Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0016632 (Fox)
1,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A precursor of 5S ribosomal RNA from Bacillus subtilis (p5A rRNA, 179 nucleotides in length) is cleaved by RNase M5, a specific maturation endonuclease which releases the mature 5S rRNA (m5, 116 nucleotides) and precursor fragments derived from the 5' (21 nucleotides) and 3' (42 nucleotides) termini of p5A rRNA. Previous results (Meyhack, B., et al. (1978) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 75, 3045) led to the conclusion that recognition elements in potential RNase M5 substrates mainly reside in the mature moiety of the precursor. Limited digestion of p5A rRNA with RNase T1 permitted the isolation of a number of test substrates which contained both precursor-specific segments and were unaltered in the immediate vicinity of the cleavage sites, but which differed in that more or less extensive regions of the mature moiety of the p5A rRNA were deleted. Tests of the capacity of these partial molecules to serve as substrates for RNase M5 indicate clearly that the enzyme recognizes the overall conformation of potential substrates, neglecting only the double-helical "prokaryotic loop" (Fox, G.E., & Woese, C.R. (1975) Nature (London) 256, 505).
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PMID:Involvement of the mature domain in the in vitro maturation of Bacillus subtilis precursor 5S ribosomal RNA. 10 77

Imino proton resonances in the downfield region (10-14 ppm) of the 500-MHz 1H NMR spectrum of Torulopsis utilis 5S RNA are identified (A X U, G X C, or G X U) and assigned to base pairs in helices I, IV, and V via analysis of homonuclear Overhauser enhancements (NOE) from intact T. utilis 5S RNA, its RNase T1 and RNase T2 digested fragments, and a second yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) 5S RNA whose nucleotide sequence differs at only six residues from that of T. utilis 5S RNA. The near-identical chemical shifts and NOE behavior of most of the common peaks from these four RNAs strongly suggest that helices I, IV, and V retain the same conformation after RNase digestion and that both T. utilis and S. cerevisiae 5S RNAs share a common secondary and tertiary structure. Of the four G X U base pairs identified in the intact 5S RNA, two are assigned to the terminal stem (helix I) and the other two to helices IV and V. Seven of the nine base pairs of the terminal stem have been assigned. Our experimental demonstration of a G X U base pair in helix V supports the 5S RNA secondary structural model of Luehrsen and Fox [Luehrsen, K. R., & Fox, G.E. (1981) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 78, 2150-2154]. Finally, the base-pair proton peak assigned to the terminal G X U in helix V of the RNase T2 cleaved fragment is shifted downfield from that in the intact 5S RNA, suggesting that helices I and V may be coaxial in intact T. utilis 5S RNA.
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PMID:Identification and assignment of base pairs in three helical stems of Torulopsis utilis ribosomal 5S RNA and its RNase T1 and RNase T2 cleaved fragments via 500-MHz proton homonuclear overhauser enhancements. 309 80

The structures of the two stable conformers of Escherichia coli 5 S RNA, the and B form, were compared. Information about the structures were obtained using the methods of limited enzymatic hydrolysis and chemical modification of accessible nucleotides. Base-specific modifications were performed for adenosines and cytidines using diethylpyrocarbonate and dimethylsulfate in combination with a strand-scission reaction at the modified site. Base-specific (RNase T1) as well as conformation-specific (nuclease S1, cobra venom nuclease) enzymes were employed for the limited enzymatic hydrolysis. Clear differences in the accessibility of the two 5 S RNA conformers to the enzymes and the chemical reagents were established and the regions with altered reactivities were localized in the 5 S RNA structure. The results are consistent with the disruption of the secondary structural interactions in helix II and partly in helices III and IV during the transition from the A to the B form. (The numbering of the helices is according to the generally accepted Fox and Woese model.) In addition some regions presumably involved in the tertiary structure are distorted. There is evidence, however, for the new formation of structural regions between two distant sites in the 5 S RNA B form. The results enable us to refine the existing 5 S RNA A-form model and provide insight into the structural dynamics that lead to the formation of the 5 S RNA B form.
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PMID:Escherichia coli 5S RNA A and B conformers. Characterisation by enzymatic and chemical methods. 620 22