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)

In order to obtain information on the nature of the amino acid residues involved in the activity of ribonuclease U1 [EC 3.1.4.8], various chemical modifications of the enzyme were carried out. RNase U1 was inactivated by reaction with iodoacetate at pH 5.5 with concomitant incorporation of 1 carboxymethyl group per molecule of the enzyme. The residue specifically modified by iodoacetate was identified as one of the glutamic acid residues, as in the case of RNase T1. The enzyme was also inactivated extensively by reaction with iodoacetamide at pH 8.0 with the loss of about one residue each of histidine and lysine. When RNase U1 was treated with a large excess of phenylglyoxal, the enzymatic activity and binding ability toward 3'-GMP were lost, with simultaneous modification of about 1 residue of arginine. The reaction of citraconic anhydride with RNase U1 led to the loss of enzymatic activity and modification of about 1 residue of lysine. The inactivated enzyme, however, retained binding ability toward 3'-GMP. These results indicate that there are marked similarities in the active sites of RNases T1 and U1.
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PMID:Chemical modifications of ribonuclease U1. 1 50

Guanylyl-(2'-5')-guanosine binds to RNase T1 in 1:1 stoichiometry with a dissociation constant of 0.22 mM at pH 5.0 and 25 degrees C. This nucleotide, coupled to aminohexyl-Sepharose 4B, is able to serve as an affinity adsorbent for guanyloribonuclease [EC 3.1.4.8]. The strength of interaction between the adsorbent and various guanyloribonucleases at pH 5.0 was found to decrease in the following order: RNase N1 greater than RNase F1 greater than RNase T1 greater than RNase St. The bound enzymes can be released from the adsorbent either by increase of ionic strength or by increasing the pH from 5.0 to 7.5. The interaction between RNase T1 and the adsorbent is weakened by the presence of a low concentration of 2', 3'-, or 5'-GMP, which are competitive inhibitors of the enzyme. RNase F1 was purified to homogeneity by use of this affinity adsorbent.
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PMID:A new affinity adsorbent for guanyloribonuclease. Guanylyl-(2'-5')-guanosine coupled to aminohexyl-Sepharose. 2 71

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

A second major species of leucine tRNA, tRNA Leu UAG (formerly designated tRNA Leu CUA) was purified from baker's yeast in a three-step procedure entailing BD-cellulose chromatography in the presence and absence of Mg2+ and Sephadex G-100 gel filtration. Results of aminoacylation and partial RNase T1 digestion experiments showed that this tRNA retains a native conformation under conditions that denature yeast tRNA Leu m5CAA (tRNA3 Leu). The primary structure of baker's yeast tRNA Leu UAG was elucidated by application of sensitive radioactive isotope derivative ("postlabeling") methods. Complete RNase T1 and A and partial RNase U2 fragments, prepared from non-radioactive tRNA and 5'-half and 3'-half molecules, were separated by two-dimensional polyethyleneimine-cellulose anion-exchange thin-layer chromatography and isolated by a novel micropreparative procedure affording high yields of these compounds in sufficient purity for subsequent tritium derivative analysis. Base composition and sequence of oligonucleotides were analyzed by tritium derivative methods. Molar ratios of the fragments were determined from the radioactivity of 3H-labeled nucleoside trialcohols in combination with base analysis. 2'-O-Methylated guanosine was characterized using the [gamma-32P]ATP/polynucleotide kinase reaction. The analysis of classical complete and partial RNase digests by the tritium derivative methods yielded the complete nucleotide sequence of the tRNA. A total of about 20 A260 units of the RNA was used for analysis, i.e. considerably less material than required for conventional spectrophotometric analysis. A different sequencing approach, consisting of a combination of "readout sequencing" with tritium sequencing of complete RNase T1 and A fragments, was applied to the 3'-half molecule. The 3'-half molecule was labeled with 32P at its 5' terminus, partially degraded with RNase T1, U2, and Phy1 and with alkali, and subjected to polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The sequence was read off the gel on the basis of cleavage patterns and size of the fragments. While the readout procedure provided only the positions of A, U, C, and G residues in the chain, additional information from tritium derivative analysis was utilized to define the positions of the modified nucleosides. The readout sequencing procedure was found to require less than 0.01 A260 unit of RNA and the analysis of the complete fragments about 6 A260 units. Interesting structural features of tRNA Leu UAG are (a) the location of unique, leucine tRNA iso-acceptor-specific sequences next to U-8, a constant nucleotide participating in synthetase recognition, (b) the occurrence of 1-methyladenosine in the T loop, a modification not present in the structurally related tRNA Leu m5CAA, and (c) the unusual presence of an unmodified uridine in the first position of the anticodon, which may be related to the unusual coding properties reported for this tRNA.
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PMID:Yeast tRNA Leu UAG. Purification, properties and determination of the nucleotide sequence by radioactive derivative methods. 37 75

The effect of polyamines on ribonucleases in the presence of various inhibitors (poly(G), heparin, and rat liver RNase inhibitor) has been studied. Bovine pancreatic RNas A and a ribonuclease from horse submaxillary gland (RNase HS) were inhibited by the inhibitors, but RNase T1 and RNase M were not inhibited. Polyamines were found to restore the activites of RNase A and RNase HS inhibited by poly(G) or heparin but not those activities inhibited by rat liver RNase inhibitor. When poly(U) and poly(C) were used as substrates, the inhibitory effects of poly(G) and heparin were greater with poly(U) than poly(C) as a substrate. However, when poly(C) was used as a substrate in the presence of either of the above inhibitors, the restoration of RNase activity by sperimine was more efficient. In fact, a stimulatory effect was observed. From the double-reciprocal plots, it was concluded that polyamines restored the activiities of RNases by increasing the availability of the substrate and enzyme to each other. The restoration of enzyme activity by polyamines occurred through the binding of the polyamines to the inhibitor and the subsequent release of enzyme from the inhibitor.
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PMID:Studies on the restoration of the activities of Ribonucleases by polyamines in the presence of various ribonuclease inhibitors. 40 77

