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Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0679427 (
myeloblastosis
)
982
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) polymerase activity can be elicited in purified preparations of avian
myeloblastosis
virus and Rous sarcoma virus (
Schmidt
-Ruppin strain) by treatment with nonionic detergent. The enzyme(s) and its synthetic products appear to be virion-associated. Enzymatic activity can be inhibited by pretreatment with either ribonuclease (8- to 10-fold inhibition) or actinomycin D (twofold inhibition). By contrast, rifampin has little, if any effect. The enzyme(s) synthesizes two primary products, a ribonucleic acid (RNA):DNA hybrid and DNA which is free of RNA. The results of both zonal and equilibrium centrifugation indicate that nascent chains of DNA are associated with the 70S viral RNA. It is concluded that at least two enzymatic activities are under study: transcription of DNA from viral RNA, and subsequent, additional synthesis of DNA, utilizing product of the initial reaction as template.
...
PMID:Deoxyribonucleic acid polymerase associated with Rous sarcoma virus and avian myeloblastosis virus: properties of the enzyme and its product. 432 Jun 96
Oncornavirus 60 to 70S ribonucleic acids (RNA), such as those from avian
myeloblastosis
virus,
Schmidt
-Ruppin virus, or mouse sarcoma-mouse leukemia viruses, isolated by conventional techniques, contain 4S transferlike RNA molecules that are released upon dissociation of the 60 to 70S RNA with heat. The 4S RNA represents 2.5 to 3.0% of the RNA in the 65S aggregate or 4 to 5 molecules per molecule of 35S RNA formed.
...
PMID:Association of 4S ribonucleic acid with oncornavirus ribonucleic acids. 432 70
Tumors induced in pigeons by inoculation with the
Schmidt
-Ruppin strain of Rous sarcoma virus regressed after about 6 weeks. Sera from these pigeons, taken 8 weeks after inoculation, had complement-fixing group-specific antibody titers of 1:2 to 1:256. In immunoelectrophoresis with the pigeon serum, disrupted BAI strain A (
myeloblastosis
) avian tumor virus showed at least five precipitin arcs. The pattern of precipitin lines was dependent in part on the means used for virus disruption, and ethyl ether and nonionic detergents appeared to be both effective and relatively mild reagents. Immunoelectrophoretic comparison of pigeon serum with serum from a tumor-bearing hamster and that from virus-inoculated rabbits yielded similar, though not identical, results.
...
PMID:Immunoelectrophoretic analysis of avian ribonucleic acid tumor virus group-specific antigens. 433 47
A sensitive and quantitative nucleic acid hybridization assay for the detection of radioactively labeled avian tumor virus-specific RNA in infected chicken cells has been developed. In our experiments we made use of the fact that DNA synthesized by virions of avian
myeloblastosis
virus in the presence of actinomycin D (AMV DNA) is complementary to at least 35% of the sequences of 70S RNA from the
Schmidt
-Ruppin strain (SRV) of Rous sarcoma virus. Annealing of radioactive RNA (either SRV RNA or RNA extensively purified from SRV-infected chicken cells) with AMV DNA followed by ribonuclease digestion and Sephadex chromatography yielded products which were characterized as avian tumor virus-specific RNA-DNA hybrids by hybridization competition with unlabeled 70S AMV RNA, equilibrium density-gradient centrifugation in Cs(2)SO(4) gradients, and by analysis of their ribonucleotide composition. The amount of viral RNA synthesized during pulse labeling with (3)H-uridine could be quantitated by the addition of an internal standard consisting of (32)P-labeled SRV RNA prior to purification and hybridization. This quantitative assay was used to determine that, in SRV-infected chicken cells labeled for increasing lengths of time with (3)H-uridine, labeled viral RNA appeared first in a nuclear fraction, then in a cytoplasmic fraction, and still later in mature virions. This observation is consistent with the hypothesis that RNA tumor virus RNA is synthesized in the nucleus of infected cells.
...
