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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Polycitone A, an aromatic alkaloid isolated from the ascidian Polycitor sp. exhibits potent inhibitory capacity of both RNA- and DNA-directed DNA polymerases. The drug inhibits retroviral reverse transcriptase (RT) [i.e. of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV), murine
leukaemia
virus (MLV) and mouse mammary tumour virus (MMTV)] as efficiently as cellular DNA polymerases (i.e. of both DNA polymerases alpha and beta and Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I). The mode and mechanism of inhibition of the DNA-polymerase activity associated with HIV-1 RT by polycitone A have been studied. The results suggest that the inhibitory capacity of the DNA polymerase activity is independent of the template-primer used. The
RNase H
function, on the other hand, is hardly affected by this inhibitor. Polycitone A has been shown to interfere with DNA primer extension as well as with the formation of the RT-DNA complex. Steady-state kinetic studies demonstrate that this inhibitor can be considered as an allosteric inhibitor of HIV-1 RT. The target site on the enzyme may be also spatially related to the substrate binding site, since this inhibitor behaves competitively with respect to dTTP with poly(rA).oligo(dT) as template primer. Chemical transformations of the five phenol groups of polycitone A by methoxy groups have a determinant effect on the inhibitory potency. Thus, the pentamethoxy derivative which is devoid of all hydroxy moieties, loses significantly, by 40-fold, the ability to inhibit the DNA polymerase function. Furthermore, this analogue lacks the ability to inhibit DNA primer extension as well as the formation of the RT-DNA complex. Indeed, inhibition of the first step in DNA polymerization, the formation of the RT-DNA complex, and hence, of the overall process, could serve as a model for a universal inhibitor of the superfamily of DNA polymerases.
...
PMID:Polycitone A, a novel and potent general inhibitor of retroviral reverse transcriptases and cellular DNA polymerases. 1054 37
The
RNase H
family of enzymes degrades RNA in RNA.DNA hybrids in a divalent cation-dependent manner. RNases H from diverse sources such as Escherichia coli and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) share homologous metal-binding active sites, and the activity of the
RNase H
domain of reverse transcriptase (RT) is required for retroviral replication. The isolated
RNase H
domain from HIV RT, however, is inactive. In contrast, the
RNase H
domain of Moloney murine
leukemia
virus (MMLV) is active, enabling functional studies. Unlike both E. coli RNase HI and HIV RT, the
RNase H
activity of MMLV RT shows greater activity in Mn(2+) than Mg(2+). We investigated the effect of mutations in five conserved active-site residues of the isolated MMLV
RNase H
domain. Mutations in two carboxylates eliminate metal binding while mutations in other active-site residues allow retention of metal ion affinity. Mutations that inactivate E.coli RNase HI in Mg(2+) have similar effects on the Mn(2+)-dependent activity of MMLV
RNase H
. These results suggest a similar one-metal catalytic mechanism for the Mn(2+)- and Mg(2+)-dependent activities of both prokaryotic and retroviral ribonucleases H.
...
PMID:Metal binding and activation of the ribonuclease H domain from moloney murine leukemia virus. 1058 3
Error-prone DNA synthesis by retroviral reverse transcriptases (RTs) is a major contributor to variation in retroviral populations. Structural features of retroviral RTs that are important for accuracy of DNA synthesis in vivo are not known. To identify structural elements of murine
leukemia
virus (MLV) RT important for fidelity in vivo, we developed a D17-based encapsidating cell line (ANGIE P) which is designed to express the amphotropic MLV envelope. ANGIE P also contains an MLV-based retroviral vector (GA-1) which encodes a wild-type bacterial beta-galactosidase gene (lacZ) and a neomycin phosphotransferase gene. Transfection of ANGIE P cells with wild-type or mutated MLV gag-pol expression constructs generated GA-1 virus that was able to undergo only one cycle of viral replication upon infection of D17 cells. The infected D17 cell clones were characterized by staining with 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside (X-Gal), and the frequencies of inactivating mutations in lacZ were quantified. Three mutations in the YVDD motif (V223M, V223S, and V223A) and two mutations in the
RNase H
domain (S526A and R657S) exhibited frequencies of lacZ inactivation 1.2- to 2.3-fold higher than that for the wild-type MLV RT (P < 0.005). Two mutations (V223I and Y598V) did not affect the frequency of lacZ inactivation. These results establish a sensitive in vivo assay for identification of structural determinants important for accuracy of DNA synthesis and indicate that several structural determinants may have an effect on the in vivo fidelity of MLV RT.
...