A modification of the known method for obtaining radioactive fingerprints from non-radioactive nucleic acids by labelling a digest with 5'-hydroxyl polynucleotide kinase and [gamma-32P]-ATP has been applied to RNase T1 digests from various high molecular weight virus RNAs and to ovalbumin mRNA. Fractionation of the resultant [32P]-labelled T1 RNase digests by two-dimensional polyacrylamide electrophoresis demonstrates that in the case of virus RNAs, the fingerprints thus obtained are very similar to those derived from uniformly labelled RNAs. The value of this technique is that it requires only 1-5 microgram of purified virus RNA and at least three orders of magnitude less radioactivity than is routinely employed in preparing uniformly labelled RNA.
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PMID:Oligonucleotide mapping of non-radioactive virus and messenger RNAs. 41 3

The topography and the length of the non-ribosomal sequences present in 7-S RNA, the immediate precursor of 5.8-S ribosomal RNA, from the yeast Saccharomyces carlsbergensis were determined by analyzing the nucleotide sequences of the products obtained after complete digestion of 7-S RNA with RNase T1. The results show that 7-S RNA contains approximately 150 non-ribosomal nucleotides. The majority (90%) of the 7-S RNA molecules was found to have the same 5'-terminal pentadecanucleotide sequence as mature 5.8-S rRNA. The remaining 10% exhibited 5'-terminal sequences identical to those of 5.9-S RNA, which has the same primary structure as 5.8-S rRNA except for a slight extension at the 5' end [Rubin, G.M. (1974) Eur. J. Biochem. 41, 197--202]. These data show that the non-ribosomal nucleotides present in 7-S RNA are all located 3'-distal to the mature 5.8-S rRNA sequence. Moreover, it can be concluded that 5.9-S RNA is a stable rRNA rather than a precursor of 5.8-S rRNA. The 3'-terminal sequence of 5.8-S rRNA (U-C-A-U-U-UOH) is recovered in a much longer oligonucleotide in the T1 RNase digest of 7-S RNA having the sequence U-C-A-U-U-U-(C-C-U-U-C-U-C)-A-A-A-C-A-(U-U-C-U)-Gp. The sequences enclosed in brackets are likely to be correct but could not be established with absolute certainty. The arrow indicates the bond cleaved during processing. The octanucleotide sequence -A-A-A-C-A-U-U-C- located near the cleavage site shows a remarkable similarity to the 5'-terminal octanucleotide sequence of 7-S RNA (-A-A-A-C-U-U-U-C-). We suggest that these sequences may be involved in determining the specificity of the cleavages resulting in the formation of the two termini of 5.8-S rRNA.
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PMID:Non-ribosomal nucleotide sequences in 7-S RNA, the immediate precursor of 5.8-S ribosomal RNA in yeast. 41 62

The methionine acceptor activity of a crude tRNA from bakers' yeast was resolved into two peaks (I and II) by column chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex A-25 with a 1 M phosphate system. Methionine tRNA from peak II was not formylated by E. coli methionyl-tRNA transformylase [EC 2.1.2.9.] after being charged with methionine, whereas that from peak I was formylatable under the same conditions. A substantial amount of unlabelled methionine tRNA, tRNAMetm, was highly purified from the peak II fraction by successive chromatographic procedures. The purified tRNAMetm was digested with pancreatic ribonuclease A [EC 3.1.4.22] and ribonuclease T1 [EC 3.1.4.8]. The digestion products were isolated into individual components and completely sequenced. The results of sequence analysis of the two RNase digests were in good agreement and indicated that the chain length of this tRNA is 76, including 13 modified nucleotides. These oligonucleotide fragments can be constructed into a unique total sequence, assuming a few conventional features of clover leaf structure for the tRNA was established by analyses of partial digestion products with RNase T1, as reported in the accompanying paper.
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PMID:The primary structure of non-initiator methionine transfer ribonucleic acid from Bakers' yeast. I. Purification and complete digestion with ribonuclease T1 and pancreatic ribonuclease A. 82 24

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.
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PMID:A synthetic 70-amino acid residue analog of ribonuclease S-protein with enzymic activity. 111 95

A reproducible, quantitative isoelectric focusing method using capillary electrophoresis that exhibits high resolution and linearity over a wide pH gradient was developed. RNase T1 and RNase ba are two proteins that have isoelectric points (pI's) at the two extremes of a pH 3-10 gradient. Site-directed mutants of the former were separated from the wild-type form and pI's determined in the same experiment. The pI's of RNase T1 wild-type, its three mutants, and RNase ba were determined for the first time as 2.9, 3.1, 3.1, 3.3, and 9.0, respectively. The paper describes the protocol for isoelectric focusing by capillary electrophoresis, as well as presenting data describing the linearity, resolution, limits of mass loading, and reproducibility of the method.
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PMID:Isoelectric focusing by free solution capillary electrophoresis. 145 46


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