Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.30.2 (endonuclease)
18,621 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The product of the Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) gag gene, Pr76gag, is a polyprotein precursor which is cleaved by the viral protease to yield the major structural proteins of the virion during particle assembly in avian host cells. We have recently shown that myristylated forms of the RSV Gag protein can induce particle formation with very high efficiency when expressed in mammalian cells (J. W. Wills, R. C. Craven, and J. A. Achacoso, J. Virol. 63:4331-4343, 1989). We made use of this mammalian system to examine the abilities of foreign antigens to be incorporated into particles when fused directly to the myristylated Gag protein. Our initial experiments showed that removal of various portions of the viral protease located at the carboxy terminus of the RSV Gag protein did not disrupt particle formation. We therefore chose this region for coupling of iso-1-cytochrome c from Saccharomyces cerevisiae to Gag. This was accomplished by constructing an in-frame fusion of the CYC1 and gag coding sequences at a common restriction endonuclease site. Expression of the chimeric gene resulted in synthesis of the Gag-cytochrome fusion protein and its release into the cell culture medium. The chimeric particles were readily purified by simple centrifugation, and transmission electron microscopy of cells that produced them revealed a morphology similar to that of immature type C retrovirions.
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PMID:Incorporation of chimeric gag protein into retroviral particles. 216 12

Cells from patients with various inherited mitochondrial myopathies have been reported to contain more than one type of mitochondrial DNA (heteroplasmy). It has been suggested that the degree of heteroplasmy may be important in the clinical manifestations of these diseases; however, little is known about the origin or inheritance of organellar heteroplasmy in mammalian cells. In order to gain an understanding of mechanisms of genetic transmission of mitochondrial DNA, we have made somatic cell hybrids by fusion of cells containing mitochondrial DNA with differences in their restriction endonuclease patterns. This permits the artificial mixing of mitochondria and the study of mitochondrial DNA segregation patterns. In this report evidence will be presented to show that there are differences in the propagational abilities of mitochondrial genomes in many intraspecies human cell hybrids crosses. This was unexpected since it is generally believed that mitochondrial DNA is under relaxed cellular controls and that random transmission of mitochondrial DNA to daughter cells occurs at mitosis. Mitochondrial DNA from tumorigenic HeLa cells, which is initially present in somatic cell hybrids made by fusion of HeLa cells to nontumorigenic cells, is usually lost after several weeks of continuous cell culture. However, when HeLa cells are fused to other tumorigenic cells, random mitochondrial DNA segregation occurs. Thus the tumorigenicity (perhaps state of differentiation) of the parental cells used in these fusions often correlates with the type of mitochondrial DNA retained.
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PMID:Unexpected nonrandom mitochondrial DNA segregation in human cell hybrids. 234 1

Eucaryotic expression vectors have been used to study transient expression of the avian sarcoma-leukosis retrovirus pol-endo protein in COS cells. The constructs encode proteins with N termini identical to that of authentic viral pp32 endonuclease with the exception of a single met residue encoded by the initiator AUG. The C termini correspond to unprocessed viral pol protein, authentic processed pp32, or a derivative which includes eight amino acids from the unprocessed portion. All three proteins localize to the nucleus. However, when the pol-endo domain is fused to a secretory signal peptide, the protein is found in medium and appears also to localize in the Golgi bodies and the cell membrane. These and derivative vectors will make it possible to assess the consequence of retroviral pol gene expression in eucaryotic cells.
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PMID:Avian sarcoma-leukosis virus pol-endo proteins expressed independently in mammalian cells accumulate in the nucleus but can be directed to other cellular compartments. 244 17