PMID:Development of an in vivo assay to identify structural determinants in murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase important for fidelity. 1059 Jan 19
Retroviral revXerse transcriptases (RTs) have an associated
RNase H
activity that can cleave RNA-DNA duplexes with considerable precision. We believe that the structure of the RNA-DNA duplexes in the context of RT determines the specificity of
RNase H
cleavage. To test this idea, we treated three related groups of synthetic RNA-DNA hybrids with either Moloney murine
leukemia
virus (MLV) RT or human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) RT. All of the hybrids were prepared using the same 81-base RNA template. The first series of
RNase H
substrates was prepared with complementary DNA oligonucleotides of different lengths, ranging from 6 to 20 nucleotides, all of which shared a common 5' end and were successively shorter at their 3' ends. The second series of oligonucleotides had a common 3' end but shorter 5' ends. The DNA oligonucleotides in the third series were all 20 bases long but had non-complementary stretches at either the 5' end, 3' end, or both ends. Several themes have emerged from the experiments with these RNA-DNA duplexes. (1) Both HIV-1 RT and MLV RT cleave fairly efficiently if the duplex region is at least eight bases long, but not if it is shorter. (2) Although, under the conditions we have used, both enzymes require the substrate to have a region of RNA-DNA duplex, both MLV RT and HIV-1 RT can cleave RNA outside the region that is part of the RNA-DNA duplex. (3) The polymerase domain of HIV-1 RT uses certain mismatched segments of RNA-DNA to position the enzyme for
RNase H
cleavage, whereas the polymerase domain of MLV RT does not use the same mismatched segments to define the position for
RNase H
cleavage. (4) For HIV-1 RT, a mismatched region near the
RNase H
domain can interfere with
RNase H
cleavage; cleavage is usually (but not always) more efficient if the mismatched segment is deleted. These results are discussed in regard to the structure of HIV-1 RT and the differences between HIV-1 RT and MLV RT.
...
PMID:Similarities and differences in the RNase H activities of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 reverse transcriptase and Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase. 1060 Mar 69
The sequence of a 900-nucleotide segment (encoding part of the reverse transcriptase, including the entire
RNase H
domain) of the pol gene of the murine
leukaemia
virus (MLV) amphotropic strain 4070A is presented. Alignment of the inferred 4070A
RNase H
amino acid sequence (157 residues) with other MLV
RNase H
sequences revealed only minor differences compared with the divergence between other retroviral and prokaryotic or eukaryotic
RNase H
sequences. Only 10 residues were invariant across the entire sample set, but secondary structure predictions for the enzymes from E. coli, yeast, human liver and diverse retroviruses (HIV, Rous sarcoma virus, foamy viruses) supported, in every case, the five beta-strands (1 to 5) and four or five alpha-helices (A, B/C, D, E) that have been identified by crystallography in the
RNase H
domain of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase and in E. coli
RNase H
. In the case of MLV, analysis of the
RNase H
domain sequences inferred from 10 different strains (including the amphotropic 4070A) predicted all five alpha-helices (A-E), as well as beta-strands 4 and 5. However, the N-terminal segment (residues 1-40) was predicted, without exception and with high probability, to fold uniquely into one (or two adjacent) alpha-helix(es) encompassing residues 13-37, instead of the three beta-strands known to exist in the HIV-1 and E. coli enzymes. The unerring consistency between the known and predicted structures of the HIV-1 and E. coli enzymes, and the prediction of the same structural elements (including beta-strands 1-3 within the N-terminal segment) for all other (non-MLV)
RNase H
proteins examined in this study, suggests that the N-terminal segment of the MLV
RNase H
domain assumes a conformation distinct from that of other retroviral and cellular
RNase H
molecules. An additional (sixth) beta-strand was also predicted uniquely within the C-terminal region of foamy virus
RNase H
domains.
...
PMID:Sequence and comparative structural analysis of the murine leukaemia virus amphotropic strain 4070A RNase H domain. 1060 72
During reverse transcription, plus strand DNA synthesis is initiated at a purine-rich RNA primer generated by the
RNase H
activity of reverse transcriptase (RT). Specific initiation of plus strand synthesis from this polypurine tract (PPT) RNA is essential for the subsequent integration of the linear viral DNA product. Based on current models, it is predicted that priming from sites upstream of the PPT may be tolerated by the virus, whereas efficient extension from RNA primers located downstream from the PPT is predicted to generate dead-end products. By using hybrid duplex substrates derived from the Moloney murine
leukemia
virus long terminal repeat, we investigated the extent to which
RNase H
degrades the viral RNA during time course cleavage assays, and we tested the capacity of the polymerase activity of RT to use the resulting cleavage products as primers. We find that the majority of the RNA fragments generated by
RNase H
are 2-25 nucleotides in length, and only following extensive degradation are most fragments reduced to 10 nucleotides or smaller. Although extensive RNA degradation by
RNase H
likely eliminates many potential RNA primers, based on thermostability predictions it appears that some RNA fragments remain stably annealed to the DNA template. RNA primers generated by
RNase H
within the long terminal repeat sequence are found to have the capacity to initiate DNA synthesis by RT; however, the priming efficiency is significantly less than that observed with the PPT primer. We find that Moloney murine
leukemia
virus nucleocapsid protein reduces
RNase H
degradation and slightly alters the cleavage specificity of RT; however, nucleocapsid protein does not appear to enhance PPT primer utilization or suppress extension from non-PPT RNA primers.
