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:3.1.4.1 (
phosphodiesterase
)
18,767
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. An
endonuclease
has been isolated from the nuclei of rye (Secale cereale L) germ and partially purified. The enzyme shows optimum activity over the pH range 5.4-7.4 towards both DNA and RNA, and has no phosphomonoesterase or
phosphodiesterase
activity. 2. DNA is degraded by the rye germ nuclease to oligonucleotides of similar size, and RNA to oligonucleotides and mononucleotides containing a C-terminal 5'-phosphate group. 3. The rate of hydrolysis of nuclear acids by the enzyme decreases in the following order: native DNA greater than denatured DNA greater than RNA. Synthetic polynucleotides are hydrolysed at a rate decreasing in the order: poly(A) greater than poly(U) greater than poly(C) greater than poly(G).
...
PMID:Purification and some properties of a nuclease from rye germ nuclei. 61 Feb 81
The 30S nuclear RNP particles from rat liver have been shown to split the double-stranded- (ds) and single-stranded (ss) sequences of nuclear pre-mRNA. Experiments performed in vitro have demonstrated that 1) a
5'-exonuclease
and an
endonuclease
specific for double-stranded pre-mRNA sequences exist in the 30S pre-mRNP particles; 2) in dsRNA monophosphorylated 5'-termini arose in the course of incubation with 30S RNP and most of the products remained double-stranded. The analysis of terminal pNp nucleotides revealed a relatively high ratio of pPyp in the cleaved dsRNA, whereas the nucleosides in 5'-terminal pNp of ssRNA showed nearly random distribution. Our results provide a possible explanation for the appearance of pNp termini during the processing of nuclear pre-mRNA of mammalian cells.
...
PMID:Cleavage of pre-mRNA sequences by ribonucleases bound to nuclear RNP particles of rat liver. 73 82
A general method has been developed for the deletion of restriction
endonuclease
sites in bacterial plasmid DNA. The procedure involves partial digestion of the covalently closed circular plasmid DNA with an appropriate restriction
endonuclease
under conditions which allow accumulation of unit-length linear DNA molecules, a controlled digestion of the exposed 5' ends with the lambda
5'-exonuclease
, and in vivo recircularization of the resulting linear DNA in a bacterial host cell. The method has been used for the deletion of one of the two EcoRI sites in the plasmid pML2 (colE1-Km). Two of the resulting plasmids, pCR1 and pCR11, have a single EcoRI cleavage site, but retain genetic determinants specifying resistance to colicin E1 and kanamycin, and thus may be useful as vectors for the cloning and amplification of DNA in bacteria.
...
PMID:A method for the deletion of restriction sites in bacterial plasmid deoxyribonucleic acid. 77 81
Endo-R-HindIII restriction
endonuclease
fragments obtained from F30 and pMB9 plasmid DNAs were ligated in vitro and used to transform a recB21 recC22 sbcB15 strain of E. coli K-12. The inability of this strain to stably maintain pMB9 alone permitted the isolation of transformants that carried hybrid plasmids containing the sbcB+ allele. These transformants became sensitive to ultraviolet light and recombination defieient and showed a 25-fold increase in the level of
exonuclease I
activity. The stability of the sbcB hybrid plasmids and their effects on
exonuclease I
activity have also been determined in wild-type and recA1 genetic backgrounds. The presence of the plasmids results in a 7-fold increase in the level of
exonuclease I
in a wild-type strain and 15-fold increase in a recA1 strain. The increased activity in the recA1 mutant appears to be a result of increased plasmid stability in this genetic background.
...
PMID:Amplification in Escherichia coli of enzymes involved in genetic recombination: construction of hybrid ColE1 plasmids carrying the structural gene for exonuclease I. 79 Mar 87
In this report we present the first description of the isolation and partial characterization of the deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) polymerase activity from two species of Mycoplasmatales, Mycoplasma orale type 1 and M. hyorhinis. We have identified only a single DNA polymerase species in the mycoplasma crude extracts, and the enzymes from the two organisms are very similar in their structural and enzymatic properties. The purified polymerase from each source has a specific activity of greater than 50,000 U/mg of protein, a sedimentation coefficient of 5.6s, and an estimated molecular weight by gel filtration of 130,000. On sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the most highly purified M. orale fraction contains a single major protein band of 130,000 daltons, which we believe may represent the polymerase protein. The enzymes are most reactive with gapped (activated) DNA and show a marked preference for this primer template over oligodeoxyribonucleotide-initiated homoribo- or homodeoxyribo-polymers. The most purified preparations are devoid of contaminating
endonuclease
activity and also appear to lack associated 5' leads to 3'- or 3' leads to
5'-exonuclease
activities, as determined by highly sensitive assays. The absence of the 3' leads to
5'-exonuclease
is particularly remarkable in that this activity is essentially ubiquitous among the DNA polymerases that have thus far been characterized from procaryotes.
...
