Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:6.3.4.6 (urease)
7,490 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Certain tRNAs in S. cerevisiae (tRNATyr and tRNAPhe) arise via precursor molecules which are mature at the 5' and 3' termini but contain intervening sequences adjacent to the anticodon (Knapp et al., 1978; O'Farrell et al., 1978). In addition to these molecules, precursors to several other tRNAs accumulate in a temperature-sensitive mutant (ts136) at the nonpermissive temperature. We have analyzed one of these species and shown that it is a precursor to a minor species of tRNASer. This precursor is also mature at both termini and contains an intervening sequence of 19 nucleotides adjacent to the hypermodified A residue 3' to the anticodon. The sequence can be arranged in a secondary structure in which the anticodon stem is extended by additional base-pairing, and contains the sites of excision and ligation within two looped regions. Support for this structure was provided by analysis of the products of limited digestion with RNAase T1. recently Piper (1978) reported the isolation of a minor species of tRNASer which decodes UCG. He found this species to be structurally heterogeneous and determined that the less abundant form corresponds to the tRNA which is altered in the recessive lethal SUP-RL1 amber suppressor. Our data now suggest that the more abundant form may be restricted to reading UCA in vivo; thus mutation of the minor species would result in complete loss of UCG-decoding ability and explain the recessive lethality of SUP-RL1. We have shown that the precursor which accumulates in ts136 corresponds exclusively to this minor tRNASerUCG species. Our results suggest that this may be the only gene for tRNASer in yeast which contains an intervening sequence.
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PMID:A precursor to a minor species of yeast tRNASer contains an intervening sequence. 38 30

The naturally occurring modified nucleoside, N-[(9-beta-D-ribofuranosylpurin-6-yl)-N-methylcarbamoyl]-L-threonine (mt6A), and the corresponding glycine analog mg6A were synthesized from N6-methyl-2',3',5'-tri-O-acetyladenosine and the appropriately blocked isocyanates derived from threonine and glycine. The natural mt6A isolated from Escherichia coli tRNA (F. Kimura-Harada et al. (1972), Biochemistry 11, 3910), from wheat embryo tRNA (R. Cunningham and M. W. Gray (1974), Biochemistry 13, 543), and from rat liver tRNA (Rogg et al. (1975), Eur. J. Biochem. 53, 115) was found to be identical with the synthetic mt6A in paper and thin-layer chromatography and electrophoresis. Several analogs of the parent 6-ureidopurine ribonucleoside, N-[(9-beta-D-ribofuranosylpurin-6-yl)carbamoyl]-L-thronine (t6A), were also prepared. Starting from 2',3',5'-tri-O-acetylguanosine and 2',3',5'-tri-O-acetylcytidine and the above isocyanates, the t6A analogs, N-[(9-beta-D-ribofuranosyl-6-oxo-1H-purin-2-yl)carbamoyl]-L-threonine (t2G) and N-[(1-beta-D-ribofuranosyl-2-oxypyrimidin-4-yl)carbamoyl]-L-threonine (t4C), were prepared. Also synthesized were the corresponding glycine analogs, g2G and g4C, from guanosine and cytidine, respectively. The 2'-deoxyribosyl analog, N-[(9-beta-D-2'-deoxyribofuranosylpurin-6-yl)carbamoyl]-L-threonine (2'-deoxy-t6A), and the arabinosyl derivative, N-[(9-beta-D-arabinofuranosylpurin-6-yl)carbamoyl]-L-threonine (t6AraA), were synthesized from the appropriate urethane and the requisite amino acid. The ureido group in mt6A could not be hydrolyzed by the enzymes urease, peptidase, and protease. Various chemical and biological properties of the naturally occurring mt6A and the related analogs are discussed.
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PMID:Synthesis properties of the naturally occurring N-[(9-beta-D-ribofuranosylpurin-6-yl)-N-methylcarbamoyl]-L-threonine (mt-6A) and other related synthetic analogs. 114 94

Mutants of the Escherichia coli initiator tRNA (tRNA(fMet)) have been used to examine the role of the anticodon and discriminator base in in vivo aminoacylation of tRNAs by cysteinyl-tRNA synthetase. Substitution of the methionine anticodon CAU with the cysteine anticodon GCA was found to allow initiation of protein synthesis by the mutant tRNA from a complementary initiation codon in a reporter protein. Sequencing of the protein revealed that cysteine comprised about half of the amino acid at the N terminus. An additional mutation, converting the discriminator base of tRNA(GCAfMet) from A73 to the base present in tRNA(Cys) (U73), resulted in a 6-fold increase in the amount of protein produced and insertion of greater than or equal to 90% cysteine in response to the complementary initiation codon. Substitution of C73 or G73 at the discriminator position led to insertion of little or no cysteine, indicating the importance of U73 for recognition of the tRNA by cysteinyl-tRNA synthetase. Single base changes in the anticodon of tRNA(GCAfMet) containing U73 from GCA to UCA, GUA, GCC, and GCG (changes underlined) eliminated or dramatically reduced cysteine insertion by the mutant initiator tRNA indicating that all three cysteine anticodon bases are essential for specific aminoacylation of the tRNA with cysteine in vivo.
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PMID:The anticodon and discriminator base are major determinants of cysteine tRNA identity in vivo. 137 31

