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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)
Using purified single-stranded ovalbumin complementary DNA (cDNAov) as a template for avian
myeloblastosis
(AM) virus reverse transcriptase, we have enzymatically synthesized a complete double-stranded cDNAov sequence. Our data suggests that many single-stranded cDNAov molecules contain short double-stranded sequences (hairpins) at their 3' termini capable of acting as primers for synthesis of complete double-stranded cDNAs. Optimum conditions for synthesis of the double-stranded cDNAov were found to be a high temperature (46 degrees) and a low salt concentration. Nevertheless, in all cases 40% of the initial single-stranded cDNAov molecules fail to prime for synthesis of a complementary double strand. Following synthesis, the second DNA strand is covalently linked to the first cDNAov strand as shown by analysis on alkaline sucrose gradients. The two strands have a high Tm on hydroxylapatite (89 degrees). These intact double-stranded cDNAov structures have a bouyant density in CsCl gradients of 1.700 g/cm3 and rapidly renature after heat denaturation with a C0t1/2 value of less than 2 X 10(-6) mol s liter(-1). All size classes of cDNAs, i.e. partial as well as complete transcripts of the mRNA, are capable of forming double-stranded structures. The closed loop of the double-stranded cDNAov could be opened with S1 nuclease. The denatured complementary strands of the cDNAov then renatured with the appropriate second order kinetics at a C0t1/2 value of 1.89 X 10(-3) mol s liter(-1). Using the enzyme terminal deoxyribonucleotidyltransferase to label to free 3'-terminal end of double-stranded [32P]cDNAov with 3H, we demonstrate a convenient procedure to study the site for restriction
endonuclease
cleavage within the ovalbumin gene.
...
PMID:The ovalbumin gene. In vitro enzymatic synthesis and characterization. 6 59
Highly purified preparations of RNA-directed DNA polymerase from avian
myeloblastosis
virus (AMV) contain a Mn2+-activated
endonuclease
activity capable of nicking supercoiled DNA. This
endonuclease
activity co-sediments in glycerol gradients with the alphabeta form of AMV DNA polymerase, and co-chromatographs with DNA polymerase activity on DEAE-cellulose, phosphocellulose, and heparin-Sepharose. It is also present in AMV alphabeta-DNA polymerase purified by electrophoresis through nondenaturing polyacrylamide gels and subsequently chromatographed on poly(C)-agarose. alphabeta-associated
endonuclease
is co-immunoprecipitated with DNA polymerase activity by antiserum directed against alphabeta holoenzyme. The alpha form of AMV DNA polymerase lacks this activity. In its enzymatic properties, alphabeta-associated
endonuclease
resembles the endodeoxyribonuclease activity associated with the AMV p32 protein, which has been shown to be structurally related to the beta (but not the alpha) subunit of AMV DNA polymerase.
...
PMID:Endonuclease activity of purified RNA-directed DNA polymerase from avian myeloblastosis virus. 8 98
Conditions are described which give an efficient synthesis of DNA copies of cowpea mosaic virus (CPMV) RNAs, using avian
myeloblastosis
reverse transcriptase and oligo (dT) primers. Maximum incorporation of dAMP into cDNA is attained with 0.4 to 0.8 mM of each deoxynucleoside triphosphate, 12 mM Mg++ and 60 mM K+ ion concentrations. High enzyme concentrations (up to 100 units/ml) were used. Under these conditions over 1000 pmoles of dAMP were incorporated per reaction. The cDNA:RNA molar ratio approached 0.3 when 1 pmole CPMV RNA was used as template. The products were heterogeneous but large. Bottom component RNA (about 6000 nucleotides long) was copied into cDNA molecules ranging from about 1000 to 4000 nucleotides, and middle component RNA (about 4000 nucleotides long) was copied into cDNA mostly between 500 and 2000 nucleotides long, on average about 1500, which can be cleaved by restriction
endonuclease
Hae III into two fragments of 880 and 540 nucleotides.
...
