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)

RNase MRP is a site-specific endonuclease that processes primer mitochondrial RNA from the leading-strand origin of mitochondrial DNA replication. Using deletional analysis and saturation mutagenesis, we have determined the substrate requirements for cleavage by mouse mitochondrial RNase MRP. Two regions of sequence homology among vertebrate mitochondrial RNA primers, conserved sequence blocks II and III, were found to be critical for both efficient and accurate cleavage; a third region of sequence homology, conserved sequence block I, was dispensable. Analysis of insertion and deletion mutations within conserved sequence block II demonstrated that the specificity of RNase MRP accommodates the natural sequence heterogeneity of conserved sequence block II in vivo. Heterologous assays with human RNase MRP and mutated mouse mitochondrial RNA substrates indicated that sequences essential for substrate recognition are conserved between mammalian species.
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PMID:Efficient site-specific cleavage by RNase MRP requires interaction with two evolutionarily conserved mitochondrial RNA sequences. 232 51

The endoribonuclease, RNase I, was purified from the periplasm of Escherichia coli. Based on PAGE, it has molecular mass of approximately 27 kDa with a migration rate indistinguishable from that of the recently reported RNase M from E. coli. The amino acid sequence of the two enzymes must be very similar based on two-dimensional mapping of their tryptic peptides and suggests either a post-transcriptional modification to yield different proteins from the same gene or evolution of two genes by gene duplication. However, while RNase I could degrade each of the four ribonucleotide homopolymers, only poly(U) or poly(C) were good substrates for RNase M with possibly some hydrolysis of poly(A). The reaction rate for poly(C) hydrolysis with RNase M was about ten times faster than for poly(U), while for RNase I the rates were about equal. Besides differences in specificity, RNase M was only located in the spheroplasts while RNase I found in the periplasm of growing cells. In terms of function, RNase I is known to cause degradation of rRNA during periods of stress or non-growth, whereas it has been proposed that RNase M is the endonuclease for mRNA degradation in growing cells.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of Escherichia coli RNase I. Comparisons with RNase M. 240 34

A computer analysis of the amino acid sequences from the putative gene products of retroviral pol genes has revealed a 150-residue segment that is homologous with the ribonuclease H of Escherichia coli. The segment occurs at the carboxyl terminus of the region assigned to the 90-kDa reverse transcriptase polypeptide. In contrast, a section nearer the amino terminus of this sequence can be aligned with nonretroviral polymerases. The order of activities in the pol gene is thus: polymerase-ribonuclease-endonuclease. On another note, all retroviral endonuclease sequences contain a consensus zinc-binding "finger." This should not be confused with the well-known zinc requirement of reverse transcriptases.
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PMID:Computer analysis of retroviral pol genes: assignment of enzymatic functions to specific sequences and homologies with nonviral enzymes. 242 13

The cytosolic untransformed molybdate-stabilized glucocorticoid-receptor complex from rat liver was eluted as a heterogenous peak containing two components with Stokes radii (Rs) of 8.3 nm and 7.1 nm when analyzed by size-exclusion HPLC even in the absence of molybdate. In contrast, the highly purified glucocorticoid receptor yielded a sharp symmetrical peak of Rs = 7.1 nm. We demonstrate that the 7.1-nm component could not result from a proteolytic degradation of the 8.3-nm receptor form. The same receptor heterogeneity was observed in thymus cytosol which contains less proteases than liver. After labeling with [3H]dexamethasone 21-mesylate and SDS/PAGE the same 94-kDa receptor band was revealed in both the 8.3-nm and 7.1-nm forms. Immunoblotting experiments showed that both the 94-kDa hormone-binding subunit and the 90-kDa heat-shock protein were present in the two different receptor forms. The 8.3-nm receptor form was converted to the 7.1-nm receptor form after treatment by ribonuclease A in the presence of molybdate and this effect was dose-dependent, being completely prevented by placental ribonuclease inhibitor (RNasin). In contrast, in the presence of molybdate, the 7.1-nm receptor form was ribonuclease-insensitive. Treatment of cytosol with RNase A in the absence of molybdate, partially shifted the untransformed receptor towards the 5.2-nm transformed receptor form. This effect was abolished by placental ribonuclease inhibitor. RNase S protein, an enzymatically inactive proteolytic fragment of RNase A, or S1 nuclease, which is specific for single-stranded nucleic acids, were ineffective when used instead of RNase A. In contrast, cobra venom endonuclease, which preferentially attacks double-stranded regions of small RNAs, caused a complete conversion of the 7-8-nm untransformed receptor to the 5.2-nm transformed receptor form. These results were not observed in the presence of molybdate. Addition of RNasin prior to heating cytosol in the absence of molybdate did not prevent the receptor from dissociating to the 5.2-nm form, suggesting that an endogenous RNase is not involved in the transformation process. The 7.1-nm receptor form was shifted to a 9.2-nm complex when incubated with an excess of GR 49 antireceptor antibody, whereas the 8.3-nm receptor form did not bind to the antibody.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:RNA binding to the untransformed glucocorticoid receptor. Sensitivity to substrate-specific ribonucleases and characterization of a ribonucleic acid associated with the purified receptor. 246 3