PMID:Quantitative determination and location of newly synthesized virus-specific ribonucleic acid in chicken cells infected with Rous sarcoma virus. 435 Jul 19
Preparations of the alphabeta and the betabeta forms of reverse transcriptase from the Prague C strain of Rous sarcoma virus grown in chicken embryo fibroblasts, the alphabeta and the betabeta forms of the enzyme from the B77 strain of Rous sarcoma virus grown in duck embryo fibroblasts, and the alphabeta form of reverse transcriptase from avian
myeloblastosis
virus have been analyzed. All these enzyme preparations contain a Mn(2+) -activated endonuclease activity. The betabeta form of enzyme, in addition, contains a Mg(2+) -dependent endonuclease. Such an activity is barely detectable in the alphabeta form of enzymes. The endonuclease associated with reverse transcriptase introduces single- and double-strand breaks containing 3' OH and 5' P termini into RF I DNA. The conversion of RF I DNA to RF III DNA is more readily catalyzed by the betabeta form of reverse transcriptase. In contrast to a recently published report by Hizi et al. (J. Virol 41:974-981, 1982), we have failed to detect the conversion of RF I DNA to covalently closed relaxed circles (RF IV DNA) by any of the alphabeta form of enzymes tested. RF IV DNA was not produced by the betabeta form of reverse transcriptase either. We conclude that topoisomerization is not an intrinsic activity of reverse transcriptase. Although the conversion of RF I DNA to RF II DNA was found to be rapid, the endonuclease associated with reverse transcriptase acted slowly on RF II, RF III, and RF IV DNAs. Circular and linear single-stranded DNAs were also susceptible to cleavage by the endonuclease at a rate comparable to nicking of RF I DNA. This pattern of activity suggests that the endonuclease cleaves the RF I DNA in the single-stranded regions of the DNA induced by its supercoiling. The preference of the alphabeta and the betabeta forms of the endonuclease for viral DNA was tested with Rous-associated virus type 2 and Rous sarcoma virus transformation-defective
Schmidt
-Ruppin B strain DNA molecularly cloned in plasmid pBR322 and M13 DNA vectors, respectively. The rate of nicking of RF I DNA containing viral DNA or partial sequences of viral DNA with one or two tandem long terminal repeats was the same as when these sequences were not present in the host vectors. A similar lack of preference was observed with single-stranded M13 DNAs.
...
PMID:Mechanism of action of the endonuclease associated with the alpha beta and beta beta forms of avian RNA tumor virus reverse transcriptase. 618 36
Reticuloendotheliosis virus strain T (REV-T) is a highly oncogenic avian retrovirus which causes a rapid neoplastic disease of the lymphoreticular system. Upon infection, this virus gives rise to two species of unintegrated linear viral DNA, which are 8.3 and 5.5 kilobase pairs long and represent the helper virus (REV-A) and the oncogenic component (REV-T), respectively. Restriction endonuclease cleavage maps of these two DNA components indicate that REV-T DNA has a large portion of the genome deleted with respect to REV-A DNA and a substitution about 0.8 to 1.5 kilobase pairs long that is unrelated to REV-A DNA. These additional sequences comprise the putative transforming region of REV-T (rel). A chicken spleen cell line transformed by REV-T produced virus which upon infection gives rise to three species of unintegrated linear viral DNA (8.3, 5.5, and 3,3 kilobase pairs). We isolated the proviruses of the 8.3- and 3.3-kilobase pair species from this cell line by cloning in the phage vector Charon 4A. Restriction enzyme mapping showed that the two proviral clones are proviruses of REV-A and a variant of REV-T, respectively. A subclone of the variant REV-T provirus specific for the rel sequences of REV-T was used as a hybridization probe to demonstrate that the rel sequences are different from the putative transforming sequences of
Schmidt
-Ruppin Rous sarcoma virus strain A, avain myelocytomatosis virus, avian
myeloblastosis
virus, avian erythroblastosis virus, Abelson murine leukemia virus, and Friend erythroleukemia virus. In addition, the rel-specific hybridization probe was used to identify a specific set of sequences which are present in uninfected avian DNAs digested with several restriction enzymes. The corresponding cell sequences are not arranged like rel in REV-T.
...
PMID:Characterization of reticuloendotheliosis virus strain T DNA and isolation of a novel variant of reticuloendotheliosis virus strain T by molecular cloning. 627 17