Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.27.4 (ribonuclease)
6,621 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Donor deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) single strands exist in a complex during the eclipse phase in pneumococcal transformation. This eclipse complex exhibited specific physical properties distinct from those of both pure DNA single strands and native DNA. These included a lower affinity for diethylaminoethyl-cellulose and hydroxylapatite than that of single-strand DNA, faster sedimentation than the DNA chains that it contains, and a buoyant density in Cs2SO4 lower than that of native DNA. The complex was dissociated by treatments with sodium dodecyl sulfate, NaOH, guanidine-hydrochloride, chloroform, and proteinase K but was insensitive to ribonuclease.
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PMID:Transformation in pneumococcus: existence and properties of a complex involving donor deoxyribonucleate single strands in eclipse. 2 Nov 66

Cultures of foetal human pituitary cells excrete and synthetize different molecular forms of proteins with HGH immunological activity. These cells incorporate tritiated-leucine in these proteins. Gel chromatography on sephadex using different length of column allow us to separate: One form excluded in front of the dead volume and which has a high molecular weight. This form is not dissociated by treatment with urea 8 M, guanidine 6 M and dithiothreitol. Nor this form is modified by treatment by ribonuclease. One form excluded within the dead volume and which is probably a dimere. This form is no more modified by the different treatments. One form which is excluded like a monomere--it is the more important form--. This form is dissociated in fragments of lower molecular weight by urea 8 M. This dissociation is partially reversible by dialysis.
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PMID:[Molecular forms of human growth hormone (HGH) secreted by cultured fetal pituitary cells]. 14 Jul 46

Purification and partial characterization of the poliovirus RNA-linked protein (VPg) are described. VPg has been freed from the RNA by ribonuclease digestion and phenol extraction. Gel filtration chromatography of VPg-pUp (labeled with 32P) in 0.5% sodium dodecyl sulfate or 6 M guanidine HCl indicates that it has a molecular weight of about 12,000. VPg is bound to the 5' end of poliovirion RNA by a phosphodiester bond between a tyrosine residue in the VPg molecule and the 5'-terminal uridine. After acid hydrolysis of [3H]tyrosine-labeled VPg-pU, free tyrosine can be released by venom phosphodiesterase. Acid hydrolysis of VPg-p labeled with either 32P or [3H] tyrosine yields tyrosine-phosphate. There appears to be only 1 tyrosine residue per VPg molecule.
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PMID:Protein is linked to the 5' end of poliovirus RNA by a phosphodiester linkage to tyrosine. 20 34

The second derivative absorption spectra of serum albumin, insulin, ribonuclease and lysozyme were measured under various conditions to determine the state and amount of their phenylalanine residues. The second derivative spectra of these proteins were very similar to that of phenylalanine in the region between 245 and 270 nm where tryptophan and tyrosine residues caused no appreciable interference. Denaturation of proteins with urea or guanidine hydrochloride caused decrease in the intensity of the second derivative spectra, but scarcely affected the positions of peaks and troughs. The amounts of phenylalanine residues in proteins calculated from a second derivative spectra of denatured proteins coincided well with those reported in the literature. The states of the phenylalanine residues in the proteins could be deduced from the change in optical intensity on denaturation.
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PMID:Estimation of state and amount of phenylalanine residues in proteins by second derivative spectrophotometry. 39 35

The in vitro folding kinetics of a fragment corresponding to an intact dimer of the Cgamma3 domain of human IgG1 (pFc') were monitored via the large changes in tryptophan fluorescence which accompany these processes. In going from the guanidine hydrochloride (Gdn.HCl) induced unfolded state (4.0 M Gdn.HCl) to the native state (0.5 M Gdn.HCl), three well-separated first-order processes were observed having time constants of 5, 50, and 350 s and roughly equal amplitudes. These values were concentration independent, a fact consistent with there being no fluorescence change accompanying dimerization. These time constants are one to two orders of magnitude slower than those observed for proteins of similar size such as ribonuclease or cytochrome c, most probably reflecting the complex processes involved in forming the correct beta-sheet arrangement of immunoglobulin domains. The corresponding unfolding transition is biphasic having time constant values of 50 and 500 s, the latter comprising 80% of the fluorescence change. These data indicate the presence of at least one species with intermediate fluorescence along the unfolding pathway. Gdn.HCl concentration jumps were also performed over various intervals within the transition zone. The results are not consistent with a fully reversible mechanism. In the absence of the intrachain disulfide bond, pFc' exists in an unfolded state even at 0.5 M Gdn.HCl. In a concomitant refolding and reoxidation experiment (at 0.5 M Gdn.HCl and using an optimal disulfide interchange catalytic system), the time constant for disulfide formation was in the range of 80--200 s and the fluorescence change revealed a lag phase analyzable in terms of rate-limiting reoxidation and refolding times consistent with those observed for the initially disulfide bonded species. Under similar conditions but a 4 M Gdn.HCl, reoxidation was more than two orders of magnitude slower, suggesting that reoxidation is directed by a refolding nucleation event.
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PMID:Folding pathways of immunoglobulin domains. The folding kinetics of the Cgamma3 domain of human IgG1. 46 72

