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Query: EC:3.1.27.5 (
RNase
)
17,967
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Atypical eukaryotic RNA polymerase activity was demonstrated in nuclei of Crypthecodinium cohnii, a eukaryote devoid of histones. Nuclei were isolated from growing cultures of this dinoflagellate and assayed for endogenous RNA polymerase (EC 2.7.7.6) activity. There was a biphasic response to Mg2+ with optima at approximately 0.01 and 0.02 M MgCl2, but in contrast to other eukaryotic RNA polymerases, this enzyme activity was inhibited by low MnCl2 concentrations. In the presence of 0.01 M MgCL2 the optimum (NH4)2SO4 concentration was 0.025 M, a concentration at which the nuclei were lysed. Incorporation of [3H]UMP into RNA was inhibited by actinomycin D and dependent on the presence of undergraded DNA, and the reaction product was sensitive to
ribonuclease
and
KOH
digestion. Omission of one or more ribonucleoside triphosphates greatly reduced the incorporation. Only a slight enhancement of RNA polymerase activity resulted from the addition of various amounts of native and denatured calf thymus DNA. Spermine caused a marked inhibition while spermidine had little effect on RNA synthesis in the nuclei. Under the optimum conditions described in the present paper the nuclei incorporated approximately 3 pmoles of [3H]UMP/microgram DNA at 25 C for 15 min, and approximately 80% of this activity was inhibited by the eukaryotic RNA polymerase II inhibitor, alpha-amanitin (20 micrograms/ml). A unique situation therefore exists in C. cohnii nuclei, in which absence of histones (a prokaryotic trait) is combined with alpha-amanitin-sensitive RNA polymerase activity (a eukaryotic trait).
...
PMID:RNA synthesis in isolated nuclei of the dinoflagellate Crypthecodinium cohnii. 57 93
Cell systems as different as normal human blood lymphocytes and frog auricles release spontaneously a nucleoprotein complex in their culture medium. This release seems to be an active mechanism that is unrelated to cell death. The presence of RNA in this complex is demonstrated. The amount of extracellular RNA is regulated by the same homeostatic mechanism that has previously been shown to govern DNA release in the same cell systems. This extracellular RNA is linked by hydrogen bonds to the extracellular DNA and cannot be extracted by a usual phenol procedure, due perhaps to the presence of a glycoprotein. Further purifications by chloroform, sodium perchlorate, and hydroxyapatite are necessary to obtain an RNA molecule that is acid precipitable,
RNase
and
KOH
sensitive, and orcinol positive. The extracellular RNA sediments between 2.5 and 4S and is not a transfer RNA. It is more highly methylated than the 28S, 18S, and 4 to 5S cellular RNA. It activates DNA synthesis in vitro.
...
PMID:Presence of RNA in the nucleoprotein complex spontaneously released by human lymphocytes and frog auricles in culture. 68 40
Membrane fraction RNA isolated from rat pituitary tumor (GC) cells has been translated in a wheat germ extract. A product was synthesized which was immunologically related to growth hormone, but which migrated more slowly than growth hormone upon sodium dodecyl sulfate-acrylamide gel electrophoresis. The mobility of the cell-free product on gels of this type was unchanged by treatment with either
KOH
or
RNase
. The mobilities during paper electrophoresis of the methionine-containing tryptic peptides obtained from the cell-free product were identical to those obtained from growth hormone synthesized and secreted by the GC cells. Molecular weights for growth hormone and the cell-free product of 19,500 and 24,000, respectively, were determined by gel electrophoresis of these proteins together with marker proteins of known molecular weights. No protein with the properties of the cell-free product was detected after a 2 min incubation of the GC cells with [35S]methionine. However, treatment of the GC cells, with a protease inhibitor, L-1-tosylamide-2-phenyl-ethylchloromethyl ketone (TPCK), led to the appearance of a new polypeptide, immunologically related to growth hormone, and with a mobility on gels identical to that of the cell-free product. These results strongly imply that the cell-free product represents a growth hormone precursor (pregrowth hormone) which is rapidly converted to growth hormone in pituitary cells.
...
PMID:Pregrowth hormone: product of the translation in vitro of messenger RNA coding for growth hormone. 106 Nov 24
The cytoplasmic distribution of poly(A)+ mRNA and its relationship to annulate lamellae were examined in developing Necturus maculosus oocytes by in situ hybridization with [3H]poly(U). The specificity of [3H]poly(U) binding was tested by incubating control ovarian sections with either
KOH
or
RNase A
before in situ hybridization. In both experiments, the silver grain densities were markedly reduced. Poly(A)+ RNA is uniformly distributed in the cytoplasm until the mid-growth phase and then later in vitellogenesis becomes localized in the subcortical ooplasm. The silver grain density in the cytoplasm varied during oogenesis and was greatest in previtellogenic oocytes. Annulate lamellae commonly are observed with the light microscope in oocytes prior to vitellogenesis. In such oocytes, the labeled mRNA probe is observed over cytoplasmic regions of annulate lamellae. The results suggests that a differential localization of messenger RNA occurs during oogenesis in Necturus maculosus. Furthermore, poly(A)+ RNA is present in cytoplasmic regions of annulate lamellae.
