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Enzyme
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Query: EC:3.6.1.25 (
triphosphatase
)
1,529
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A core-associated enzyme, which catalyzes a nucleotide-pyrophosphate exchange with GTP, has been purified from vaccinia virions. The enzyme requires MgCl2 for activity, has an alkaline pH optimum, and specifically utilizes GTP as the exchanging nucleotide. The enzyme does not catalyze exchange of GMP with GTP. The GTP-PPi exchange enzyme co-purifies with vaccinia capping enzyme (RNA guanylyltransferase and RNA (guanine-7-)methyltransferase) through successive chromatography steps on DEAE-cellulose, DNA-cellulose, and phosphocellulose. GTP-PPi exchange and capping activities remain physically associated during sedimentation in a glycerol gradient. Under high
salt
conditions (1 M NaCl), GTP-PPi exchange, capping, and methylating activities co-sediment with an RNA
triphosphatase
activity and a nucleoside triphosphate phosphohydrolase activity as a 6.5 S multifunctional enzyme complex which contains two major polypeptides of 96,000 and 26,000 molecular weight. The characteristics of the various enzymatic reactions catalyzed by this complex are described. The GTP-PPi exchange reaction of vaccinia guanylyltransferase affords a simple, sensitive assay for capping enzyme function. The relevance of the GTP-PPi exchange reaction to the mechanism of transguanylylation is considered.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of a GTP-pyrophosphate exchange activity from vaccinia virions. Association of the GTP-pyrophosphate exchange activity with vaccinia mRNA guanylyltransferase . RNA (guanine-7-)methyltransferase complex (capping enzyme). 625 74
A cytochemical technique that measures the ability of plasma to stimulate guinea-pig renal glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) activity in vitro, which is a marker of its ability to inhibit Na+-K+-adenosine-
triphosphatase
(Na+-K+-ATPase), was used in 19 patients with essential hypertension and 23 normotensive, healthy subjects. The ability of plasma to stimulate G6PD was significantly greater in the hypertensive patients when they were taking their normal sodium diet than in the normotensive subjects, and was significantly correlated with blood pressure. The ability of plasma to stimulate G6PD was inversely correlated with plasma renin activity in the hypertensive patients and increased with age and sodium intake in the normotensive subjects. These results support the hypothesis that essential hypertension, and also perhaps the increase in blood pressure with age in communities that consume large quantities of
salt
, is in part due to an increase in a circulating concentration of an inhibitor of Na+-N+-ATPase.
...
PMID:Evidence for a raised concentration of a circulating sodium transport inhibitor in essential hypertension. 627 73
Nucleoside mono-, di- and
triphosphatase
activities of highly purified endoplasmic reticulum (ER), Golgi apparatus, and plasma membrane fractions of rat liver were compared. The highest rates of hydrolysis were always in ER or plasma membrane. Golgi apparatus activity was intermediate between those of ER and plasma membrane. This relationship was true for both freshly isolated fractions and
salt
-extracted membranes. Detergent solubilization of the membranes, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the solubilized proteins, and localization of the enzyme activities on the gel revealed bands of enzyme activity which had identical mobilities in all three membrane fractions as well as other bands of activity that occurred only in ER and to a lesser degree in the Golgi apparatus. Antibodies raised against one of the phosphatase bands of plasma membrane which was common to all three membrane fractions cross-reacted with the corresponding phosphatase band in ER and Golgi apparatus. The anti-nucleoside phosphatase was utilized in combination with pulse-chase techniques to investigate the flow kinetics of transfer of newly synthesized enzyme among different cell compartments. Label first appeared in nucleoside phosphatase within the ER. Maximum specific activity was observed at about 5 min after injection of label and was followed by rapid loss of label. This was followed by appearance of label in Golgi apparatus 15 to 25 min after injection of label and by subsequent rapid loss of label. Plasma membranes were labeled last with no evidence of either rapid accumulation of label or of rapid turnover. Flow of nucleoside phosphatase from its site of synthesis and insertion into the membrane at the endoplasmic reticulum to the plasma membrane via the Golgi apparatus is indicated but in a manner whereby a significant fraction of the protein may be processed (removed?) from the membrane concomitant with the flow process.
...
