Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.1.30.2 (
endonuclease
)
18,621
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The DNA sequence of the gag and pol regions of a provirus cloned from a bovine tumor is presented. In order to confirm these results the sequence of portions of a second clone, derived from a virus-producing cell line, was also determined. The gag gene was found to consist of 1179 nucleotides, which probably encode only three proteins: an N-terminal protein of 109 amino acids, a major core protein (p24) of 215 amino acids, and a nucleic acid binding protein (p12) of 69 residues. An open reading frame, whose translated product showed clear homology to the avian and murine proteases, was found beginning immediately upstream of the 3' end of gag. Following this protease region, a third long open reading frame, encoding 852 amino acids, showed clear homology to both avian and murine pol genes. The mechanism of translation of the protease and pol gene products cannot be predicted with certainty. Like Moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MuLV), BLV has a termination signal at the 3' end of gag, but unlike M-MuLV the protease is in a different reading frame. Like Rous sarcoma virus (RSV), BLV has a termination signal at the 3' end of the protease region and the reverse transcriptase is in a different (i.e., the third) reading frame. Possible translation mechanisms are discussed. Finally, the BLV gag and pol gene products are highly related to those of the human T-cell leukemia virus (HTLV); relatedness varied from 37% amino acid identities within the N terminal gag protein to 54% within the nucleic acid binding protein. Highly significant homology with both murine and avian type-C proteins was found within
p24
, p12, and the putative protease, reverse transcriptase, and
endonuclease
. Based on this homology, the BLV-HTLV family of viruses appears about equally distantly related to murine and avian type-C viruses.
...
PMID:The gag and pol genes of bovine leukemia virus: nucleotide sequence and analysis. 299 90
Serum samples from 247 patients with positive HIV-1 IgG serology were investigated for specific IgM antibodies. We found that 109 also reacted positively with a least one antigen in an HIV-1 IgM Western Blot and only 31 in an HIV-1 IgM enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). It was shown that in some of the persons, specific IgM antibodies against the gp160/120, p66, p55, gp41,
p24
, and p17 antigens of the virus are synthesized at some time after infection. IgM antibodies to the
endonuclease
-related p31 antigen were observed in one serum only. IgM antibodies against the gp160/120, p66, gp41, and p17 antigens seemed to disappear early after infection. Those against the p55 and the
p24
antigens were found in 62% and 75% of investigated cases, respectively. A direct correlation between the Western Blot patterns and the IgM ELISA results was not found.
...
PMID:Detection of anti-HIV-1 immunoglobulin M antibodies in patients with serologically proved HIV-1 infection. 316 78
Serum samples from 27 patients infected with human T-cell lymphotropic virus type III (14 with acquired immune deficiency syndrome [AIDS] and 13 with AIDS-related complex) were examined for antibodies to viral proteins by the Western blot method and with four different commercial solid-phase enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs). Virus-specific bands on blots at molecular masses of 64, 55, 53, 41, 31, 24, and 17 kilodaltons were observed. Rank correlation matrices were calculated to relate the intensity of viral bands, stage of illness, and ELISA kit optical densities (ODs). Groups of bands tended to covary in intensity: p17,
p24
, and p55 (gag gene products); p53 and p64 (pol gene products); and p31 (pol/
endonuclease
gene product) and p41 (env gene product). Blots of sera from AIDS-related complex patients usually showed strong activity against all viral proteins, while those of sera from AIDS patients characteristically showed strong reactivity only at the pol/
endonuclease
and env bands. For one ELISA kit (Abbott Laboratories, North Chicago, Ill.), ODs correlated well with the env and pol band intensity scores, while ELISA ODs with other kits (from Litton Industries, Sunnyvale, Calif.; Electro-Nucleonics, Inc., Fairfield, N.J.; and E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., Inc., Wilmington, Del.) correlated closely with gag band intensity scores. We conclude that human T-cell lymphotropic virus type III Western blot patterns are determined by (i) viral protein processing pathways and (ii) the stage of illness of the patient and may reflect (iii) the ELISA method used for serum screening.
...