Sporamin, the major soluble protein of the sweet potato tuberous root, is coded for by a multigene family. Fourty-nine essentially full-length sporamin cDNAs isolated from tuberous root cDNA library have been classified by cross hybridization, restriction endonuclease cleavage pattern and ribonuclease cleavage mapping. All the cDNAs fall into one of the two distinct homology groups, subfamilies A and B, which correspond to the polypeptide classes sporamin A and B, respectively. At least 5 different sequences are detected in both of the 22 sporamin A and 27 sporamin B cDNAs. Comparison of the nucleotide sequences of the coding region of three each of sporamin A and B subfamily members, four from cDNAs and two from genomic clones, indicates that intra-subfamily homologies (94 to 98%) are much higher than inter-subfamily homologies (82 to 84%), and there are deletions or insertions of one or two codons at three locations which characterize each subfamily. Large portions of base substitutions in the coding region accompany amino acid substitutions. In contrast to the coding region, most of the structural differences among the members in the 5' and 3' noncoding regions are deletions or insertions.
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PMID:Structural relationship among the members of a multigene family coding for the sweet potato tuberous root storage protein. 249 73

A previously unreported endoribonuclease has been identified in Escherichia coli, which has a preference for hydrolysis of pyrimidine-adenosine (Pyd-Ado) bonds in RNA. It was purified about 7000-fold to give a single band after SDS/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; the eluted protein gave the same RNase specificity. The sizes of the native and denatured enzymes agreed suggesting that the enzyme exists as a monomer of approximately 26 kDa. It is called RNase M. The only other reported broadly specific endoribonuclease in E. coli is RNase I, a periplasmic enzyme. Based on differences in charge, heat stability and substrate specificity, it was clear that RNase M is not RNase I. The specificity of RNase M was remarkably similar to that of pancreatic RNase A even though the two enzymes differ in charge characteristics and size. Earlier studies had shown that mRNA from the lactose operon of E. coli is hydrolyzed in vivo primarily between Pyd-Ado bonds [Cannistraro et al. (1986) J. Mol. Biol. 192, 257-274] We propose that this major RNase activity accounts for these cleavages observed in vivo and that it is the endonuclease for mRNA degradation in E. coli.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of ribonuclease M and mRNA degradation in Escherichia coli. 265 29

Verticillium agaricinum when grown for 60 min under near-UV irradiation (366 nm) followed by 24 h in darkness produced maximal activity of a number of nucleic acid enzymes (DNase I, endonuclease, nuclease, RNase A, and RNase T1). Total protein and nucleic acid on the other hand showed a decrease under the same conditions. The nucleic acid enzymes which are involved in reversible reactions seem to favour nucleic acid degradation in this study.
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PMID:Effect of near-UV (366 nm) on the activity of certain nucleic acid enzymes in Verticillium agaricinum. 300 7

An RNase activity was found to be present in rat brain and liver and was strongly bound to the nucleoprotein fractions of these tissues. It could not be solubilized by treatment with acid or by lipid solvents. The pattern of oligonucleotides produced during hydrolysis by this enzyme indicated that it was probably an endonuclease with restricted specificity. It was inhibited by zinc ions and by low pH.
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PMID:Occurrence of a nucleoprotein bound RNase in rat brain and liver. 308 63

Nontoxigenic strains of Clostridium botulinum types C and D are converted to toxigenic strains by infection with specific Tox+ bacteriophages. The nucleic acids were extracted from five converting phages, c-st, c-468, c-203, c-d6f, and d-1873, and one nonconverting phage, c-n71, and treated with nucleases. The nucleic acids isolated were not digested by RNase A, but were digested by DNase I and exonuclease III, indicating that they were double-stranded DNA. On the basis of the restriction endonuclease digestion patterns on 0.8% agarose gel electrophoresis, the length of c-st, c-n71, c-468, and c-d6f phage DNAs was estimated to be about 110 kilobase pairs and that of c-203 and d-1873 was about 150 kilobase pairs. The digestion patterns of c-st, c-468, and c-n71 phage DNAs by PstI and HindIII were very similar. High homology was observed in the dot hybridization test. For other phages and nucleases, a good similarity was not observed. Only a little similarity was observed between c-203 and c-d6f phages. The existence of the structural genes for the toxin in both c-st and c-n71 phages was confirmed by the hybridization test with these phage DNAs and the oligonucleotide probe which represented the DNA sequence predicted for the N-terminal amino acids (2 to 17) of C. botulinum type C toxin. The loss of the converting ability of c-n71 phage may be caused not by the deletion of the tox+ gene but rather by the base mutation in c-st phage DNA.
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PMID:Characterization of bacteriophage nucleic acids obtained from Clostridium botulinum types C and D. 327 90

The vast majority of nuclease activity in yeast mitochondria is due to a single polypeptide with an apparent molecular weight of 38,000. The enzyme is located in the mitochondrial inner membrane and requires non-ionic detergents for solubilization and activity. A combination of heparin-agarose and Cibacron blue-agarose chromatography was employed to purify the nuclease to approximately 90% homogeneity. The purified enzyme shows multiple activities: 1) RNase activity on single-stranded, but not double-stranded RNA, 2) endonuclease activity on single- and double-stranded DNA, and 3) a 5'-exonuclease activity on double-stranded DNA. Digestion products with DNA contain 5'-phosphorylated termini. Antibody raised against an analogous enzyme purified from Neurospora crassa (Chow, T. Y. K., and Fraser, M. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 12010-12018) inhibits and immunoprecipitates the yeast enzyme. This antibody inhibits 90-95% of all nuclease activity present in solubilized mitochondria, indicating that the purified nuclease accounts for the bulk of mitochondrial nucleolytic activity. Analysis of a mutant strain in which the gene for the nuclease has been disrupted supports this conclusion and shows that all detectable DNase activity and most nonspecific RNase activity in the mitochondria is due to this single enzyme.
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PMID:Purification and properties of the major nuclease from mitochondria of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 328 39


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