Although an apparently generalized defect of cytochrome c oxidase (COX) occurs in many patients with subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy (Leigh's syndrome), the mode of inheritance in this disorder is not known. We transformed COX-deficient fibroblasts from a child with Leigh's syndrome with simian virus 40 to obtain cells with an infinite life span. These cells were still COX-deficient, grew normally in HAT medium, and were ouabain-sensitive. We fused these cells with a HAT-sensitive, ouabain-resistant variant of HeLa cells (HeLacot) and isolated surviving hybrid clones in ouabain-containing HAT medium. Prolonged cultivation of the hybrids was accompanied by preferential loss of HeLacot mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), as determined by mtDNA restriction patterns of parental and hybrid cell DNA with the restriction endonuclease HaeII. COX activity was normal or higher than normal in hybrids, including the progeny of cell clones that had lost almost all the HeLacot mtDNA. These data demonstrate that COX deficiency in this Leigh's syndrome patient's cells was corrected by a nuclear DNA-encoded factor from the HeLacot parent and ruled out an mtDNA mutation as the basis for COX deficiency. This system can be used to determine whether different generalized mitochondrial disorders are due to mutations of nuclear or mtDNA.
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PMID:Cytochrome c oxidase deficiency in Leigh's syndrome: genetic evidence for a nuclear DNA-encoded mutation. 254 Apr 52

A gene encoding the human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) TAT protein was chemically synthesized and expressed in HeLa cells and in a cell-free system. To facilitate both the assembly of the synthetic gene and further mutagenesis and gene fusion studies, several unique restriction endonuclease cleavage sites were included in the coding sequence without altering the encoded protein sequence. The synthetic TAT coding sequence was fused to a translation start signal and placed under SV40 early transcriptional control. Co-transfection of the TAT-encoding synthetic gene together with a reporter gene (chloramphenical acetyl transferase or beta-galactosidase) linked to an HIV LTR confirmed that the synthetic gene product exhibits similar activity to TAT expressed from HIV genomic DNA in the transactivation of the LTR. TAT mRNA prepared by cell-free transcription of the synthetic TAT coding sequence was also shown to produce functional TAT following microinjection into HeLa-derived cells containing an integrated reporter gene with the HIV LTR linked to beta-galactosidase.
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PMID:Chemical synthesis and expression of a gene encoding HIV-1 TAT protein. 254

Restriction endonuclease (RE) mapping studies and molecular hybridization analyses were conducted to determine the molecular structure of the genome of equine cytomegalovirus (ECMV). The ECMV genome is a linear, double-stranded DNA with a molecular size of 126 +/- 0.6 MDa (189 kbp). A library of cloned BamHI, EcoRI, and HindIII fragments of the viral genome was used to construct RE maps. Individual 32P-labeled cloned DNA fragments were hybridized to Southern blots of viral genomic DNA digested to completion with BamHI, EcoRI, HindIII, or SalI. These analyses revealed that the ECMV genome consists of a 97-MDa unique long region which is bracketed by repeated sequences. At one terminus of the genome, a 21.3-MDa segment of repeated sequences with no apparent unique sequences was identified. At the other terminus, a 6-MDa unique region bracketed by 2.4-MDa repeat segments was identified. No submolar RE fragments were identified upon digestion of the ECMV genome with BamHI, EcoRI, HindIII, SalI, or other REs, including BclI, BglII, NruI, and XbaI. The genome possesses only two termini as judged by lambda exonuclease digestion and by T4 DNA polymerase end-labeling of the intact DNA followed by digestion with BamHI, EcoRI, HindIII, SalI, BclI, BglII, NruI, or XbaI. In addition, Southern blot analysis of DNA extracted from ECMV-infected rabbit kidney cells revealed that only one viral DNA fragment within the intracellular viral DNA pool contains fused genomic termini. Taken together, these observations indicate that the ECMV genome does not isomerize and suggest that the genome of ECMV may be unique among those of the herpesviruses and especially those of the betaherpesviruses (cytomegaloviruses) since it contains regions of extensive internal homology yet does not undergo isomerization. Lastly, the relatively small size of the viral genome indicates an evolutionary diversification among the cytomegaloviruses.
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PMID:Physical structure and molecular cloning of equine cytomegalovirus DNA. 255 43

Using a microinjection method (Rokkones et al. 1985) deoxyribonucleic acid was introduced into fertilized salmonid eggs. The survival rate after a 28 day period was 91% for injected eggs in comparison to non-injected controls. A gene construct containing the mouse metallothionein promoter fused to the human growth hormone structural gene was microinjected either as a supercoiled plasmid or as a linear sequence. In Southern blot analysis of both 5 and 73 day old dissected rainbow trout embryos, as well as in 1 year old Atlantic salmon, the mouse metallothionein human growth hormone gene sequence was detected together with the chromosomal DNA when micro-injected as plasmid or as linear DNA. After digestion with Bam HI restriction endonuclease, the human growth hormone gene was excised from the high molecular weight DNA fraction. Transcription into human growth hormone specific RNA, as well as translation and release of human growth hormone immunoreactive protein, could be demonstrated in early embryonic stages.
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PMID:Microinjection and expression of a mouse metallothionein human growth hormone fusion gene in fertilized salmonid eggs. 271 58

