Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.21.64 (proteinase K)
4,071 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Messenger RNAs in eukaryotic cells exhibit a broad range of stabilities in vivo. Globin mRNA has a half life in excess of 50 h, but the half life of the c-myc oncogene mRNA is less than 20 min. Regulation of gene expression may be accomplished by a variety of mechanisms, including altering mRNA stability. We have examined the nuclear and cytoplasmic fractions of cells for factors affecting the metabolism of mRNA. Here we report that a HeLa whole-cell extract contains a factor that protects beta-globin mRNA from attack by RNases in a mouse erythroleukemia cell cytoplasmic extract. The factor is non-dialysable, inactivated by proteinase K and heat treatment, and resistant to RNase and DNase digestion. The HeLa cell factor resembles placental RNase inhibitor in that the mRNA-protecting activity is effective against RNase A and that treatment of the extract with N-ethylmaleimide completely destroys the protective activity. However, purified placental RNase inhibitor was unable to inhibit the RNase activity in the MELC cytoplasmic extract. These results suggest that the HeLa cell extract contains an RNase inhibitor (or inhibitors) with an activity or specificity that is distinct from that of placental RNase inhibitor.
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PMID:Cellular factor affecting the stability of beta-globin mRNA. 316 61

mRNA molecules encoding a number of inflammatory cytokines, as well as certain proto-oncogenes, contain a conserved UA-exclusive sequence in the 3' untranslated region that confers message instability in vivo. This sequence may comprise a critical regulatory element, governing the level of these mRNA molecules, and determining the efficiency with which they are translated. Through the use of a double-label RNAse assay, we have determined that lysates prepared from mouse macrophages selectively degrade mRNA molecules containing the 3' untranslated UA sequence found in the mRNA encoding human cachectin/TNF. The degree of instability is dependent upon the number of copies of inserted UA sequence present in the target mRNA molecule (a Xenopus beta-globin mRNA). mRNAs containing randomly generated UA sequences are more labile than unmodified globin mRNA, but less susceptible to degradation than mRNAs containing the authentic cachectin-derived sequence. mRNA molecules containing synthetic UG-exclusive sequences are normally stable or protected in vitro. The destruction of UA-containing mRNA is inhibited by random adenylate/uridilate copolymers, but not by guanylate/uridilate copolymers. Boiling or proteinase K treatment destroys the selective nucleolytic activity of macrophage lysates. We propose that the nuclease measured here may serve to regulate cellular levels of mRNA molecules encoding cachectin, other inflammatory cytokines, and certain proto-oncogene products.
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PMID:Assay of a ribonuclease that preferentially hydrolyses mRNAs containing cytokine-derived UA-rich instability sequences. 328 1

The ability of purified U1 small nuclear RNA-protein complexes (U1 snRNPs) to bind in vitro to two RNAs transcribed from recombinant DNA clones by bacteriophage T7 RNA polymerase has been studied. A transcript which contains sequences corresponding to the small intron and flanking exons of the major mouse beta-globin gene is bound in marked preference to an RNA devoid of splice site sequences. The site of U1 snRNP binding to the globin RNA has been defined by T1 ribonuclease digestion of the RNA-U1 snRNP complex. A 15-17-nucleotide region, including the 5' splice site, remains undigested and complexed with the snRNP such that it can be co-precipitated by antibodies directed against the U1 snRNP. Partial proteinase K digestion of the U1 snRNP abolishes interaction with the globin RNA, indicating that the snRNP proteins contribute significantly to RNA binding. No RNA cleavage, splicing, or recognition of the 3' splice site by U1 snRNPs has been detected. Our results are discussed in terms of the probable role of U1 snRNPs in the messenger RNA splicing of eucaryotic cell nuclei.
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PMID:The U1 small nuclear RNA-protein complex selectively binds a 5' splice site in vitro. 619 May 73