Thermus thermophilus ribonuclease H is exceptionally stable against thermal and guanidine hydrochloride denaturations as compared to Escherichia coli ribonuclease HI (Kanaya, S., and Itaya, M. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 10184-10192). The identity in the amino acid sequences of these enzymes is 52%. As an initial step to elucidate the stabilization mechanism of the thermophilic RNase H, we examined whether certain regions in its amino acid sequence confer the thermostability. A variety of mutant proteins of E. coli RNase HI were constructed and analyzed for protein stability. In these mutant proteins, amino acid sequences in loops or terminal regions were systematically replaced with the corresponding sequences from T. thermophilus RNase H. Of the nine regions examined, replacement of the amino acid sequence in each of four regions (R4-R7) resulted in an increase in protein stability. Simultaneous replacements of these amino acid sequences revealed that the effect of each replacement on protein stability is independent of each other and cumulative. Replacement of all four regions (R4-R7) gave the most stable mutant protein. The temperature of the midpoint of the transition in the thermal unfolding curve and the free energy change of unfolding in the absence of denaturant of this mutant protein were increased by 16.7 degrees C and 3.66 kcal/mol, respectively, as compared to those of E. coli RNase HI. These results suggest that individual local interactions contribute to the stability of thermophilic proteins in an independent manner, rather than in a cooperative manner.
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PMID:Stabilization of Escherichia coli ribonuclease HI by strategic replacement of amino acid residues with those from the thermophilic counterpart. 132 37

We describe a sensitive ribonuclease protection assay that we have used to measure the amount of interferon-beta RNA directly in lysates of human cells. Cell lysates were prepared in concentrated guanidine thiocyanate. Molecular hybridization with RNA probes was then performed directly in crude cell lysate, and native RNase-resistant duplexes were characterized by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Comparison of interferon-beta RNA abundance by quantitative solution hybridization and lysate RNase protection showed that lysate RNase protection was highly quantitative. A high degree of reproducibility of the method was determined with a glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase "housekeeping" gene probe. Sensitivity of lysate RNase protection was determined using both induced interferon-beta RNA and synthetic human endogenous reverse transcriptase RNA as target. The lysate RNase protection method was able to measure as few as 10(4)-10(5) RNA molecules.
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PMID:RNA abundance measured by a lysate RNase protection assay. 138 Nov 96

Molecular hybridization with RNA probes was performed on unfractionated cells solubilized in guanidine thiocyanate solutions. Unhybridized probe was digested with ribonuclease, and protected probe fragments were resolved by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). Since the same medium was used both for solubilization of the cells and as the hybridization buffer, RNA purification was not required and the analysis of large numbers of samples was facilitated. Using this method, specificity is superior to dot blot analysis because the size of hybridized fragments is determined and the signal of the probe hybridized to target RNA is separated from the background by PAGE.
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PMID:Quantitative molecular hybridization with unfractionated, solubilized cells using RNA probes and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. 245 Apr 87

Polyribosomes were isolated from the intestinal mucosa of fasted and fat-fed rats in the presence of ribonuclease inhibitors. Polyribosomes from fat-fed rats were larger and more efficient in incorporating radioactive aminoacids into proteins than those from fasted rats. Total RNA prepared by guanidine-HCl extraction, from the intestine of fasting and fat-fed rats were translated in vitro in a mRNA-dependent rabbit reticulocyte lysate system in the presence of 35S-methionine. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography of the synthesized peptides showed a relative increase in the radioactivity of some peptides of RNA from fat-fed animals and particularly a two fold increase in preapo-AIV indicating that the intestinal apo-AIV synthesis is under transcriptional regulation by the metabolic processes involved in fat transport, that is, triglyceride-rich lipoprotein production.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of rat intestinal polyribosomes and RNA during absorption of fat. Increased translation in vitro of apo-AIV. 257 92

A novel replicating agent (IFDO) was isolated from ileal fluid. Growth occurred in vitro under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, and was faster at 37 degrees C than at room temperature. The doubling time was 15.8 min. Colonies were dark brown in colour and occurred beneath the surface of agar after conventional surface inoculation. Provisional data indicate that the agent may be a normal intestinal commensal. The agent was remarkably resistant to inactivation by steam at 134 degrees C, formaldehyde and glutaraldehyde; it was relatively resistant to ionising radiation, and it was filterable through membranes with a nominal pore diameter of 10 nm. Such properties, with the exception of growth in cell-free medium, are shared by "unconventional agents" such as those of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and scrapie. Further comparison of the properties of the intestinal agent and of slow viruses revealed additional shared characteristics, including resistance to proteinase K and trypsin, and inactivation by guanidine thiocyanate, diethyl pyrocarbonate, phenol and sodium hydroxide. The agent differs from that of scrapie in being inactivated by ethidium bromide, zinc nitrate, EDTA, hydroxylamine in the presence Sarkosyl, and, under certain circumstances, by ribonuclease. Broth cultures of the agent contained particles possessing considerable size heterogeneity. The smaller filterable particles were generally more susceptible to inactivation, did not survive autoclaving, and were inactivated by papaya protease and lipase. It is possible that the replicating agent may be formed by crystallisation from constituents of the medium, and not by a biological process. This does not exclude the postulated relationship to slow viruses.
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PMID:A novel replicating agent isolated from the human intestinal tract having characteristics shared with Creutzfeldt-Jakob and related agents. 265 97


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