PMID:Variations in Western blot banding patterns of human T-cell lymphotropic virus type III/lymphadenopathy-associated virus. 354 2
The primary structure analysis of the gag gene products of human T-cell leukemia virus (HTLV)-ICR has been nearly completed. A comparison of the amino acid sequences with the published nucleotide sequence of HTLV-IATK established that i) p19 which is known to share antigenic determinants with a protein present in normal thymic epithelium, is nevertheless virally coded. ii) The gene order and complete primary structure of the gag precursor (Pr55) which has been shown to be myristylated (My) at its N-terminus is My-p19-
p24
-p15-OH; and iii) the Pr55gag amino acid sequences of HTLV-ICR and HTLV-IATK are nearly identical showing only a single residue difference in the C-terminal region of p15. Antibodies to synthetic peptides inferred from the nucleotide sequence of the env gene of HTLV-IATK were also raised and used to identify and purify env precursor gPr62-68, surface glycoprotein gp46-51 and transmembrane protein p21. While most of the peptide sera were shown to be subgroup specific some of them detected antigenic determinants shared between protein homologs of viruses of subgroups I and II. Partial or complete amino acid sequences of both the gag and env gene coded proteins of bovine leukemia virus (BLV) structural proteins have also been determined. These extensive protein data together with nucleotide sequences confirm and extend our initial finding that HTLV and BLV are structurally and antigenically related and may have originated from common ancestor. The structural and immunological studies revealed also relationships between HTLV and a number of type C and type D retroviruses studied. One of the highly conserved sequences is shared by the transmembrane proteins of these retroviruses which have been implicated in immunosuppression. It is conceivable that these common regions have common biological function. Two previously unidentified proteins of BLV have also been purified and structurally characterized. Nucleotide sequences capable of coding for related products are present in HTLV. The nature and possible biological functions of these new BLV proteins and the putative HTLV gene products will be discussed. The size and complexity of the genome of the replication competent retroviruses are similar but not identical. The 35S RNA of all replication competent helper viruses is divided into three genes encoding the viral structural proteins: the gag (group-specific antigen) gene codes for the internal structural proteins, the pol (polymerase) gene codes for the enzymes protease, reverse transcriptase and
endonuclease
and the env (envelope) gene codes for the proteins of the viral envelope.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Structural and antigenic characterization of the proteins of human T-cell leukemia viruses and their relationships to the gene products of other retroviruses. 610 Jun 35
Although human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection is progressive, the rate of decline in CD4+ lymphocyte counts varies. The role of immune system components in limiting HIV infection has yet to be defined, but a previous report on the U.S. Navy HIV Seropositive Cohort reported that strong reactivity in the anti-p55 (core precursor),
p24
(core) and p53 (reverse transcriptase) Western blot bands was associated with higher CD4+ lymphocyte counts at the first clinical evaluation for HIV. The previous report examined the cross-sectional association between Western blot banding patterns and initial CD4+ lymphocyte counts. This report examines the association between these banding patterns in individuals who progressed rapidly as compared with patterns of patients who did not, based on their trends in repeated CD4+ lymphocyte counts as a marker of progression. Rapid and slower progressors were identified from a cohort of 3414 Navy and Marine Corps personnel who had a first positive HIV Western blot during 1986-1991. For purposes of this study, rapid progressors were defined as individuals whose CD4+ lymphocyte counts declined to < 500 cells/mm3 within 1 year of seroconversion. A total of 325 individuals met these criteria. A comparison group of 63 slower progressors also was identified; this group consisted of those whose CD4+ lymphocyte counts remained at > or = 500 cells/mm3 for a minimum of 5 years of follow-up after their first positive Western blot. Rapid progressors were slightly younger than slower progressors and were more likely to be never married but did not differ significantly from slower progressors in race or sex. Rapid progressors had weaker reactivity in the anti-p55 core precursor (P < 0.0001), p15 core (P < 0.01), gp41 transmembrane (P < 0.01) and p31
endonuclease
(P < 0.05) bands on the Western blot. The odds ratio for rapid progressor status associated with weak or absent reactivity was 7.8 in the anti-p55 band and ranged from 2.0 to 3.2 in the anti-p31, p15, and gp41 bands. These associations remained significant after adjustment for age, race, and sex. The p55 association persisted in repeated Western blots during routine clinical evaluation during a period of 5 years after the first positive Western blot. It was concluded that several possible explanations may account for the weaker reactivity of rapid progressors: (i) weak anti-p55 reactivity might have been a marker of early immune system damage; (ii) high concentrations of p55 or related proteins in the serum may have bound the available anti-p55 antibodies in rapid progressors, making them difficult to identify on the Western blot; or (iii) lack of anti-p55, p15, gp41, or p31 reactivity might have allowed more rapid progression.
