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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
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630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The ribosomal frameshifting signal present in the genomic RNA of the coronavirus infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) contains a classic hairpin-type RNA pseudoknot that is believed to possess coaxially stacked stems of 11 bp (stem 1) and 6 bp (stem 2). We investigated the influence of stem 1 length on the frameshift process by measuring the frameshift efficiency in vitro of a series of IBV-based pseudoknots whose stem 1 length was varied from 4 to 13 bp in single base-pair increments. Efficient frameshifting depended upon the presence of a minimum of 11 bp; pseudoknots with a shorter stem 1 were either
non-functional
or had reduced frameshift efficiency, despite the fact that a number of them had a stem 1 with a predicted stability equal to or greater than that of the wild-type IBV pseudoknot. An upper limit for stem 1 length was not determined, but pseudoknots containing a 12 or 13 bp stem 1 were fully functional. Structure probing analysis was carried out on RNAs containing either a ten or 11 bp stem 1; these experiments confirmed that both RNAs formed pseudoknots and appeared to be indistinguishable in conformation. Thus the difference in frameshifting efficiency seen with the two structures was not simply due to an inability of the 10 bp stem 1 construct to fold into a pseudoknot. In an attempt to identify other parameters which could account for the poor functionality of the shorter stem 1-containing pseudoknots, we investigated, in the context of the 10 bp stem 1 construct, the influence on frameshifting of altering the slippery sequence-pseudoknot spacing distance, loop 2 length, and the number of G residues at the bottom of the 5'-arm of stem 1. For each parameter, it was possible to find a condition where a modest stimulation of frameshifting was observable (about twofold, from seven to a maximal 17 %), but we were unable to find a situation where frameshifting approached the levels seen with 11 bp stem 1 constructs (48-57 %). Furthermore, in the next smaller construct (9 bp stem 1), changing the bottom four base-pairs to G.C (the optimal base composition) only stimulated frameshifting from 3 to 6 %, an efficiency about tenfold lower than seen with the 11 bp construct. Thus stem 1 length is a major factor in determining the functionality of this class of pseudoknot and this has implications for models of the frameshift process.
J
Mol
Biol 1999 May 07
PMID:The role of RNA pseudoknot stem 1 length in the promotion of efficient -1 ribosomal frameshifting. 1032 44
RNA pseudoknots are structural elements that participate in a variety of biological processes. At -1 ribosomal frameshifting sites, several types of pseudoknot have been identified which differ in their organisation and functionality. The pseudoknot found in infectious bronchitis virus (IBV) is typical of those that possess a long stem 1 of 11-12 bp and a long loop 2 (30-164 nt). A second group of pseudoknots are distinguishable that contain stems of only 5 to 7 bp and shorter loops. The NMR structure of one such pseudoknot, that of mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV), has revealed that it is kinked at the stem 1-stem 2 junction, and that this kinked conformation is essential for efficient frameshifting. We recently investigated the effect on frameshifting of modulating stem 1 length and stability in IBV-based pseudoknots, and found that a stem 1 with at least 11 bp was needed for efficient frameshifting. Here, we describe the sequence manipulations that are necessary to bypass the requirement for an 11 bp stem 1 and to convert a short
non-functional
IBV-derived pseudoknot into a highly efficient, kinked frameshifter pseudoknot. Simple insertion of an adenine residue at the stem 1-stem 2 junction (an essential feature of a kinked pseudoknot) was not sufficient to create a functional pseudoknot. An additional change was needed: efficient frameshifting was recovered only when the last nucleotide of loop 2 was changed from a G to an A. The requirement for an A at the end of loop 2 is consistent with a loop-helix contact similar to those described in other RNA tertiary structures. A mutational analysis of both partners of the proposed interaction, the loop 2 terminal adenine residue and two G.C pairs near the top of stem 1, revealed that the interaction was essential for efficient frameshifting. The specific requirement for a 3'-terminal A residue was lost when loop 2 was increased from 8 to 14 nt, suggesting that the loop-helix contact may be required only in those pseudoknots with a short loop 2.
