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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)
A new class of linear duplex DNA structures that contain simian virus 40 (SV40) DNA sequences and that are replicated during productive infection of cells with SV40 is described. These structures comprise up to 35% of the radioactively labeled DNA molecules that can be isolated by selective extraction. These molecules represent a unique size class corresponding to the length of an open SV40 DNA molecule (FO III), and they contain a heterogeneous population of DNA sequences either of host or of viral origin, as shown by restriction
endonuclease
analysis and nucleic acid hybridization. Part of the FO III DNA molecules contain viral-host DNA sequences covalently linked with each other. They start to replicate with the onset of SV40 superhelix replication 1 day after infection. Their rate of synthesis is most pronounced 3 days after infection when superhelix replication is already declining. Furthermore, they cannot be chased into other structures. At least a fraction of these molecules is infectious when administered together with DEAE-dextran to permissive cells. After intracellular circularization, superhelical DNA FO I with an aberrant cleavage pattern accumulates. In addition, tumor and viral capsid antigen are induced, and infectious viral progeny is obtained.
Infection
of cells with purified SV40 FO I DNA does not result in FO III DNA molecules in the infected cells or in the viral progeny. It is suggested, therefore, that these FO III DNA molecules are perpetuated within SV40 virus pools by encapsidation into pseudovirions.
...
PMID:Infectious linear DNA sequences replicating in simian virus 40-infected cells. 18 87
A plaque-forming lambdapolA phage was isolated from a population of transducing phage made in vitro from Escherichia coli DNA and a phage vector digested with restriction
endonuclease
HindIII. Amber mutations, in genes whose products are necessary for late protein synthesis (Q) and cell lysis (S), were crossed into the lambdapolA phage.
Infection
of either polA+ or polA- bacteria with this phage, under conditions permitting DNA replication but preventing phage production and lysis, elevated the levels of DNA polymerase I to between 75- and 100-fold that detected in a wild-type strain. The kinetics of enzyme production suggest that the polA gene is transcribed from its own promoter rather than from any of the well-characterized phage promoters. The fragment of E. coli DNA within the lambdapolA phage comprises approximately 5000 base pairs, sufficient to accommodate the polA gene and one, or two, coding sequences for smaller proteins.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of a lambdapolA transducing phage. 34 Nov 64
The nonrestricting/nonmodifying strain Bacillus subtilis 222 (r-m-) can be induced to synthesize a DNA-modifying activity upon treatment with either mitomycin C (MC) or UV light. This is shown by the following facts. (i)
Infection
of MC-pretreated 222 cells with unmodified SPP1 phage yields about 3% modified phage that are resistant to restriction in B. subtilis R (r+m+). The induced modifying activity causes the production of a small fraction of fully modified phage in a minority class of MC-treated host cells. (ii) The MC-pretreated host cells contain a DNA cytosine methylating activity: both bacterial and phage DNAs have elevated levels of 5-methylcytosine. (iii) The MC-induced methylation of SPP1 DNA takes place at the recognition nucleotide sequences of restriction
endonuclease
R from B. subtilis R. (iv) Crude extracts of MC-pretreated 222 cells have enhanced DNA methyltransferase activities, with a substrate specificity similar to that found in modification enzymes present in (constitutively) modifying strains.
...
PMID:Restriction and modification in Bacillus subtilis: inducibility of a DNA methylating activity in nonmodifying cells. 82 59
Inhibition of
endonuclease
by d-2-(6'-methoxy-2'-naphthyl)-propionic acid (naproxen) is discussed as a possible therapeutic principle of the antiinflammatory action in polyarthritis.
Infections
by 'slow viruses" and mycoplasma have to be considered as possible etiologic factors for rheumatoid arthritis. The incorporation of the viral or mycoplasmatic DNA into the genetic material of the host cell depends on the function of endonucleases, which can be inhibited by naproxen. The advantages and the drawbacks of this type of mechanism of action are discussed.
...
PMID:[Naproxen, a 'specific" antirheumatic drug?]. 117 77
Infections
with Yersinia pseudotuberculosis serotype III and Y. enterocolitica serotype O2,3 were found to be common in Australian sheep flocks. Transmission of Y. pseudotuberculosis occurred in late winter and early spring, while Y. enterocolitica transmission occurred from midwinter to early summer. Excretion of Y. pseudotuberculosis was limited to the winter and spring period and was particularly common in 1- and 2-year-old sheep.
Infection
persisted for up to 14 weeks. Y. pseudotuberculosis infection did not confer immunity to natural infection with Y. enterocolitica. Y. enterocolitica excretion occurred year-round, with the greatest prevalence being in summer and autumn.
Infection
persisted for up to 29 weeks. Sheep less than 1 year old were most commonly infected with Y. enterocolitica.
Infection
with either Y. pseudotuberculosis or Y. enterocolitica was rare in aged sheep. Restriction
endonuclease
analysis of Y. pseudotuberculosis serotype III from sheep, cattle, deer, and pigs showed that the bacterial isolates were genetically indistinguishable. Similarly, Y. enterocolitica isolates from sheep were indistinguishable from those isolated from goats and cattle.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis and Y. enterocolitica infections in sheep in Australia. 131 49
Human herpesvirus type 6 (HHV-6), a newly recognized human herpesvirus first described in 1986, is morphologically similar to other herpesviruses but is distinguishable from all of them by some unique in vitro biological effects, specific antigenic analysis, and patterns of
endonuclease
restriction digests of DNA. In vitro HHV-6 exhibits tropism mainly for T lymphocytes, but it also infects other cells, including B lymphocytes, monocytes-macrophages, glial cells, and fibroblasts. Because HHV-6 causes frequent infection in infants and children, a seroprevalence rate of antibody to this virus of up to 80% has been reported in the United States.