...
PMID:Western blot banding patterns of HIV rapid progressors in the U.S. Navy Seropositive Cohort: implications for vaccine development. Navy Retroviral Working Group. 887 45
The simultaneous presence of multiple HIV-1 subtypes has become common in communities with the growth of the pandemic. As a consequence, the potentiality for an increased frequency of HIV-1 mixed infections caused by viruses of distinct subtypes could be expected. Thus, there is a need to estimate the prevalence and geographic distribution of infections caused by viruses of a singular subtype as well as coinfections caused by two or more HIV-1 strains of distinct subtypes. To address this need, we have developed a genetic method based on restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) to screen for these two types of infections within infected populations. In this assay, restriction enzymes may be used to predict the phylogroup of HIV-1 infected samples. A 297 bp pol fragment spanning the entire viral protease gene and a 311 bp fragment of the
p24
gag region are used for this analysis. The viral regions are amplified by nested PCR using DNA templates from uncultured peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) or virus culture. Classification of HIV-1 strains to well defined subtypes B, D, F, and A/C is done by sequential
endonuclease
restriction analysis of a PCR amplified-protease gene followed by analysis of the
p24
gag region. The electrophoretic migration patterns visualized by ethidium bromide staining or by radiolabeled probes are then determined on a 10% polyacrylamide gel. In infections caused by viruses of a singular subtype, a single restriction pattern is detected, whereas in multiple infections caused by two or more viral strains of different subtypes, the combination of different digestion patterns are observed in infected individuals. Using this methodology we have screened for genetic variations in HIV-1 proviral DNA from thirty-three Brazilian samples. Our RFLP procedure classified thirty-two samples as single infections caused by viruses of subtypes B (31) and F (1), and one sample as dual infection caused by distinct viral strains. Subsequent sequence and phylogenetic analysis of the viral protease gene in lymphocytes of all these patients confirmed our RFLP findings in single infections, and demonstrated the existence of two distinct HIV-1 strains of subtypes F and D in a patient which lymphocytes showed the simultaneous presence of two different digestion patterns. As up to now, single infections caused by subtype D variants were not identified in Brazil, our data provide the first evidence of subtype D HIV-1 in this country. Because sequencing of HIV proviral DNA is not particularly practical for large-scale molecular epidemiological studies, the protease/gag-based RFLP screening method will be useful to predict the phylogroup of HIV-1, and to identify multiple infections caused by HIV-1 strains of distinct subtypes. We believe that this information is crucial for both evaluation of the HIV-1/AIDS pandemic and intervention strategies.
...
PMID:Identification of single and dual infections with distinct subtypes of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 by using restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis. 893 82
Effects of exogenous proteins poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP1) and its 24-kD proteolytic fragment (p24) on the repair of DNA duplexes containing a one nucleotide gap with furan phosphate or phosphate group at the 5'-end of the downstream primer were studied in bovine testis nuclear extract. These damaged DNAs are repaired by the long-patch or short-patch subpathways of base excision repair (BER), respectively. Exogenous PARP1 and
p24
decreased the efficiency of gap filling DNA synthesis for both duplexes, but did not influence the ligation stage in the repair of DNA duplex by the short-patch subpathway. Under the same conditions, these proteins inhibited strand-displacement DNA synthesis and decreased the efficiency of the flap endonuclease 1 (FEN1)-catalyzed
endonuclease
reaction in the nuclear extract, blocking repair of DNA duplex by the long-patch subpathway. Addition of exogenous PARP1 and
p24
also reduced the efficiency of UV light crosslinking of extract BER proteins to the photoreactive BER intermediates carrying a nick. Thus, PARP1 and
p24
interact with DNA intermediates of BER and compete with nuclear extract proteins for binding to DNA. The interaction of PARP1 and
p24
with DNA intermediates of the long-patch subpathway of BER resulted in inhibition of subsequent stages of the repair mediated by this mechanism. However, on recovery of the intact structure of DNA duplex by the short-patch subpathway, PARP1 and
p24
suppressed the repair of the one nucleotide gap less efficiently and failed to influence the final stage of the repair, ligation.
...
PMID:Influence of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 and its apoptotic 24-kD fragment on repair of DNA duplexes in bovine testis nuclear extract. 1690 28
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