J
Mol
Biol 1999 May 07
PMID:Evidence for an RNA pseudoknot loop-helix interaction essential for efficient -1 ribosomal frameshifting. 1032 45
We report the insertion of the transposable element B104 in the Phenylalanine hydroxylase gene of the Drosophila mutant Henna-recessive 3. Its presence alters the Phenylalanine hydroxylase splicing pattern, producing at least two aberrant mRNAs which contain part of the B104 sequence interrupting the coding region. This aberrant splicing is provoked by the use of a cryptic donor site encoded by the B104 3' long terminal repeat in combination with either the gene intron 3 acceptor site or a novel acceptor site generated by the target duplication caused by transposition. One of them, referred as mRNA type 1, encodes a truncated protein that could be predictably
non-functional
. In mRNA type 2, in spite of a 42 nt insertion, the Phenylalanine hydroxylase reading frame is not altered and it would encode for a protein with 14 extra amino acids which would be able to account for the low enzyme activity detected in this mutant. These results demonstrated that Henna locus encodes the enzyme phenylalanine hydroxylase providing direct evidence of its participation in pteridine synthesis. Moreover, it constitutes an example of the ability of transposable elements to generate protein variation in populations with the evolutionary consequences that this implies.
Insect Biochem
Mol
Biol 1999 Apr
PMID:Aberrant splicing of the Drosophila melanogaster phenylalanine hydroxylase pre-mRNA caused by the insertion of a B104/roo transposable element in the Henna locus. 1033 70
Structural genes of phospholipid biosynthesis in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae are activated by the Ino2p/Ino4p transcription factor that binds to ICRE promoter motifs and mediates maximal gene expression in the absence of inositol. We identified the ino80 mutation causing inositol auxotrophy as a result of a defect in ICRE-dependent gene activation. The product of the corresponding wild-type gene INO80 (= YGL150C) shows significant similarity to the Snf2p family of DNA-dependent ATPases. Nevertheless, SNF2 in increased gene dosage did not suppress ino80 mutant phenotypes. Mutation of the Ino80p lysine residue corresponding to the NTP binding site of Snf2p led to a
non-functional
protein. In ino80 null mutants, gene activation mediated by an ICRE decreased to 16% of the wild-type level. Maximal expression of PHO5, GAL1, CYC1 and ICL1 was also significantly reduced. Thus, Ino80p affects several transcription factors involved in unrelated pathways. As demonstrated by gel filtration, Ino80p is part of a high-molecular-weight complex of more than 1 MDa. Similar to what was found for Snf2p, the Ino80p-containing complex may influence the transcriptional level of several unrelated structural genes by functioning as an ATPase that possibly acts on chromatin.
Mol
Microbiol 1999 May
PMID:The product of the SNF2/SWI2 paralogue INO80 of Saccharomyces cerevisiae required for efficient expression of various yeast structural genes is part of a high-molecular-weight protein complex. 1036 Dec 78
The human glycine transporter type 2 (hGlyT2) was cloned from a spinal cord cDNA library using PCR-based methodologies. The isolated sequence exhibits 89% homology with the previously isolated rat GlyT2 cDNA (Liu et al., J. Biol. Chem. 268 (1993) 22802-22808) at the nucleotide level, and 93% amino acid sequence identity. The greatest divergence between the human and rat sequences is found at the amino-terminus, where only 74% amino acid identity exists in residues 1-190. Expression of the intact hGlyT2 transporter sequence in COS-7 cells resulted in a 10-fold increase in high-affinity uptake relative to control cells transfected with vector alone. An artificially truncated form of the transporter, missing the NH2-terminal 153 amino acids, was also capable of mediating glycine uptake. However, an identified variant lacking the first 234 amino acids was
non-functional
. An hGlyT2 transporter containing a 14-residue deletion in the intracellular loop between transmembrane domains 6 and 7 was also identified and expressed, but failed to mediate glycine uptake. Like rat GlyT2, the high-affinity uptake mediated by hGlyT2 was found to be insensitive to the GlyT1 inhibitor sarcosine.