PMID:Flow kinetics of a nucleoside phosphatase common to endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, and plasma membrane of rat liver. 629 68
GTP:mRNA guanylyltransferase, an enzyme that catalyzes the transfer of a GMP residue from GTP to the 5' end of RNA to form a cap structure identified as G(5')pppN-, has been isolated from HeLa cell nuclei. The enzyme has been purified approximately 1000-fold and separated by column chromatography (using DEAE-cellulose, phosphocellulose, Cibacron blue-agarose, and GTP-agarose) from a variety of other activities, including RNA
triphosphatase
and mRNA (guanine-7)methyltransferase. The reaction product was identified by its resistance to Penicillium nuclease and alkaline phosphatase, sensitivity to venom phosphodiesterase, and electrophoretic and chromatographic mobilities relative to authentic standards. Optimal enzyme activity was obtained at pH 7.5 in the presence of Mn2+ or Mg2+, GTP, and an appropriate acceptor polyribonucleotide. The enzyme was inhibited by elevated concentrations of
salt
and by sulfhydryl-binding reagents but was unaffected by S-adenosylmethionine or S-adenosylhomocysteine. A molecular weight of 48,500 was estimated by sucrose gradient centrifugation of purified enzyme.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of mRNA guanylyltransferase from HeLa cell nuclei. 735 12
A recombinant baculovirus overexpressing the herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) origin binding protein, encoded by the UL9 gene, was constructed. The purified recombinant protein has DNA-dependent nucleoside
triphosphatase
activity similar to the enzyme isolated from mammalian cells. Optimal nucleoside
triphosphatase
activity requires low
salt
(< 50 mM), 2-3 mM Mg2+, alkaline pH (8.3-9.5), high temperature (45 degrees C), and a single-stranded DNA coeffector containing minimal secondary structure. Enzymatic activity is subject to product inhibition, and there appears to be a single nucleotide binding site. The minimal length of single-stranded DNA that elicits enzymatic activity is 14 nucleotides, and activity increases as the length is increased. Saturation for various single-stranded DNA coeffectors is about 10 microM in nucleotide, but the maximum velocity is reduced 2-3-fold for coeffectors containing secondary structure. The HSV-1-encoded single-stranded DNA-binding protein ICP8 specifically stimulates the DNA-dependent nucleoside
triphosphatase
activity. The kinetics of nucleoside triphosphate hydrolysis exhibit a substantial lag period which can be shortened, but not eliminated, by reduced secondary structure in the DNA coeffector or by increased temperature.
...
PMID:The herpes simplex virus type I origin binding protein. DNA-dependent nucleoside triphosphatase activity. 838 Apr 7
Sequence motifs within the nonstructural protein NS3 of members of the Flaviviridae family suggest that this protein possesses nucleoside
triphosphatase
(NTPase) and RNA helicase activity. The RNA-stimulated NTPase activity of this protein from prototypic members of the Pestivirus and Flavivirus genera has recently been established and enzymologically characterized. Here, we experimentally demonstrate that the NS3 protein from a member of the third genus of Flaviviridae, human hepatitis C virus (HCV), also possesses a polynucleotide-stimulated NTPase activity. Characterization of the purified HCV NTPase activity showed that it exhibited reaction condition optima with respect to pH, MgCl2, and
salt
identical to those of the representative pestivirus and flavivirus enzymes. However, each NTPase also possessed several unique properties when compared with one another. Notably, the profile of polynucleotide stimulation of the NTPase activity was distinct for the three enzymes. The HCV NTPase was the only one whose activity was significantly enhanced by a deoxyribopolynucleotide. Additional distinguishing features among the three enzymes relating to the kinetic properties of their NTPase activities are discussed. These studies provide a foundation for investigation of the putative RNA helicase activity of these proteins and for further study of the role of the NS3 proteins of members of the Flaviviridae in the replication cycle of these viruses.
...
PMID:Hepatitis C virus NS3 protein polynucleotide-stimulated nucleoside triphosphatase and comparison with the related pestivirus and flavivirus enzymes. 839 75
A nuclear pore complex-associated nucleoside
triphosphatase
(NTPase) activity is believed to provide energy for nuclear export of poly(A)+ mRNA. This study was initiated to determine if nuclear membrane lipid composition is altered during chronic hyperlipidemia, and what effect this has on NTPase activity. The JCR:LA-cp corpulent rat model is characterized by severe hypertriglyceridemia and moderate hypercholesterolemia, and thus represents an ideal animal model in which to study nuclear cholesterol and NTPase activity. NTPase activity was markedly increased in purified hepatic nuclei from corpulent female JCR:LA-cp rats in comparison to lean control rats as a function of assay time, [GTP], [ATP], and [Mg2+]. Nuclear membrane cholesterol and phospholipid content were significantly elevated in the corpulent animals. Nuclei of corpulent animals were less resistant to
salt
-induced lysis than nuclei of lean animals, suggesting a change in relative membrane integrity. Together, these results indicate that altered lipid metabolism in a genetic corpulent animal model can lead to changes in nuclear membrane lipid composition, which in turn may alter nuclear membrane NTPase activity and integrity.
...