PMID:Purification and partial characterization of the principal deoxyribonucleic acid polymerase from Mycoplasmatales. 91 80
Poly(A)-containing messenger RNA isolated from rabbit reticulocytes as estimated by periodate oxidation and condensation with [3H]isoniazid has two oxidizable end groups per molecule of mol. wt. 220000. When the mRNA is subjected to stepwise degradation by beta-elimination, only one oxidizable end-group is found. This indicates that one of the 2',3' hydroxyl end-groups is linked through the normal 3'--5' phosphodiester bond, but that the other is linked in such a way that after stepwise degradation no new 2',3 hydroxyl group is revealed. This structure could be a 5'-linked 5'-phospho di- or tri-ester. On digestion with ribonuclease the isoniazid-labelled RNA produced oligonucleotide hydrazones consistent with a poly(A) sequence at the 3' end plus fragments that are not found after stepwise degradation. These fragments have a charge of --6 and --8 from pancreatic ribonuclease or --7 from ribonuclease T1 digestion. These charges are changed to --3.4 and --4.1 after pancreatic ribonuclease, ribonuclease T2 and alkaline phosphatase digestion. methyl-3H-labelled-poly(A)-containing RNA isolated from late erythroid cells contain a methyl-labelled fragment resistant to
endonuclease
and phosphodiesterase II digestion. After digestion with
phosphodiesterase I
this fragment produces methyl-3 H-labelled nucleotides with the electrophoretic mobility of pm7G and pAm. It is concluded that globin mRNA has the 5' sequences m7G(5')ppp'AmpYpGp ... and m7G(5')pppAmpApGpYp.
...
PMID:The nature of the 5'-linked 5' nucleotide sequence at the 5' end of rabbit globin messenger ribonucleic acid. 94 25
DNA deoxyribophosphodiesterase (dRpase) of E. coli catalyzes the release of deoxyribose-phosphate moieties following the cleavage of DNA at an apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) site by either an AP
endonuclease
or AP lyase. Exonuclease I is a single-strand specific DNA nuclease which affects the expression of recombination and repair pathways in E. coli. We show here that a major dRpase activity in E. coli is associated with the
exonuclease I
protein. Highly purified
exonuclease I
isolated from an over-producing stain contains high levels of dRpase activity; it catalyzes the release of deoxyribose-5-phosphate from an AP site incised with
endonuclease
IV of E. coli and the release of 4-hydroxy-2-pentenal-5-phosphate from an AP site incised by the AP lyase activity of endonuclease III of E. coli. A strain containing a deletion of the sbcB gene showed little dRpase activity; the activity could be restored by transformation of the strain with a plasmid containing the sbcB gene. The dRpase activity isolated from an overproducing stain was increased 70-fold as compared to a normal sbcB+ strain (AB3027). These results suggest that the dRpase activity may be important in pathways for both DNA repair and recombination.
...
PMID:DNA deoxyribophosphodiesterase of Escherichia coli is associated with exonuclease I. 132 27
Modified deoxynucleosides 2'-deoxy-beta-L-uridine, beta-L-thymidine, alpha-L-thymidine, 2'-deoxy-beta-L-adenosine and 2'-deoxy-alpha-L-adenosine were synthesized and assembled as homooligomers, respectively: octa-beta-L-deoxyuridylates, octa beta-L and alpha-L-thymidylates and tetra beta-L and alpha-L-deoxyadenylates. These unnatural oligomers were then substituted with an acridine derivative. The binding studies of these modified oligonucleotides with D-ribo- and D-deoxyribopolynucleotides were carried out by absorption spectroscopy. While beta-L-d(Up)8m5Acr, beta-L-(Tp)8m5Acr, alpha-L-(Tp)8m5Acr did not interact with poly(rA) and poly(dA), beta-L-d(Ap)4m5Acr and alpha-L-d(Ap)4m5Acr did form double and triple helices with poly(rU) and poly(dT), respectively. Their stability towards nuclease digestion was studied through comparison with that of octa-beta-D-thymidylate and tetra beta-D-deoxyadenylate covalently linked to an acridine derivative. One
endonuclease
(nuclease P1 from Penicillium citrinum) and two exonucleases (a 3'-exonuclease from Crotalus durissus venom and a
5'-exonuclease
extracted from calf thymus) were employed. beta-L- and alpha-L-oligomers demonstrate a high resistance toward nuclease digestion.
...
PMID:Synthesis and physicochemical properties of oligonucleotides built with either alpha-L or beta-L nucleotides units and covalently linked to an acridine derivative. 165 74
The repair of apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites is described. The major pathway involves hydrolysis of the stable phosphodiester bond on the 5' side of the lesion by an AP
endonuclease
. The 5' terminal deoxyribose-phosphate residue is excised by a separate
phosphodiesterase
which does not appear to be an exonuclease. Repair replication of the single missing nucleotide residue by a DNA polymerase and ligation complete the excision-repair process. The possibility that minor DNA lesions may accumulate with time in long-lived cells is considered. Such lesions should be chemically stable and should not be recognized by DNA-repair enzymes.
...
PMID:Repair of intrinsic DNA lesions. 169 69
The mode of action of the RNase H activity from HIV-1 was analyzed with a purified recombinant p66/p51 reverse transcriptase RT/RNase H protein and RNA-DNA hybrid consisting of RNA harboring the polypurine tract (ppt) and three complementary synthetic DNA oligonucleotides. Upon incubation of this preformed RNA-DNA hybrid with the p66/p51 RT/RNase H, a cleavage pattern is observed that indicates endonucleolytic RNase H activity with some sequence specificity for the next to last nucleotide of the 3'-end of the ppt RNA and one cut within the ppt. The RNase H avoids cleavage of G or A stretches. During RNA-directed DNA synthesis the RNA is hydrolyzed in a concerted action of RT and RNase H whereby the RNase H exhibits
endonuclease
as well as 3'-
5'-exonuclease
activity. The distance between the active centers of the RT and RNase H corresponds to 18 base pairs of the RNA-DNA hybrid. Plus-strand DNA-directed DNA synthesis initiates exactly at the next to last nucleotide of the 3'-end of the ppt RNA by means of the RNase H activity.
...
PMID:Interaction of HIV-1 ribonuclease H with polypurine tract containing RNA-DNA hybrids. 170 2
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>