Brain Res
Mol
Brain Res 1999 Jun 18
PMID:Characterization of multiple forms of the human glycine transporter type-2. 1038 48
The Agrobacterium tumefaciens VirB4 ATPase functions with other VirB proteins to export T-DNA to susceptible plant cells and other DNA substrates to a variety of prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. Previous studies have demonstrated that VirB4 mutants with defects in the Walker A nucleotide-binding motif are
non-functional
and exert a dominant negative phenotype when synthesized in wild-type cells. This study characterized the oligomeric structure of VirB4 and examined the effects of Walker A sequence mutations on complex formation and transporter activity. VirB4 directed dimer formation when fused to the amino-terminal portion of cI repressor protein, as shown by immunity of Escherichia coli cells to lambda phage infection. VirB4 also dimerized in Agrobacterium tumefaciens, as demonstrated by the recovery of a detergent-resistant complex of native protein and a functional, histidine-tagged derivative by precipitation with anti-His6 antibodies and by Co2+ affinity chromatography. Walker A sequence mutants directed repressor dimerization in E. coli and interacted with His-VirB4 in A. tumefaciens, indicating that ATP binding is not required for self-association. A dimerization domain was localized to a proposed N-terminal membrane-spanning region of VirB4, as shown by the dominance of an allele coding for the N-terminal 312 residues and phage immunity of host cells expressing cI repressor fusions to alleles for the first 237 or 312 residues. A recent study reported that the synthesis of a subset of VirB proteins, including VirB4, in agrobacterial recipients has a pronounced stimulatory effect on the virB-dependent conjugal transfer of plasmid RSF1010 by agrobacterial donors. VirB4'312 suppressed the stimulatory effect of VirB proteins for DNA uptake when synthesized in recipient cells. In striking contrast, Walker A sequence mutants contributed to the stimulatory effect of VirB proteins to the same extent as native VirB4. These findings indicate that the oligomeric structure of VirB4, but not its capacity to bind ATP, is important for the assembly of VirB proteins as a DNA uptake system. The results of these studies support a model in which VirB4 dimers or homomultimers contribute structural information for the assembly of a transenvelope channel competent for bidirectional DNA transfer, whereas an ATP-dependent activity is required for configuring this channel as a dedicated export machine.
Mol
Microbiol 1999 Jun
PMID:Dimerization of the Agrobacterium tumefaciens VirB4 ATPase and the effect of ATP-binding cassette mutations on the assembly and function of the T-DNA transporter. 1038 64
The tomato LCA1 gene encodes a Ca2+-ATPase and gives rise to two major mRNA transcripts and two distinct protein products of different size in tomato roots. The basis of the transcript size difference was investigated to assess whether the mRNA transcripts encoded distinct protein products. Primer extension and S1 nuclease analysis identified two transcription initiation sites at -72 and -1392 from the start of translation. RNA gel blot analysis of poly(A)+ RNA isolated from phosphate-starved tomato roots using probes designed to domains of the 5'-untranslated region (UTR) or the full-length LCA1 cDNA identified mRNAs of 4.7 and 3.6 kb, corresponding to mRNA originating from transcription initiation sites -1392 and -72, respectively. Screening of a cDNA library derived from phosphate-starved tomato roots yielded three cDNA clones, LCA1A, LCA1B and LCA1C (3.6, 4.5 and 5.1 kb respectively). These cDNAs contain full-length LCA1 mRNA sequence derived from each transcription initiation site, with LCA1C additionally containing an intron of 0.6 kb. Sequence analysis indicated 100% identity between the three size classes of cDNA clones except for the differential 5'-UTR and the unspliced intron. Overall, the results indicate that the two major LCA1 mRNA transcripts are derived by differential transcription initiation and that two of the mRNAs may encode identical protein products, while a third mRNA may correspond to a
non-functional
truncated protein.
Plant
Mol
Biol 1999 May
PMID:Alternative transcription initiation sites generate two LCA1 Ca2+-ATPase mRNA transcripts in tomato roots. 1039 52
The AbH6H gene for hyoscyamine 6beta-hydroxylase (H6H), which converts hyoscyamine to scopolamine, was isolated from Atropa belladonna. This plant also possesses a related sequence, Ab psiH6H, which appears to be a
non-functional
pseudo-gene. AbH6H RNA was detected in cultured root, native root and anther, but not in stem, leaf, pistil, petal, and sepal tissues. In situ hybridization, immunohistochemistry and promoter::GUS transgene analysis showed that AbH6H is expressed specifically in root pericycle cells, and in tapetum and pollen mother cells. A 671 bp 5'-upstream region from AbH6H was sufficient for pericycle-specific expression in hairy roots of A. belladonna and Hyoscyamus niger, which both produce scopolamine, but cell-specific regulation was severely compromised in tobacco hairy roots, which do not produce scopolamine.