The sensitivities of three methods of detection of Mycoplasma pneumoniae by a 16S rDNA PCR were compared by using a serial dilution of M. pneumoniae. These methods consisted of a PCR performed directly on cells after a proteinase K pretreatment (direct PCR), a PCR after purification of nucleic acids (DNA-PCR), and a PCR with rRNA sequences as the target after reverse transcription. The direct PCR and the reverse transcription PCR had a sensitivity of 1.5 CFU (approximately 250 genomes). By purification, a 10-fold loss of target DNA occurred, as shown by a 10-fold decrease in sensitivity (15 CFU) of the DNA-PCR. The presence of an excess of human background DNA did not influence the sensitivity of either PCR. The direct PCR was evaluated on samples from patients with respiratory complaints. Direct PCR amplification was possible in 94.9% of the samples, which were tested by amplification of a 326-bp fragment of the beta-globin gene, which was performed to test for the suitability of amplification. Nucleic acid purification was performed on the beta-globin-negative samples, after which only 2% remained negative. A positive correlation between the direct M. pneumoniae PCR and serology, as tested by the microparticle agglutination assay (MAG assay), was found in 88.1% of the cases. A positive MAG assay result was found for samples from 10 (17%) of the patients; samples from 6 (10.2%) of these patients were also positive by PCR. Samples from three patients were found to be positive by the M. pneumoniae PCR and negative by the MAG assay. Persistence of M. pneumoniae, as detected by PCR was observed in three patients. These results indicate that the direct PCR with 16S rDNA could prove to be useful in the detection of M. pneumoniae in respiratory tract samples, although more studies are needed to evaluate the correlation between clinical symptoms and positive test results.
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PMID:Direct PCR enables detection of Mycoplasma pneumoniae in patients with respiratory tract infections. 751 Mar 8

The efficiency of a freeze-thaw method, a proteinase K/Tween 20 lysis method and a guanidinium isothiocyanate/silica beads method for DNA extraction from fixed and Papanicolaou-stained cells from the cervical cancer cell line Siha was measured by beta-globin polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The GTC/silica beads method, which appeared superior, revealed a human papillomavirus (HPV) general primer-mediated PCR sensitivity of 50-500 copies of HPV 16 per sample using dilutions of fixed and stained Siha cells. Application to archival cervical smears (n = 116) revealed that the yield and size of amplifiable DNA decreases with storage time. The longer the storage time, the more repetitions of the whole procedure, including the lysis step, were required to extract sufficient amplifiable DNA. In this way, an overall beta-globin PCR positivity for 98% of the smears was reached. Further analysis revealed that a maximum size of 200 bp could be amplified from smears stored for up to 9 years. The method was validated by demonstrating by PCR the same HPV types in archival smears and corresponding cervical biopsies of cervical cancer patients. In conclusion, the GTC/silica beads method appears suitable to process archival cervical smears for HPV detection by PCR. provided that stepwise adjustments are made until beta-globin PCR positivity is obtained and primers are chosen which amplify a maximum of about 200 bp.
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PMID:Processing of long-stored archival cervical smears for human papillomavirus detection by the polymerase chain reaction. 891 55

Conventional solution-phase polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and in situ PCR/PCR in situ hybridization are powerful tools for retrospective analysis of fixed paraffin wax-embedded material. Amplification failure using these techniques is now encountered in some centres using archival fixed tissues. Such 'failures' may not only be due to absent target DNA sequences in the tissues, but may be a direct effect of the type of fixative, fixation time and/or fixation temperature used. The type of nucleic acid extraction procedure applied will also influence amplification results. This is particularly true with in situ PCR/PCR in situ hybridization. To examine these effects in solution-phase PCR, beta-globin gene was amplified in 100 mg pieces of tonsillar tissue fixed in Formal saline, 10% formalin, neutral buffered formaldehyde, Carnoy's Bouin's, buffered formaldehyde sublimate, Zenker's, Helly's and glutaraldehyde at 0 to 4 degrees C, room temperature and 37 degrees C fixation temperatures and for fixation periods of 6, 24, 48 and 72 hours and 1 week. DNA extraction procedures used were simple boiling and 5 days' proteinase K digestion at 37 degrees C. Amplified product was visible primarily yet variably from tissue fixed in neutral buffered formaldehyde and Carnoy's, whereas fixation in mercuric chloride-based fixatives produced consistently negative results. Room temperature and 37 degrees C fixation temperature appeared most conducive to yielding amplifiable DNA template. Fixation times of 24 and 48 hours in neutral buffered formaldehyde and Carnoy's again favoured amplification.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The importance of fixation procedures on DNA template and its suitability for solution-phase polymerase chain reaction and PCR in situ hybridization. 804 6