Infection
in infancy develops as levels of maternal antibody wane, thus resulting in either subclinical infection or an acute febrile illness termed exanthema subitum. Primary infection acquired later in life causes a disease resembling acute infectious mononucleosis. Since HHV-6 shares the capacity to establish latent infection with other herpesviruses, frequent viral reactivation is probably the explanation for the high incidence of serologically proven active HHV-6 infection found simultaneously with active infection due to other herpesviruses as well as in the presence of various immune deficiency conditions.
...
PMID:Human herpesvirus type 6: review. 131 2
To account for the wide variations in the prevalence of cytomegalovirus infections among day-care centers we serially tested 309 children at three day-care centers for 3 years. Based on the DNA restriction
endonuclease
pattern of each isolate, the rate of infection for children differed significantly (P less than 0.001) among centers: at Center 1, 50% (46 of 93) of children acquired cytomegalovirus in day care; at Center 2, 62% (64 of 104); and at Center 3, 25% (21 of 84).
Infection
rates were associated with the number of infants enrolled, and half or more of infected children were younger than 24 months of age. Six of 7 new isolates were introduced by children 18 months of age. Based on DNA patterns the prevalent isolates at Centers 1 and 2, although different, were shed for an average of 22 and 23 months, respectively, compared with an average of 15 months for other isolates (P less than 0.001). Reinfections with the prevalent isolates were observed for 2 of 34 children tested. The most important factors affecting day-care center transmission are the number of infants enrolled and prolonged viral shedding, possibly enhanced by reinfection.
...
PMID:Molecular epidemiology of cytomegalovirus: a study of factors affecting transmission among children at three day-care centers. 165 38
The denV gene from bacteriophage T4 encodes a pyrimidine dimer-specific
endonuclease
that has the capacity to initiate excision repair of DNA. Cells from excision repair-deficient xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) patients are able to carry out excision repair initiated by the denV gene product and introduction of the denV gene into XP cells results in the partial restoration of colony-forming ability after irradiation with UV light. In this work we have constructed a helper-independent recombinant human adenovirus, Ad5denV, which contains the denV gene. A 1.9 kb cartridge consisting of the denV gene flanked by the long terminal repeat (LTR) promoter from Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) and the simian virus 40 (SV40) polyadenylation (poly A) splice signals, was inserted into the E3 region of an E3 deletion mutant (Ad5d1E3) of adenovirus type 5.
Infection
of human fibroblasts and other permissive human cells with Ad5denV resulted in lytic infection and expression of the denV gene was confirmed by primer extension of infected cell RNA. The ability of the denV gene to restore the DNA repair deficiency in XP fibroblasts was examined using host cell reactivation of viral structural antigen formation for UV-irradiated adenovirus. The control virus, Ad5VSV, was also a recombinant which contained the gene for vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein G inserted into the E3 region of Ad5d1E3. UV survival of Ad5denV was similar to that of Ad5VSV following infection of two normal fibroblast strains and a Cockayne syndrome fibroblast strain, CS7SE, from complementation group B. In contrast, UV survival of Ad5denV was significantly greater than that for Ad5VSV after infection of three unrelated XP fibroblast strains from complementation groups A, C and E. However, UV survival of Ad5denV in the XP fibroblasts did not reach levels obtained in normal fibroblasts, indicating that restoration of the XP defect was partial.
...
PMID:Construction of a recombinant adenovirus containing the denV gene from bacteriophage T4 which can partially restore the DNA repair deficiency in xeroderma pigmentosum fibroblasts. 170 21
The temperate bacteriophage phiLC3, isolated from Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris, has an isometric head and a flexible tail containing 1 major protein and 8 minor proteins.
Infection
of a permissive L. lactis host strain yields a burst of about 50 phages per infected cell with a latent period of 60 min. A detailed restriction map of the phage chromosome was constructed by using 12 different restriction enzymes. The phage chromosome is a 33-kb linear double-stranded DNA molecule with unique cohesive ends and with a G + C content of 36.5%. Chemical sequencing of the DNA ends revealed 13-base 3' extended complementary single strands with a relatively high percentage of G + C. Pulsed-field gel electrophoretic analysis of DNA from a strain lysogenized with phiLC3 was used to localize the prophage to a 320-kb BamHI restriction
endonuclease
fragment from the host chromosomal DNA. This result indicates that lysogeny involves integration of the phage into the host chromosome. A spontaneous phiLC3 clear plaque mutant that was unable to give rise to lysogens was isolated.
...
PMID:Characterization of phiLC3, a Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris temperature bacteriophage with cohesive single-stranded DNA ends. 184 Apr 80
A single strain of Staphylococcus epidermidis caused an outbreak of postoperative wound infections and endocarditis during a 6-month period.
Infections
caused by the epidemic strain developed more frequently in valve surgery patients than in those undergoing coronary artery bypass graft surgery (P = .03) and occurred only in patients operated on by surgeon A. None of 17 members of the cardiac surgery team carried the epidemic strain in their anterior nares, axillae, or inguinal folds. Hand cultures were performed on 8 surgical personnel, and only surgeon A carried the epidemic strain on his hands. Isolates from cardiac surgery patients, bypass pump blood cultures, and the hands of the implicated surgeon all had identical antimicrobial susceptibility patterns, plasmid profiles, and EcoRI restriction
endonuclease
digest patterns. In the 24 months after control measures were implemented, no infections caused by the epidemic strain occurred among open heart surgery patients. The findings suggest that the common-source outbreak of infections among cardiac surgery patients was due to carriage of a strain S. epidermidis on the hands of a cardiac surgeon.
...
PMID:A common-source outbreak of Staphylococcus epidermidis infections among patients undergoing cardiac surgery. 217 23
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