...
PMID:Cytoplasmic distribution of poly(A)-containing RNA in developing Necturus maculosus oocytes with reference to annulate lamellae. 171 57
When rat liver nuclear chromatin was sonicated in buffer containing 0.35 M (NH4)2SO4 to release the engaged RNA polymerases, a potent inhibitor was also released. This inhibitor elicited dramatic inhibition of RNA synthesis regardless of whether the free or engaged RNA polymerase was used. On further analysis, it became apparent that the site of inhibition was on the DNA template, not on the enzyme. This inhibitor could be extracted into 0.25 N HCl by the standard procedure for the isolation of histones. This acid-soluble inhibitor, showing typical histone band on gel, was
RNase A
and DNase I resistant, but was sensitive to both pronase and snake venom phosphodiesterase digestion, as well as to 0.1 N
KOH
hydrolysis. Furthermore, when [14C]adenine labeled poly-ADP-ribosylated histones were digested by snake venom phosphodiesterase, the release of radioactivity was in parallel to the loss of inhibitor activity. We conclude that the inhibitor substances are poly-ADP-ribosylated histones and propose that the poly-ADP-ribosylated histones rather than the histones are the natural suppressors of the gene.
...
PMID:Poly-ADP-ribosylated histones: potent DNA suppressors. 404 88
The effect of exogenous RNA on many cellular functions has been studied in a variety of eukaryotic cells but there are few reports on macrophages. In the present study, it is demonstrated that cytoplasmatic RNA extracted from rat macrophages stimulated with Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS), referred to as L-RNA, induced the release of TNF-alpha and IL-1 from monolayers of peritoneal resident macrophages. The activity of L-RNA was not altered by polymyxin B but was abolished by
ribonuclease
(
RNase
) pretreatment, indicating the absence of LPS contamination and that the integrity of the polynucleotide chain is essential for this activity. Both the poly A(-) and poly A(+) fractions obtained from L-RNA applied to oligo(dT)-cellulose chromatography induced TNF-alpha and IL-1 release. The L-RNA-induced cytokine release was inhibited by dexamethasone and seemed to be dependent on protein synthesis since this effect was abolished by cycloheximide or actinomycin-D. The LPS-stimulated macrophages, when pre-incubated with [5-(3)H]-uridine, secreted a trichloroacetic acid (TCA) precipitable material which was sensitive to
RNase
and
KOH
hydrolysis, suggesting that the material is RNA. This substance was also released from macrophage monolayers stimulated with IL-1beta but not with TNF-alpha, IL-6 or IL-8. The substance secreted ((3)H-RNA) sediments in the 4-5S region of a 5-20% sucrose gradient. These results show that L-RNA induces cytokine secretion by macrophage monolayers and support the idea that, during inflammation, stimulated macrophages could release RNA which may further induce the release of cytokines by the resident cell population.
...
PMID:RNA from LPS-stirnulated macrophages induces the release of tumour necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin-1 by resident macrophages. 1847 60
A bacilliform virus from the cultivated mushroom, Agaricus bisporus, has been extensively purified and shown to be a unique mycovirus in that the genome is single-stranded (ss) RNA. The purification procedure entailed extraction at pH 6, followed by polyethylene glycol-NaCl precipitation, and differential, rate-zonal, and equilibrium centrifugation. Mushroom bacilliform virus (MBV) has a buoyant density of 1.317 g/cm(3) in Cs2SO4, A260/A280 nm absorbance ratio of 1.67, and contains approximately 20% nucleic acid by weight. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic analyses revealed that MBV contains a single major nucleic acid species with a molecular weight of 1.4 x 108 and a single capsid polypeptide of molecular weight 24,400. The nucleic acid was hydrolyzed by
pancreatic ribonuclease
A in high ionic strength buffer and by 0.4 M
KOH
, but not by pancreatic deoxyribonuclease I. Further, the kinetics of melting of MBV RNA upon thermal denaturation closely paralleled that of the ssRNA of tobacco mosaic virus. Based on this evidence, we propose that MBV is the first mycovirus shown to possess a ssRNA genome.
...
PMID:Purification and partial characterization of a bacilliform virus from Agaricus bisporus: a single-stranded RNA mycovirus. 1863 73