The role of the anticodon and discriminator base in aminoacylation of tRNAs with tryptophan has been explored using a recently developed in vivo assay based on initiation of protein synthesis by mischarged mutants of the Escherichia coli initiator tRNA. Substitution of the methionine anticodon CAU with the tryptophan anticodon CCA caused tRNA(fMet) to be aminoacylated with both methionine and tryptophan in vivo, as determined by analysis of the amino acids inserted by the mutant tRNA at the translational start site of a reporter protein containing a tryptophan initiation codon. Conversion of the discriminator base of tRNA(CCA)fMet from A73 to G73, the base present in tRNA(Trp), eliminated the in vivo methionine acceptor activity of the tRNA and resulted in complete charging with tryptophan. Single base changes in the anticodon of tRNA(CCA)fMet containing G73 from CCA to UCA, GCA, CAA, and CCG (changes underlined) essentially abolished tryptophan insertion, showing that all three anticodon bases specify the tryptophan identity of the tRNA. The important role of G73 in tryptophan identity was confirmed using mutants of an opal suppressor derivative of tRNA(Trp). Substitution of G73 with A73, C73, or U73 resulted in a large loss of the ability of the tRNA to suppress an opal stop codon in a reporter protein. Base pair substitutions at the first three positions of the acceptor stem of the suppressor tRNA caused 2-12-fold reductions in the efficiency of suppression without loss of specificity for aminoacylation of the tRNA with tryptophan.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Conversion of a methionine initiator tRNA into a tryptophan-inserting elongator tRNA in vivo. 155 14

The middle base (U35) of the anticodon of tRNA(Gln) is a major element ensuring the accuracy of aminoacylation by Escherichia coli glutaminyl-tRNA synthetase (GlnRS). An opal suppressor of tRNA(Gln) (su+2UGA) containing C35 (anticodon UCA) was isolated by genetic selection and mutagenesis. Suppression of a UGA mutation in the E. coli fol gene followed by N-terminal sequence analysis of purified dihydrofolate reductase showed that this tRNA was an efficient suppressor that inserted predominantly tryptophan. Mutations of the 3-70 base pair (U70 and A3U70) were made. These mutants of su+2UGA are less efficient suppressors and inserted predominantly tryptophan in vivo; alanine insertion was not observed. Mutations of the discriminator nucleotide (A73, U73, C73) result in very weak opal suppressors. Aminoacylation in vitro by E. coli TrpRS of tRNA(Gln) transcripts mutated in the anticodon demonstrate that TrpRS recognizes all three nucleotides of the anticodon. The results show the interchangeability of the glutamine and tryptophan identities by base substitutions in their respective tRNAs. The amber suppressor (anticodon CUA) tRNA(Trp) was known previously to insert predominantly glutamine. We show that the opal suppressor (anticodon UCA) tRNA(Gln) inserts mainly tryptophan. Discrimination by these synthetases for tRNA includes position 35, with recognition of C35 by TrpRS and U35 by GlnRS. As the use of the UGA codon as tryptophan in mycoplasma and in yeast mitochondria is conserved, recognition of the UCA anticodon by TrpRS may also be maintained in evolution.
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PMID:Switching tRNA(Gln) identity from glutamine to tryptophan. 156 39

The selenocysteine-inserting tRNA (tRNA(Sec)) of E. coli differs in a number of structural features from all other elongator tRNA species. To analyse the functional implications of the deviations from the consensus, these positions have been reverted to the canonical configuration. The following results were obtained: (i) inversion of the purine/pyrimidine pair at position 11/24 and change of the purine at position 8 into the universally conserved U had no functional consequence whereas replacements of U9 by G9 and of U14 by A14 decreased the efficiency of selenocysteine insertion as measured by translation of the fdhF message; (ii) deleting one basepair in the aminoacyl acceptor stem, thus creating the canonical 7 bp configuration, inactivated tRNA(Sec); (iii) replacement of the extra arm by that of a serine-inserting tRNA abolished the activity whereas reduction by 1 base or the insertion of three bases partially reduced function; (iv) change of the anticodon to that of a serine inserter abolished the capacity to decode UGA140 whereas the alteration to a cysteine codon permitted 30% read-through. However, the variant with the serine-specific anticodon efficiently inserted selenocysteine into a gene product when the UGA140 of the fdhF mRNA was replaced by a serine codon (UCA). Significantly, none of these changes resulted in the non-specific incorporation of selenocysteine into protein, indicating that the mRNA context also plays a major role in directing insertion. Taken together, the results demonstrate that the 8-basepair acceptor stem and the long extra arm are crucial determinants of tRNA(Sec) which enable decoding of UGA140 in the fdhF message.
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PMID:Mutagenesis of selC, the gene for the selenocysteine-inserting tRNA-species in E. coli: effects on in vivo function. 170 99