...
PMID:RNA degradation and primer selection by Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase contribute to the accuracy of plus strand initiation. 1077 11
A precise, reproducible deletion made during in vitro reverse transcription of RNA2 from the icosahedral positive-stranded Helicoverpa armigera stunt virus (Tetraviridae) is described. The deletion, located between two hexamer repeats, is a 50-base sequence that includes one copy of the hexamer repeat. Only the Moloney murine
leukemia
virus reverse transcriptase and its derivative Superscript I, carrying a deletion of the carboxy-terminal
RNase H
region, showed this response, indicating a template-switching mechanism different from one proposed that involves a
RNase H
-dependent strand transfer. Superscript II, however, which carries point mutations to reduce
RNase H
activity, does not cause a deletion. A possible mechanism involves the enzyme pausing at the 3' side of a stem-loop structure and the 3' end of the nascent DNA strand separating from the template and reannealing to the upstream hexamer repeat.
...
PMID:Reverse transcription of a naturally occurring nonretroviral RNA produces a precise deletion in the majority of its cDNA products. 1086 14
Retroviral reverse transcriptases (RTs) frequently switch templates within the same RNA or between copackaged viral RNAs to generate mutations and recombination. To identify structural elements of murine
leukemia
virus RT important for template switching, we developed an in vivo assay in which RT template switching within direct repeats functionally reconstituted the green fluorescent protein gene. We quantified the effect of mutations in the YXDD motif, the deoxynucleoside triphosphate binding site, the thumb domain, and the
RNase H
domain of RT and hydroxyurea treatment on the frequencies of template switching. Hydroxyurea treatment and some mutations in RT increased the frequency of RT template switching up to fivefold, while all of the mutations tested in the
RNase H
domain decreased the frequency of template switching by twofold. Based on these results, we propose a dynamic copy choice model in which both the rate of DNA polymerization and the rate of RNA degradation influence the frequency of RT template switching.
...
PMID:Structural determinants of murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase that affect the frequency of template switching. 1088 59
The ability of reverse transcriptase to generate, extend, and remove the primer derived from the polypurine tract (PPT) is vital for reverse transcription, since this process determines one of the ends required for integration of the viral DNA. Based on the ability of the
RNase H
activity of Moloney murine
leukemia
virus reverse transcriptase to cleave a long RNA/DNA hybrid containing the PPT, it appears that cleavages that could generate the plus-strand primer can occur by an internal cleavage mechanism without any positioning by an RNA 5'-end, and such cleavages may serve to minimize cleavage events within the PPT itself. If the PPT were to be cleaved inappropriately just upstream of the normal plus-strand origin site, the resulting 3'-ends would not be extended by reverse transcriptase. Extension of the PPT primer by at least 2 nucleotides is sufficient for recognition and correct cleavage by
RNase H
at the RNA-DNA junction to remove the primer. Specific removal of the PPT primer after polymerase extension deviates from the general observation that primer removal occurs by cleavage one nucleotide away from the RNA-DNA junction and suggests that the same PPT specificity determinants responsible for generation of the PPT primer also direct PPT primer removal. Once the PPT primer has been extended and removed from the nascent plus-strand DNA, reinitiation at the resulting plus-strand primer terminus does not occur, providing a mechanism to prevent the repeated initiation of plus strands.
...
PMID:Analysis of plus-strand primer selection, removal, and reutilization by retroviral reverse transcriptases. 1091 35
Reverse transcriptase, an essential retroviral DNA polymerase, replicates the single-stranded RNA genome of the retrovirus, producing a double-stranded DNA copy, which is subsequently integrated into the host's genome. Substitution of Ala for either Asp114 or Arg116, two highly conserved residues in the fingers domain of Moloney murine
leukemia
virus reverse transcriptase, results in enzymes (D114A or R116A) with significant defects in their abilities to processively synthesize DNA using RNA or DNA as a template. D114A and R116A enzymes also bind more weakly to template-primer in the presence of added deoxyribonucleotides, as seen by gel-shift analysis, but retain the ability to strand transfer and accumulate smaller
RNase H
cleavage products when compared to the wild-type enzyme. In addition, mutant proviruses, including D114A and R116A substitutions in Moloney murine
leukemia
virus reverse transcriptase, are not viable despite the presence of processed reverse transcriptase in the viral particles. A potential mechanistic role in processive synthesis for D114 and R116 is discussed in the context of our results, related studies on HIV-1 reverse transcriptase, and previous structural studies.
...
PMID:Substitution of Asp114 or Arg116 in the fingers domain of moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase affects interactions with the template-primer resulting in decreased processivity. 1112 10
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