Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.30.1 (S1 nuclease)
3,660 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Sequential reverse transcriptase, DNA polymerase, and S1 nuclease reactions can be employed to synthesize double-stranded DNA representing messenger RNA. Using reverse transcriptase products made from partially purified lysozyme, ovomucoid, and ovalbumin messengers from hen oviduct, we have characterized the Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I reaction. We have optimized for a high yield of full length second strands under conditions which require only a small amount of mRNA. The effects of several parameters (time, enzyme levels, salt concentration, monovalent cation, and temperature) on the length of products synthesized by DNA polymerase I have been investigated. Each has a significant influence on the proportion of products which are full length. Under our conditions the three reactions are efficient in synthesizing full length duplex DNA from partially purified mRNA fractions or from total poly(A)-containing RNA.
...
PMID:Synthesis of double-stranded DNA complementary to lysozyme, ovomucoid, and ovalbumin mRNAs. Optimization for full length second strand synthesis by Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I. 7 87

The DNA homology relationships of 25 micrococci (15 strains of Micrococcus, eight strains of Sarcina and two strains of Staphylococcus) were studied by the deoxyribonucleic acid hybridization method using nuclease S1, an endonuclease specific for single-stranded DNA molecules. Nineteen of the strains were classified into three groups. Group I contained Micrococcus lysodeikticus IAMI056, M. luteus IAMI1010, M. flavus IAMI2005 and IAMI2006, Sarcina flava IAMI2007 and IAMI1006. S. subflava IAMI2009, S. lutea ATCC381, and ATCC382, and M. luteus IAMI1006. Group II contained M. roseus IAMI315, ATCC412, ATCC185 and IAMI295. Group III contained S. lutea IAMI099, IFO3232 and ATCC383, M. varians ATCC399 and Staphylococcus lactis ATCC15306. Micrococcus luteus IAMI097, M. varians ATCC19099 and ATCC19100, M. conglomeratus IAMI459 and IAMI470, and St. aureus IAMI011 could not be assigned to any of the three groups. The grouping corresponds to that derived from the results of differential lysis by lysozyme, 'lytic enzyme 2' from Cytophaga sp., or Streptomyces albus G enzyme; and to types of peptidoglycan in the cell walls and genetic transformation. The usefulness of classification based on sensitivity to various lytic enzymes was demonstrated. Group I probably coincides with M. luteus of Bergey's Manual of Determinative Bacteriology (1974), and groups II and III with M. roseus and M. varians respectively.
...
PMID:Classification of micrococci on the basis of deoxyribonucleic acid homology. 18 Feb 38

We have developed a novel plasmid isolation procedure and have adapted it for use on an automated nucleic acid extraction instrument. The protocol is based on the finding that phenol extraction of a 1 M guanidinium thiocyanate solution at pH 4.5 efficiently removes genomic DNA from the aqueous phase, while supercoiled plasmid DNA is retained in the aqueous phase. S1 nuclease digestion of the removed genomic DNA shows that it has been denatured, which presumably confers solubility in the organic phase. The complete automated protocol for plasmid isolation involves pretreatment of bacterial cells successively with lysozyme, RNase A, and proteinase K. Following these digestions, the solution is extracted twice with a phenol/chloroform/water mixture and once with chloroform. Purified plasmid is then collected by isopropanol precipitation. The purified plasmid is essentially free of genomic DNA, RNA, and protein and is a suitable substrate for DNA sequencing and other applications requiring highly pure supercoiled plasmid.
...
PMID:Plasmid purification by phenol extraction from guanidinium thiocyanate solution: development of an automated protocol. 171 49

Matrix attachment regions (MARs) are DNA elements that dissect the genome into topologically separated domains by binding to a chromosomal skeleton. This study explored the putative influence of the MAR located 5' of the chicken lysozyme gene on expression of heterologous genes in heterologous cell systems. Expression of a construct with the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) indicator gene controlled by the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase promoter (TC) and a construct in which the same transcriptional unit is flanked by chicken lysozyme 5' MARs (MTCM) was assayed after stable transfection into rat fibroblasts. Median CAT activity per copy number in MTCM transfectants was elevated approximately 10-fold relative to that in TC transfectants. Total variation in normalized CAT activity decreased from more than 100-fold among TC transfectants to nearly 6-fold among MTCM transfectants. The steady-state level of transcripts and the relative rate of transcription were increased in MTCM transfectants, as shown by S1 nuclease and run-on transcription assays, respectively. The chicken lysozyme 5' MAR thus can confer elevated, less position-dependent expression on a heterologous promoter in cells of a different species by increasing the density of transcribing RNA polymerase molecules. MAR-mediated transcriptional enhancement suggests that MARs are important for gene expression and not just for DNA packaging.
...
PMID:The chicken lysozyme 5' matrix attachment region increases transcription from a heterologous promoter in heterologous cells and dampens position effects on the expression of transfected genes. 232 53

The DNA sequence was determined for the cloned Agrobacterium sp. strain ATCC 21400 beta-glucosidase gene, abg. High-resolution nuclease S1 protection studies were used to map the abg mRNA 5' and 3' termini. A putative abg promoter was identified whose sequence shows similarities to the consensus promoter of Escherichia coli and with the nif promoter regions of Klebsiella. The abg coding sequence was 1,374 nucleotides long. The molecular weight of the enzyme, based on the predicted amino acid sequence, was 51,000. The observed Mr was 50,000 to 52,000. A region of deduced protein sequence was homologous to a region from two other beta-glucosidase sequences. This region of homology contained a putative active site by analogy with the active site of hen egg white lysozyme.
...
PMID:Structure and transcription analysis of the gene encoding a cellobiase from Agrobacterium sp. strain ATCC 21400. 282 95