As part of a retrospective study into the prevalence of the t(14;18) translocation in B-cell lymphomas, we assessed the suitability of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to amplify the t(14;18) major breakpoint region (MBR) in frozen and formalin-fixed tissue. Considering Southern blotting as a standard, the sensitivity of PCR was 81%. Of the various procedures used to extract DNA from paraffin-embedded tissue (PET), proteinase K digestion in the presence of nonionic detergents gave the highest yield and quality of DNA and the most efficient amplification rate. Using this method, excellent amplification rates (100%) were obtained for both the beta-globin control sequence and the MBR t(14;18) for fixed follicular lymphoma specimens collected in the previous 2 to 6 years (n = 27). Of nine older PETs, PCR on six gave inconsistent results, probably because of the poorer-quality substrate used for amplification. Specimens exposed to formol sublimate or formalin-acetic acid-alcohol were as suitable for amplification as tissues fixed in neutral-buffered formalin. The overall incidence of the MBR t(14;18) in all follicular lymphoma specimens as detected by both Southern blotting and PCR was 59% (23 of 39).
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PMID:Detection of the t(14;18) translocation in frozen and formalin-fixed tissue. 826 84

A simple and rapid method for the molecular detection of beta-globin structural mutations is described using a reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction of reticulocyte mRNA and direct sequencing of the product. The amplified segment (employing a sense primer 5'-ATTTGCTTCTGACACAACTGT-3', located at position + 1 with respect to the Cap site and an antisense primer 5'-TCCAGATGCTCAAGGCCCTTC-3', located at position + 1772 with respect to the Cap site) encompasses the cDNA sequence including the three globin exons. Employing this method we were able to characterize two hemoglobin structural variants: Hb S (beta 6 (A3) Glu-Val: GAG-GTG) and Hb Porto Alegre (beta 9 (A6) Ser-Cys: TCT-TGT). The approach described in this paper should be very useful to detect hemoglobin structural variants because the RNA extraction is simple, rapid and does not require cesium chloride, guanidinium and proteinase K. In addition, the direct sequencing of the RT-PCR product permits the screening of the entire globin genes with only two reactions.
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PMID:Rapid identification of beta-globin structural mutations by sequencing the mRNA from peripheral blood reticulocytes. 831 34

Adenoviruses and herpes simplex virus (HSV) can cause clinically indistinguishable episodes of acute eye disease. Adenovirus infection is associated with nosocomial outbreaks and HSV may result in episodes of recurrent ocular inflammation. In a comparison of multiplex PCR for the two viral DNAs and virus isolation in cell culture, identical results were obtained for 18 of 20 specimens (positive for adenovirus in 5, HSV in 5, and negative in 8). One specimen was falsely negative for each viral DNA. Inclusion of human beta-globin primers in the adenovirus-HSV reaction was precluded by a consequential 10--100-fold reduction in sensitivity for the two viral targets and by the failure of beta-globin DNA amplification at the annealing temperature (45 degrees C) required to ensure detection of adenoviruses of serotypes 7 and 11 with the selected adenovirus primers. A single-target beta-globin PCR gave positive results with 19 of the 20 specimens prepared by treatment with proteinase K lysis buffer, indicating the effectiveness of this simple DNA extraction procedure. Nonetheless, the availability of effective antiviral therapy for HSV made monitoring for extraction failure using human primers crucial to avoid false-negative results for HSV DNA. Adenovirus-HSV PCR has considerable potential for the rapid diagnosis of viral eye disease particularly if beta-globin primers can be included in the reaction.
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PMID:Multiplex polymerase chain reaction for adenovirus and herpes simplex virus in eye swabs. 869 Jul 66

Several DNA extraction methods have been used for formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues, with variable results being reported regarding the suitability of DNA obtained from such sources to serve as template in polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based genetic analyses. We present a method routinely used for archival material in our laboratory that reliably yields DNA of sufficient quality for PCR studies. This method is based on extended proteinase K digestion (250 micrograms/ml in an EDTA-free calcium-containing buffer supplemented with mussel glycogen) followed by phenol-chloroform extraction. Agarose gel electrophoresis of both digestion buffer aliquots and PCR amplification of the beta-globin gene tested the suitability of the retrieved DNA for PCR amplification.
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PMID:DNA extraction from formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues: protein digestion as a limiting step for retrieval of high-quality DNA. 955 94


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