Plant
Mol
Biol 1999 May
PMID:An Atropa belladonna hyoscyamine 6beta-hydroxylase gene is differentially expressed in the root pericycle and anthers. 1039 53
The lambda S gene represents the prototype of holin genes with a dual-start motif, which leads to the synthesis of two polypeptides, S105 and S107. They differ at their N-terminus by only two amino acids, Met-1 and Lys-2, at the beginning of the longer product. Despite the minor difference, the two proteins have opposing functions in lysis, with protein S107 being an inhibitor and protein S105 being an effector of 'hole formation' in the inner membrane. Here, we have studied the molecular mechanism underlying the 'lysis clock' contributed by the dual-start motif. We have used protein fusions in which the secretory signal sequence of the M13 procoat protein VIII has been abutted to the N-terminal Met residues of S105 and S107 respectively. S-dependent 'hole formation' required removal of the signal sequence in both fusion proteins, as both the VIII-S105 and the VIII-S107 fusion proteins were
non-functional
when leader peptidase cleavage was inhibited. These results strongly supported the hypothesis that functional assembly of S proteins requires translocation of their N-terminus to the periplasm. Using signal sequence cleavage as a measure of translocation, we observed that the translocation kinetics of the N-terminus of the S107 moiety was reduced about threefold when compared with the N-terminus of the S105 moiety. Moreover, depolarization of the membrane resulted in an immediate cleavage of the signal sequence and 'hole formation' exerted by the S107 moiety of the VIII-S107 fusion protein. A model is presented in which S107 with a reversed topology of its N-terminus interacts with S105 and poisons 'hole formation'. Upon depolarization of the membrane, translocation of the N-terminus of S107 to the periplasm results in the functional assembly of S proteins, i.e. 'hole formation'.
Mol
Microbiol 1999 Aug
PMID:Molecular function of the dual-start motif in the lambda S holin. 1041 47
The six biochemical steps of the de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis pathway are conserved in all known organisms. However, in animals and fungi, unlike prokaryotes, at least the first two activities are grouped on a multifunctional enzyme. Here, we report cloning, mapping and transcriptional characterization of some pyrimidine biosynthesis genes in the filamentous fungus Aspergillus nidulans. The first two steps of the pathway are performed by a multifunctional enzyme comprising the activities of carbamoyl phosphate synthetase (CPSase) and aspartate transcarbamylase (ATCase). This polypeptide is encoded by a 7 kbp cluster gene, pyrABCN, which has a high degree of nucleotide identity with the Ura2 gene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The enzyme of the third step, dihydroorotase (DHOase), is encoded by a separate locus, pyrD. However, the pyrABCN gene apparently contains an evolutionary remnant of a DHOase-encoding sequence, similarly to the Ura2 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The pyrABCN gene is transcribed as a single 7 kb mRNA species. The level of transcripts of pyrABCN, pyrD and, to a lesser degree, pyrF genes responds to the presence of exogenous pyrimidines and to the conditions of pyrimidine starvation. Derepression of pyrABCN and pyrD under pyrimidine starvation is noticeably enhanced in pyrE mutants that accumulate dihydroorotic acid. The pyrABCN gene maps to the distal portion of the right arm of the chromosome VIII, whereas the pyrD gene, in contrast to early genetic data, is closely linked to the brlA gene and located to the right of it. Our data on mitotic recombination should help to verify the genetic map of the chromosome VIII. Comparison of amino acid sequences of active dihydroorotases with related enzymes and with their
non-functional
homologues in yeast and Aspergillus indicates that the active dihydroorotases from fungi are more similar to ureases and enzymes of the pyrimidine degradation pathway. The 'silent' dihydroorotase domains of the multifunctional enzymes from fungi and active DHOase domains of the multifunctional enzymes in higher eukaryotes are more closely related to bacterial dehydroorotases.
Mol
Microbiol 1999 Aug
PMID:Structural and transcriptional analysis of the pyrABCN, pyrD and pyrF genes in Aspergillus nidulans and the evolutionary origin of fungal dihydroorotases. 1041 50
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