A new procedure for the construction of linker scanning mutants is described. A plasmid containing the target DNA is randomly linearized and slightly shortened by a novel combination of established methods. After partial apurination with formic acid a specific nick or small gap is introduced at the apurinic site by exonuclease III, followed by nuclease S1 cleavage of the strand opposite the nick/gap. Synthetic linkers are ligated to the ends and plasmids having the linker inserted in the target DNA are enriched. Putative linker scanning mutants are identified by their topoisomer patterns after relaxation with topoisomerase I. This technique allows the distinction of plasmids differing in length by a single basepair. We have used this rapid and efficient strategy to generate a set of 32 linker scanning mutants covering the chicken lysozyme promoter from -208 to +15.
...
PMID:A new method for constructing linker scanning mutants. 302 81

Cloned complementary DNAs encoding chicken ovalbumin, chicken prelysozyme and calf preprochymosin, prochymosin and chymosin were inserted downstream from various viral promoters in modified recombinant "shuttle" vectors. Microinjection of the ovalbumin, prelysozyme and preprochymosin constructs into the nuclei of Xenopus laevis oocytes resulted in the synthesis, segregation in membranes and secretion into the extracellular medium of ovalbumin, lysozyme and prochymosin, respectively. Judging from molecular weight estimations, lysozyme and prochymosin were correctly proteolytically processed while ovalbumin, which lacks a cleavable signal sequence, was glycosylated. Injection of the DNA construct encoding prochymosin without its signal sequence resulted in synthesis of prochymosin protein that was localized exclusively in the oocyte cytoplasm. No immunospecific protein was detected after injection of the DNA encoding mature chymosin. In terms of protein expression in oocytes, the Herpes simplex thymidine kinase (TK) promoter was up to sevenfold more effective than the simian virus 40 (SV40) early promoter, and equally as effective as the Moloney murine sarcoma virus long terminal repeat element. Where tested, protein expression in oocytes was much reduced if DNA sequences encoding the SV40 small t intron and its flanking sequences were present in the constructs. S1 nuclease mapping of transcripts produced after injection of DNAs containing the TK promoter indicated that the majority of transcripts initiated at, or within, two bases of the known "cap" site. However, minor transcripts initiating upstream from this site were observed and one (or more) of these transcripts was responsible for the synthesis of an ovalbumin polypeptide containing a 51 amino acid N-terminal extension. This extended protein remained in the oocyte cytosol. When ovalbumin cDNA was inserted into the vectors with opposite polarity to the viral promoter, expression in oocytes resulted in the predominant synthesis and secretion of a variant ovalbumin with a 21 amino acid N-terminal extension, although some full-length ovalbumin was also synthesized and secreted. S1 mapping revealed the presence, in these oocytes, of transcripts of predicted polarity initiating 118 bases upstream from the wild type ovalbumin initiator ATG, at a previously unreported SV40 "promoter". No protein synthesis was detected after the injection of these reverse-orientation constructs into baby hamster kidney (BHK-21) cells.
...
PMID:Efficient expression of cloned complementary DNAs for secretory proteins after injection into Xenopus oocytes. 609 86

A method for cloning mRNAs has been used which results in a high yield of recombinants containing complete 5'-terminal mRNA sequences. It is not dependent on self-priming to generate double-stranded DNA and therefore the S1 nuclease digestion step is not required. Instead, the cDNA is dCMP-tailed at its 3'-end with terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT). The synthesis of the second strand is primed by oligo(dG) hybridized to the 3'-tail. Double-stranded cDNA is subsequently tailed with dCTP and annealed to dGMP-tailed vector DNA. This approach overcomes the loss of the 5'-terminal mRNA sequences and the problem of artifacts which may be introduced into cloned cDNA sequences. Chicken lysozyme cDNA was cloned into pBR322 by this procedure with a transformation efficiency of 5 x 10(3) recombinant clones per ng of ds-cDNA. Sequence analysis revealed that at least nine out of nineteen randomly isolated plasmids contained the entire 5'-untranslated mRNA sequence. The data strongly support the conclusion that the 5'-untranslated region of the lysozyme mRNA is heterogeneous in length.
...
PMID:5'-Terminal sequences of eucaryotic mRNA can be cloned with high efficiency. 616 21

The chicken lysozyme gene was inserted into an SV40-based plasmid vector, and the recombinants were transfected into the human cell lines HeLa and MCF-7. Correct and efficient transient expression directed by the lysozyme promoter was found in both of these cell lines, as determined by S1 nuclease mapping and Northern blot analysis of the RNAs made. SV40 sequences dramatically enhance the expression of the lysozyme gene. This enhancing effect is only acting in cis and is distance/orientation dependent, since clones containing the lysozyme gene in either orientation produce different amounts of correct lysozyme transcripts. The transfected lysozyme gene was not induced by steroid hormone treatment of the cells.
...
PMID:Transient expression of the chicken lysozyme gene after transfer into human cells. 632 55