PMID:Nuclear cholesterol content and nucleoside triphosphatase activity are altered in the JCR:LA-cp corpulent rat. 891 86
Previous work has suggested that changes in nuclear membrane cholesterol may induce a stimulation in nuclear nucleoside
triphosphatase
(NTPase) activity. The purpose of the present study was to directly investigate if nuclear membrane cholesterol can stimulate nuclear NTPase activity. The cholesterol content of nuclei was altered with a liposomal methodology. The cholesterol content of nuclei isolated from hepatic tissue was relatively low in comparison to that typically exhibited by other membrane fractions. Because of this, it was difficult to further deplete the nuclear membrane of cholesterol, but we could successfully increase the cholesterol content after exposure to cholesterol-enriched liposomes. Nuclear NTPase activity was potently stimulated (approximately 150-200% of control) by an increase in the nuclear membrane cholesterol content. The Vmax of the NTPase activity in the presence of ATP or GTP was significantly increased after cholesterol enrichment without altering the affinity of the enzyme for these moieties. Mg2+ dependency of NTPase activity was also altered by cholesterol incorporation into the nuclear membrane. Cholesterol enrichment of the nuclear membrane also left the nuclei more susceptible to damage by
salt
-induced lysis than control nuclei. Our results clearly demonstrate that the cholesterol content of the nuclear membrane will have significant, direct effects on nuclear integrity and NTPase activity.
...
PMID:Nuclear membrane cholesterol can modulate nuclear nucleoside triphosphatase activity. 897 60
The 549-amino acid yeast RNA
triphosphatase
Cet1p catalyzes the first step in mRNA cap formation. Cet1p consists of three domains as follows: (i) a 230-amino acid N-terminal segment that is dispensable for catalysis in vitro and for Cet1p function in vivo; (ii) a protease-sensitive segment from residues 230 to 275 that is dispensable for catalysis but essential for Cet1p function in vivo; and (iii) a catalytic domain from residues 275 to 539. Sedimentation analysis indicates that purified Cet1(231-549)p is a homodimer. Cet1(231-549)p binds in vitro to the yeast RNA guanylyltransferase Ceg1p to form a 7.1 S complex that we surmise to be a trimer consisting of two molecules of Cet1(231-549)p and one molecule of Ceg1p. The more extensively truncated protein Cet1(276-549)p, which cannot support cell growth, sediments as a monomer and does not interact with Ceg1p. An intermediate deletion protein Cet1(246-549)p, which supports cell growth only when overexpressed, sediments principally as a discrete
salt
-stable 11.5 S homo-oligomeric complex. These data implicate the segment of Ceg1p from residues 230 to 275 in regulating self-association and in binding to Ceg1p. Genetic data support the existence of a Ceg1p-binding domain flanking the catalytic domain of Cet1p, to wit: (i) the ts growth phenotype of 2mu CET1(246-549) is suppressed by overexpression of Ceg1p; (ii) a ts alanine cluster mutation CET1(201-549)/K250A-W251A is suppressed by overexpression of Ceg1p; and (iii) 15 other cet-ts alleles with missense changes mapping elsewhere in the protein are not suppressed by Ceg1p overexpression. Finally, we show that the in vivo function of Cet1(275-549)p is completely restored by fusion to the guanylyltransferase domain of the mouse capping enzyme. We hypothesize that the need for Ceg1p binding by yeast RNA
triphosphatase
can by bypassed when the
triphosphatase
catalytic domain is delivered to the RNA polymerase II elongation complex by linkage in cis to the mammalian guanylyltransferase.
...
PMID:A conserved domain of yeast RNA triphosphatase flanking the catalytic core regulates self-association and interaction with the guanylyltransferase component of the mRNA capping apparatus. 1042 48
The nucleoside
triphosphatase
(NTPase)/helicase associated with nonstructural protein 3 of West Nile (WN) virus was purified from cell culture medium harvested from virus-infected Vero cells. The purification procedure included sequential chromatography on Superdex-200 and Reactive Red 120 columns, followed by a concentration step on an Ultrogel hydroxyapatite column. The nature of the purified protein was confirmed by immunoblot analysis using a WN virus-positive antiserum, determination of its NH(2) terminus by microsequencing, and a binding assay with 5'-[(14)C]fluorosulfonylbenzoyladenosine. Under optimized reaction conditions the enzyme catalyzed the hydrolysis of ATP and the unwinding of the DNA duplex with k(cat) values of 133 and 5.5 x 10(-3) s(-1), respectively. Characterization of the NTPase activity of the WN virus enzyme revealed that optimum conditions with respect to the Mg(2+) requirement and the monovalent
salt
or polynucleotide response differed from those of other flavivirus NTPases. Initial kinetic studies demonstrated that the inhibition (or activation) of ATPase activity by ribavirin-5'-triphosphate is not directly related to changes in the helicase activity of the enzyme. Further analysis using guanine and O(6)-benzoylguanine derivatives revealed that the ATPase activity of WN virus NTPase/helicase may be modulated, i.e., increased or reduced, with no effect on the helicase activity of the enzyme. On the other hand the helicase activity could be modulated without changing the ATPase activity. Our observations show that the number of ATP hydrolysis events per unwinding cycle is not a constant value.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of West Nile virus nucleoside triphosphatase (NTPase)/helicase: evidence for dissociation of the NTPase and helicase activities of the enzyme. 1123 48
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