PMID:Efficient reverse transcription of cowpea mosaic virus RNAs. 8 93
Full-length radiolabeled albumin and alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) cDNAs were synthesized from pure albumin and AMP mRNA preparations by using avian
myeloblastosis
virus reverse transcriptase (RNA-dependent DNA polymerase). The cDNAs have been used to quantitate the number of albumin and AFP genes in different rat tissues by two independent methods, both of which yielded similar results. First, the kinetics of the association of these cDNAs with nuclear DNA from rat liver, rat kidney, and Morris hepatoma 7777 under conditions of vast DNA excess indicated that the albumin and AFP mRNA's are transcribed from "nonrepetitive DNA." Second, saturation hybridization experiments in which a constant amount of rat liver DNA or Morris hepatoma 7777 was hybridized with increasing amounts of cDNA to albumin mRNA have shown the presence of 1--2 albumin genes per rat haploid genome. The number of AFP genes obtained in similar titration experiments was approximately 2--3. This was true whether rat liver DNA or hepatoma 7777 DNA was used in the reassociation experiments. When high molecular weight DNA preparations from both these tissues were digested with the restriction
endonuclease
EcoRI and the fragments were transferred to a nitrocellulose filter, the albumin and AFP [32P]cDNA probes hybridized to different sets of DNA fragments. However, each probe gave the same hybridization pattern whether Buffalo rat liver DNA or hepatoma 7777 DNA was utilized.
...
PMID:alpha-Fetoprotein and albumin genes of rats: no evidence for amplification-deletion or rearrangement in rat liver carcinogenesis. 8 3
Hepatitis B virus DNA made fully double stranded by a virion DNA polymerase reaction could be converted from circular to linear molecules by heating in 10 mM NaCl at 77 degrees C or in 100 mM NaCl at 90 degrees C for 15 min. Heat-generated linear hepatitis B virus DNA was reannealed to circular molecules by incubating in higher salt concentrations. The identity of the molecular forms was established by their electrophoretic mobility and appearance in electron micrographs. Recircularization was blocked by reacting linear molecules with nuclease S1 or avian
myeloblastosis
virus reverse transcriptase. These results suggest that the heated linear DNA had single-stranded ends with complementary nucleotide sequences. It also suggests that a discontinuity or nick is present in each strand of the circular DNA molecule after the single-stranded region is made double stranded by the virion DNA polymerase reaction. The difference in contour length by electron microscopy of circular and linear molecules spread under aqueous conditions suggested that the discontinuities in the two strands were about 270 base pairs apart. The amount of nucleotide incorporated into the ends of heat-generated linear hepatitis B virus DNA by reverse transcriptase suggested that the single-stranded ends were about 305 bases in length. This fully double-stranded linear DNA was cleaved with EcoRI or HpaI restriction
endonuclease
. The sum of the two fragments generated by each totaled 3,510 base pairs, 310 base pairs greater than the contour length of circular hepatitis B virus DNA which represents a third estimate of the distance between the discontinuities in the two DNA strands of circular DNA. Restriction
endonuclease
cleavage also indicated that the ends of heated linear DNA which correspond to the discontinuities in the two strands of the circular DNA are at unique sites in the DNA with respect to the restriction sites.
...
PMID:Hepatitis B viral DNA molecules have cohesive ends. 9 58
Viral DNA molecules were purified from a nontransforming and a transforming strain of Epstein-Barr virus. Each viral DNA was labeled in vitro and renatured in the presence of an excess of either one or the other unlabeled viral DNA. Both viral DNAs were also digested with the Eco R1 restriction
endonuclease
and subsequently labeled by using avian
myeloblastosis
virus DNA polymerase to repair either the EcoR1 nuclease-generated single-stranded ends of the DNAs or their single-stranded ends produced by a second digestion with exonuclease III after the first EcoR1 nuclease digestion. The results of these experiments support three general conclusions: (i) the DNAs of these two strains of Epstein-Barr virus share approximately 90% of their nucleotide sequences; (ii) both viral DNA populations are reasonably homogenous; and (iii) both DNAs contain repetitions or inverted repetitions of some of their nucleotide sequences.
...
PMID:Nucleic acid renaturation and restriction endonuclease cleavage analyses show that the DNAs of a transforming and a nontransforming strain of Epstein-Barr virus share approximately 90% of their nucleotide sequences. 17 7
A DNA endonuclease, Endo-I, which cleaves superhelical DNAs, has been isolated from avian
myeloblastosis
virions stripped of their coats by mild detergent treatment. The enzyme has a broad pH optimum around 7.5-8.0 and requires Mg2+ for activity. A second
endonuclease
, Endo-II, with a requirement for Mn2+, also present in viral cores, copurified with avian
myeloblastosis
virus alpha beta DNA polymerase (reverse transcriptase, RNA-dependent DNA nucleotidyltransferase) and similarly cleaved superhelical DNAs. Heat denaturation and sodium fluoride and N-ethylmaleimide inhibition studies were carried out to demonstrate a possible relationship between the two endonucleases and the viral DNA polymerase and RNase H activities. It appears that Endo-II may be an intrinsic activity of the polymerase.