The nucleotide sequence of the selA gene from Escherichia coli whose product is involved in the conversion of seryl-tRNA(Sec UCA) into selenocysteyl-tRNA(Sec UCA) was determined. selA codes for a polypeptide of a calculated Mr of 50,667; a protein of appropriate size was synthesized in vivo in a T7 promoter/polymerase system. An assay for SELA activity was devised which is based on the seryl-tRNA(Sec UCA)-dependent incorporation of [75Se] selenium into acid-insoluble material. It was used to follow SELA purification from cells that overproduced the protein from a phage T7 promoter plasmid. Purified native SELA protein migrates in gel filtration experiments with a native Mr of about 600,000. SELA contains 1 mol of bound pyridoxal 5-phosphate/mol of 50-kDa subunit. Evidence is presented that the overall conversion of seryl-tRNA(Sec UCA) to selenocysteyl-tRNA(Sec UCA) occurs at the SELA protein. SELA, therefore, has the function of a selenocysteine synthase.
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PMID:Selenocysteine synthase from Escherichia coli. Nucleotide sequence of the gene (selA) and purification of the protein. 200 84

The product of the selA gene, selenocysteine synthase, is a pyridoxal 5-phosphate-containing enzyme which catalyzes the conversion of seryl-tRNA(Sec UCA) into selenocysteyl-tRNA(Sec UCA). Reduction of the aldimine group of pyridoxal 5-phosphate inactivates the enzyme. When reacted with seryl-tRNA(Sec UCA) as sole substrate, pyruvate (and possibly also ammonia) is released; in the presence of a high concentration of potassium borohydride, alanyl-tRNA(Sec UCA) is formed from seryl-tRNA(Sec UCA). These results support the notion that the formyl group of pyridoxal phosphate forms a Schiff base with the alpha-amino group of L-serine with the subsequent 2,3-elimination of a water molecule and the generation of an aminoacrylyl-tRNA(Sec UCA) intermediate. ATP is not required for this reaction step, but it is necessary for the conversion of aminoacrylyl-tRNA into selenocysteyl-tRNA(Sec UCA) which, in addition, requires the SELD protein and reduced selenium. Selenocysteine synthase forms a stable complex with seryl-tRNA(Sec UCA) with one tRNA molecule bound per two 50-kDa monomers. The enzyme does not interact with serine-inserting tRNA species. Taken together, the results show that biosynthesis of selenocysteine takes place in the enzyme-bound state and involves the dehydration of L-serine esterified to tRNA in a first step formally followed by the 2,3-addition of HSe- which is provided by the SELD protein in an ATP-dependent reaction in the form of a reactive selenium donor molecule.
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PMID:Selenocysteine synthase from Escherichia coli. Analysis of the reaction sequence. 200 85

Molecular cloning and sequencing showed that Mycoplasma gallisepticum, like Mycoplasma capricolum, contains both tRNA(UCA) and tRNA(CCA) genes, while Mycoplasma pneumoniae and Mycoplasma genitalium each appear to have only a tRNA(UCA) gene. Therefore, these mycoplasma species contain a tRNA with the anticodon UCA that can translate both UGA and UGG codons.
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PMID:Evidence that UGA is read as a tryptophan codon rather than as a stop codon by Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Mycoplasma genitalium, and Mycoplasma gallisepticum. 210 12

AGA and AGG codons for arginine are the least used codons in Escherichia coli, which are encoded by a rare tRNA, the product of the dnaY gene. We examined the positions of arginine residues encoded by AGA/AGG codons in 678 E. coli proteins. It was found that AGA/AGG codons appear much more frequently within the first 25 codons. This tendency becomes more significant in those proteins containing only one AGA or AGG codon. Other minor codons such as CUA, UCA, AGU, ACA, GGA, CCC and AUA are also found to be preferentially used within the first 25 codons. The effects of the AGG codon on gene expression were examined by inserting one to five AGG codons after the 10th codon from the initiation codon of the lacZ gene. The production of beta-galactosidase decreased as more AGG codons were inserted. With five AGG codons, the production of beta-galactosidase (Gal-AGG5) completely ceased after a mid-log phase of cell growth. After 22 hr induction of the lacZ gene, the overall production of Gal-AGG5 was 11% of the control production (no insertion of arginine codons). When five CGU codons, the major arginine codon were inserted instead of AGG, the production of beta-galactosidase (Gal-CGU5) continued even after stationary phase and the overall production was 66% of the control. The negative effect of the AGG codons on the Gal-AGG5 production was found to be dependent upon the distance between the site of the AGG codons and the initiation codon. As the distance was increased by inserting extra sequences between the two codons, the production of Gal-AGG5 increased almost linearly up to 8 fold. From these results, we propose that the position of the minor codons in an mRNA plays an important role in the regulation of gene expression possibly by modulating the stability of the initiation complex for protein synthesis.
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PMID:Suppression of the negative effect of minor arginine codons on gene expression; preferential usage of minor codons within the first 25 codons of the Escherichia coli genes. 210 7


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