or ability to assemble a mitotic aster is separable from the basal body activity, or ability to serve directly as a template for microtubule growth.
...
PMID:Evidence for a functional role of RNA in centrioles. 40 9
Terminal labeling of embryonic feather keratin mRNA with [3H]KBH4 followed by digestion with
ribonuclease T1
and T2, alkaline phosphatase, snake venom phosphodiesterase, and nucleotide pyrophosphatase and analysis of the products by high voltage paper electrophoresis, indicated the presence of the sequence m7G(5')ppp(5')N at the 5'-end of the mRNA.
Ribonuclease
T1 and A digests of the terminally labeled, and also of unlabeled mRNA followed by fractionation on denaturing polyacrylamide gels indicated the presence of polyadenylate tracts ranging in size from 45 to 165 nucleotide at the 3'-end of the mRNA.
...
PMID:The terminal structures of feather keratin mRNA. 49 58
Ribonuclease
T1 [EC 3.1.4.8] was selectively hydrolyzed by digestion with trypsin at the peptide bond of the single arginine residue at position 77. Selective hydrolysis was achieved by blocking the xi-amino group of Lys-41 with 2-methoxy-5-nitrotropone and subsequent digestion with trypsin in the presence of 2M urea. The trypsin-digested
ribonuclease T1
was composed of two polypeptide chains containing 77 and 27 residues, though the two chains were covalently linked by a disulfide bond between Cys-6 and Cys-103. The modified enzyme lost enzymatic activity toward RNA and the ability to bind to 3'-GMP. The circular dichroic spectrum of the modified protein suggested that its conformation was extensively destroyed. It is concluded from the present results that the continuity of the peptide chain at the arginine residue is extremely important for maintaining the active conformation of the enzyme protein and for the enzymatic function of
ribonuclease T1
.
...
PMID:Preparation and properties of trypsin-digested ribonuclease T1 split at the single arginyl peptide bond. 82 Jun 95
RNA isolated from purified St. Louis encephalitis and Sindbis virus particles was compared by cellulose CF-11 chromatography, and
RNase T1
and pancreatic RNase A digestion. SLE RNA eluted from the cellulose CF-11 column as a molecule with very little secondary structure, while Sindbis appears to have some internal bonding.
Ribonuclease
digestion indicates that SLE RNA contains 2.4 per cent polyadenylic acid.
...
PMID:A comparison of Saint Louis encephalitis and Sindbis virus RNA. 88 39
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.
...
PMID:Crystal structure of ribonuclease T1 complexed with adenosine 2'-monophosphate at 1.8-A resolution. 165 20
Ribonuclease
T1 contains a subsite which by interacting with the leaving nucleoside N of GpN dinucleoside phosphate substrates, contributes to catalysis [Steyaert, J., Wyns, L. & Stanssens, P. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 8661-8665]. The Asn36Ala and Asn98Ala mutations reduce the transesterification rates of GpA, GpC and GpU considerably whereas they have virtually no effect on the transesterification kinetics of the synthetic substrate guanosine 3'-(methyl phosphate) (GpMe) (in which the leaving nucleoside is replaced by methanol), indicating that the Asn36 and Asn98 side chains are part of the
RNase T1
subsite [Steyaert, J., Haikal, A. F., Wyns, L. & Stanssens, P. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 8666-8670]. The kinetics of the Asn36Ala, Asn98Ala and wild-type catalyzed transesterification of guanosine 3'-(5'-D-ribosyl phosphate) (GpRib), another GpN analog in which the leaving groups is replaced by D-ribose, enables the mapping of the subsite interactions provided by Asn36 and Asn98. We find that the Asn36 amide function contributes 4.6 kJ/mol to catalysis through interactions with the ribose moiety of the leaving nucleoside. Asn98 is at least in part responsible for the subsite preference for cytidine; the Asn98 side chain preferentially binds cytosine as the leaving nucleoside base.
...
PMID:Dissection of the ribonuclease T1 subsite. The transesterification kinetics of Asn36Ala and Asn98Ala ribonuclease T1 for minimal dinucleoside phosphates. 173 39
Ribonuclease
T1 and the mutant enzymes were cocrystallized with several ribonucleotides, including non-hydrolyzable substrate analogs of di- and triribonucleotides, which have a novel guanylate in which the 2'-hydroxyl group of the ribose is replaced by a fluorine atom. One of the mutant enzymes has a tryptophan residue, instead of Tyr45 of the wild-type enzyme, to enhance the binding of ribonucleotides to the enzyme and the other mutant enzyme has histidine and aspartate residues, instead of Asn43 and Asn44, respectively, to reproduce the natural substitutions found in ribonuclease Ms. Polymorphism of the crystals was observed for wild-type and mutant enzymes. However, orthorhombic crystals, which are virtually all isomorphous to each other, were successfully obtained from wild-type and mutant (Y45W) enzymes by the macroscopic seeding technique using mother crystals of the wild-type
ribonuclease T1
complexed with 2'GMP or 3'GMP. The diffraction patterns of these crystals extend beyond 2.5 A resolution and the diffraction data were collected from some of the crystals on a diffractometer up to a range of 2.5 to 1.8 A resolution.
...
PMID:Crystallographic characterization of wild-type and mutant ribonuclease T1 complexes with several ribonucleotides. 208 29
Ribonuclease
activity in HeLa cell nuclei is markedly inhibited by ADP-ribosylation following incubation of intact isolated nuclei with [14C]NAD. Time course experiments demonstrate that [14C] incorporation into proteins is accompanied by a 50% inhibition of ribonuclease activity on single-strand and double-strand polynucleotides. Inhibition does not occur when 3-aminobenzamide, a potent (ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitor, is present. Two enzymatic activities that degrade double-strand polynucleotides have been purified and partially characterized. A relevant level of radioactivity resulting from [14C]NAD incubation of nuclei was associated to the purified enzyme. The
RNase F1
component, which shows maximal activity on polyU-polyA is demonstrated to be the major ADP-ribose acceptor protein.
...
PMID:In vitro inhibition of HeLa cell nuclear ribonucleases by ADP-ribosylation. 211 91
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