...
PMID:DNA endonucleases associated with the avian myeloblastosis virus DNA polymerase. 22 53
cDNA, synthesized from rabbit globin mRNA, was used in a self-priming reaction, with avian
myeloblastosis
virus DNA polymerase, for the synthesis of double-stranded DNA. Globin DNA ranging from about 400 to 650 base pairs was elongated with dG tails using deoxypolynucleotide transferase and was annealed to linear Escherichia coli plasmic pCR1, elongated with dC tails. Preparation of the plasmid DNA involved an enzymatic reconstruction of one EcoRI-specific site on each side of the molecule. After transformation of E. coli cells to kanamycin resistance with the hybrid molecules, bacterial clones harboring recombinant plasmids were studied for the presence of globin-specific DNA. Plasmids containing either alpha or beta rabbit globin gene sequences were obtained. There was a 4-fold excess of recombinant plasmids containing beta-globin sequences over those with alpha-globin DNA. The longest beta-globin sequences found in plasmids were about 550 to 600 pairs long, and correspond therefore to the entire beta-globin structural gene and to some of the untranslated regions. The alpha-globin sequences were 400 to 450 base pairs long. Treatment of clone pCR1betarG 19 with EcoRI
endonuclease
released two DNA fragments (410 and 210 base pairs) resulting from cleavage at two reconstructed external EcoRI sites and at one internal EcoRI site within the rabbit globin gene. The same treatment of pCR1alpharG 11 released one fragment. In most other recombinant plasmids studied however, no fragment was released by EcoRI digestion.
...
PMID:Cloning and amplification of rabbit alpha- and beta-globin gene sequences into Escherichia coli plasmids. 32 53
Detection of hantaviruses, the etiological agents of hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS), by virus isolation using experimental animals or cell culture is time-consuming. A more rapid but equally specific method is needed. We used a reverse transcriptase-directed polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) to detect hantavirus genomic sequences and compared its sensitivity with conventional virus isolation. RNA, extracted by the guanidinium isothiocyanate-cesium chloride method from hantavirus-infected Vero E6 cells and from tissues of infant mice inoculated intracerebrally with 100 LD50 of hantavirus, was initially reverse transcribed using avian
myeloblastosis
virus reverse transcriptase. The resulting complementary DNA (cDNA) was used as template to amplify the glycoprotein 2-encoding region of the hantavirus M segment. With this method, Vero E6 cell cultures infected with Hantaan virus strains 76-118 (prototype) and HV114 (an isolate from the urine of an HFRS patient in China) were positive, while control cultures were negative. Brain, lung, and heart tissues from hantavirus-infected mice were positive by RT-PCR at 5, 8, and 11 days after intracerebral inoculation. The specificity of the positive results was confirmed by restriction
endonuclease
digestion of the amplified fragments with AluI and HpaI. The sensitivity of the RT-PCR was equal to cell culture amplification but required less time. This method is being adapted for detection of hantavirus genomic sequences in clinical specimens and postmortem tissues from patients with HFRS.
...
PMID:Detection of hantavirus RNA in tissues of experimentally infected mice using reverse transcriptase-directed polymerase chain reaction. 171 66
A quantitative and efficient assay was developed to measure the 3'-OH terminal DNA endonuclease activity of the avian
myeloblastosis
virus (AMV) integrase protein. A retroviral-like linearized plasmid containing long terminal repeat (LTR) sequences at its recessed 3'-OH termini was filled in and labeled with the Escherichia coli Klenow DNA polymerase fragment. The 32P-labeled nucleotide was located at the penultimate position. The labeled linearized plasmid or restriction fragments derived from it were incubated with AMV IN and release of the label was quantitated by conversion to acid-soluble counts. The structure of the released product was characterized on 23% sequencing gels. Results indicate that AMV integration protein is functioning as an
endonuclease
releasing a dinucleotide and that the activity is stoichiometric with a preference for the cleavage of the U3 LTR terminus over that of the U5 LTR terminus.
...
PMID:Development of an acid-soluble assay for measuring retrovirus integrase 3'-OH terminal nuclease activity. 188 32
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