The phage T7 endonuclease gene was fused to the 3' end of the lac repressor gene. The hybrid protein exhibits repressor and nuclease functions in a manner dependent on the conformation of the DNA. With supercoiled DNA, nuclease activity is directed to the major cruciform, whereas with linear DNA, the enzyme cleaves preferentially restriction fragments carrying the operator. These properties render the hybrid protein a unique probe of DNA conformation in vitro and in vivo.
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PMID:Biosynthesis of a repressor/nuclease hybrid protein. 276 53

The gene encoding the outer membrane phosphate-selective porin protein P from Pseudomonas aeruginosa was cloned into Escherichia coli. The protein product was expressed and transported to the outer membrane of an E. coli phoE mutant and assembled into functional trimers. Expression of a product of the correct molecular weight was confirmed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blot (immunoblot) analysis, using polyclonal antibodies to protein P monomer and trimer forms. Protein P trimers were partially purified from the E. coli clone and shown to form channels with the same conductance as those formed by protein P from P. aeruginosa. The location and orientation of the protein P-encoding (oprP) gene on the cloned DNA was identified by three methods: (i) mapping the insertion point of transposon Tn501 in a previously isolated P. aeruginosa protein P-deficient mutant; (ii) hybridization of restriction fragments from the cloned DNA to an oligonucleotide pool synthesized on the basis of the amino-terminal protein sequence of protein P; and (iii) fusion of a PstI fragment of the cloned DNA to the amino terminus of the beta-galactosidase gene of pUC8, producing a fusion protein that contained protein P-antigenic epitopes. Structural analysis of the cloned DNA and P. aeruginosa chromosomal DNA revealed the presence of two adjacent PstI fragments which cross-hybridized, suggesting a possible gene duplication. The P-related (PR) region hybridized to the oligonucleotide pool described above. When the PstI fragment which contained the PR region was fused to the beta-galactosidase gene of pUC8, a fusion protein was produced which reacted with a protein P-specific antiserum. However, the restriction endonuclease patterns of the PR region and the oprP gene differed significantly beyond the amino-terminal one-third of the two genes.
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PMID:Cloning of the Pseudomonas aeruginosa outer membrane porin protein P gene: evidence for a linked region of DNA homology. 283 40

We have characterized the heterogeneity occurring at the junction of the long (L) and short (S) segments and at the termini of the strain AD169 human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) genome by restriction endonuclease mapping and nucleotide sequence analyses. The HCMV a sequence was identified by its position at both termini and inverted orientation at the L-S junction. Heterogeneity at both termini and the L-S junction was generated by the presence of fused and tandem a sequences. Some S termini lacked an a sequence. In addition, near the L terminus and at the L-S junction there were a variable number of 217-base-pair (bp) XhoI fragments arranged in tandem. The 217-bp fragments consisted of a portion of the a and adjacent b sequences (in the L-segment repeat) bounded by the same direct repeats (DR1) found at the boundaries of the a sequence. A model for the generation of these heterogeneous fragments is presented. We also determined the sequence of seven cloned terminal fragments, five from the L terminus and two from the S terminus. All L termini contained identical terminal sequences ending with base 32 of a 33-bp DR1. The S termini differed from each other and from the L-segment termini. One S terminus lacked an a sequence and terminated within S-segment repeat (c) sequences. The second S terminus contained an a sequence and terminated with bases 20 to 33 of a 33-bp DR1. A comparison of the cloned L and S terminal sequences with cloned L-S junction sequences suggested that the termini contained 3' single base extensions which were removed during the cloning. We also show that the herpesvirus conserved sequence is in a similar position relative to the termini of HCMV and several other herpesviruses, thus adding further support for the role of the sequence in the maturation of viral DNA.
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PMID:Terminal structure and heterogeneity in human cytomegalovirus strain AD169. 301 22


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