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1.
S M Rybak  B L Vallee 《Biochemistry》1988,27(7):2288-2294
The base cleavage specificity of angiogenin toward naturally occurring polyribonucleotides has been determined by using rapid RNA sequencing technology. With 5S RNAs from Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Escherichia coli, angiogenin cleaves phosphodiester bonds exclusively at cytidylic or uridylic residues, preferably when the pyrimidines are followed by adenine. However, not all of the existent pyrimidine bonds in the 5S RNAs are cleaved, likely owing to elements of structure in the substrate. Despite the high degree of sequence homology between angiogenin and ribonuclease A (RNase A), which includes all three catalytic as well as substrate binding residues, the cleavage patterns with natural RNAs are unique to each enzyme. Angiogenin significantly hydrolyzes certain bonds that are not appreciably attacked by RNase A and vice versa. The different cleavage specificities of angiogenin and RNase A may account for the fact that the former is angiogenic while the latter is not.  相似文献   

2.
Mapping adenines, guanines, and pyrimidines in RNA.   总被引:392,自引:248,他引:144       下载免费PDF全文
The positions of adenines, guanines, and pyrimidines can be determined by partial nuclease digestion of a terminally labeles RNA molecule. In urea, at elevated temperatures, RNase T1 generates a pattern reflecting cleavage at guanines while RNase U2 cleaves only at adenine. A limited alkaline hydrolysis provides a continuum of fragments derived from breaks at every phosphodiester bond. The reaction products are electrophoretically fractionated by size in adjacent lanes of a polyacrylamide gel. An autoradiograph of the gel displays the sequence up to 100 nucleotides from the end of the molecule, although uracil cannot as yet be distinguished from cytosine. These techniques form the basis of an RNA sequencing method and are demonstrated on yeast 5.8S ribosomal RNA.  相似文献   

3.
In order to examine the effect of modifications at the 3' overhang regions of short interfering RNAs (siRNAs) on their gene-silencing activities, we designed and synthesized novel siRNAs having thymidine dimers consisting of a carbamate or a urea linkage at their 3' overhang regions. Suppression of human RNase L protein expression by these siRNAs was analyzed by immunoblot with RNase L-specific antibody. It was found that, at 24 h post-transfection, the modified siRNAs having the thymidine dimers with the carbamate and urea linkage suppress the protein expression 78 and 37 times more efficiently than that with the natural phosphodiester linkage, respectively. Furthermore, the siRNA containing the carbamate linkage was 37 times more resistant to nucleolytic degradation by snake venom phosphodiesterase than the siRNA consisting of the natural phosphodiester linkage. Thus, the RNA duplexes having the thymidine dimers with the carbamate or urea linkage at their 3' overhang regions will be promising candidates for novel siRNA molecules to down-regulate protein expression.  相似文献   

4.
In a continuing effort to identify ribonucleases that may be involved in mRNA decay in Bacillus subtilis, fractionation of a protein extract from a triple-mutant strain that was missing three previously characterized 3'-to-5' exoribonucleases (polynucleotide phosphorylase [PNPase], RNase R, and YhaM) was undertaken. These experiments revealed the presence of a high-molecular-weight nuclease encoded by the yhcR gene that was active in the presence of Ca(2+) and Mn(2+). YhcR is a sugar-nonspecific nuclease that cleaves endonucleolytically to yield nucleotide 3'-monophosphate products, similar to the well-characterized micrococcal nuclease of Staphylococcus aureus. YhcR appears to be located principally in the cell wall and is likely to be a substrate for a B. subtilis sortase. Zymogram analysis suggests that YhcR is the major Ca(2+)-activated nuclease of B. subtilis. In addition to having a unique overall domain structure, YhcR contains a hitherto unknown structural domain that we have named "NYD," for "new YhcR domain."  相似文献   

5.
Three ribonucleases, RNase I, RNase II and RNase III, were purified from the 109,000 X g supernate of detergent-treated Tetrahymena pyriformis strain W. RNases I and II act optimally at pH 5.5-6.0 and are inhibited by increasing concentrations of salts of monovalent cations. RNase III acts optimally at pH 7.5 and is activated 1.5-fold by millimolar concentrations of ZnSO4 and 5-fold by 50 mM KCl. RNases II and III are activated approximately 100% in the presence of 3 M and 5 M urea respectively. All enzymes are heat-sensitive and acid-resistant. They are endonucleases forming 2',3'-cyclic products. Their base specificity, as tested against ribosomal RNAs of known sequence, is as follows: RNase I hydrolyzes preferentially YpN and secondarily GpN bonds, RNase II is highly specific for RpN bonds, though the preparation can also hydrolyze the UpU sequence. Finally the principal targets of RNase III are YpR sequences and secondarily YpY sequences. A shorthand visualization of base specificity of nucleases in the form of right isosceles triangles is presented. The triangles are constructed by subdividing each of the two perpendicular sides in as many units as the maximum number of times the most abundant dinucleotide appears in all substrates employed and plotting the frequency of hydrolysis of each dinucleotide sequence by the enzyme under study. The proximity of each dinucleotide sequence to the hypotenuse or to one of the perpendicular sides is indicative of its susceptibility or resistance to the enzyme's action.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Bisbal C  Silverman RH 《Biochimie》2007,89(6-7):789-798
The endoribonuclease L (RNase L) is the effector of the 2-5A system, a major enzymatic pathway involved in the molecular mechanism of interferons (IFNs). RNase L is a very unusual nuclease with a complex mechanism of regulation. It is a latent enzyme, expressed in nearly every mammalian cell type. Its activation requires its binding to a small oligonucleotide, 2-5A. 2-5A is a series of unique 5'-triphosphorylated oligoadenylates with 2'-5' phosphodiester bonds. By regulating viral and cellular RNA expression, RNase L plays an important role in the antiviral and antiproliferative activities of IFN and contributes to innate immunity and cell metabolism. The 2-5A/RNase L pathway is implicated in mediating apoptosis in response to viral infections and to several types of external stimuli. Several recent studies have suggested that RNase L could have a role in cancer biology and evidence of a tumor suppressor function of RNase L has emerged from studies on the genetics of hereditary prostate cancer.  相似文献   

8.
The conformational stability of RNase Rs was determined with chemical and thermal denaturants over the pH range of 1-10. Equilibrium unfolding with urea showed that values of D(1/2) (5.7 M) and DeltaG(H(2)O) (12.8 kcal/mol) were highest at pH 5.0, its pI and the maximum conformational stability of RNase Rs was observed near pH 5.0. Denaturation with guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl), at pH 5.0, gave similar values of DeltaG(H(2)O) although GdnHCl was 2-fold more potent denaturant with D(1/2) value of 3.1 M. The curves of fraction unfolded (f(U)) obtained with fluorescence and CD measurements overlapped at pH 5.0. Denaturation of RNase Rs with urea in the pH range studied was reversible but the enzyme denatured irreversibly >pH 11.0. Thermal denaturation of RNase Rs was reversible in the pH range of 2.0-3.0 and 6.0-9.0. Thermal denaturation in the pH range 4.0-5.5 resulted in aggregation and precipitation of the protein above 55 degrees C. The aggregate was amorphous or disordered precipitate as observed in TE micrographs. Blue shift in emission lambda(max) and enhancement of fluorescence intensity of ANS at 70 degrees C indicated the presence of solvent exposed hydrophobic surfaces as a result of heat treatment. Aggregation could be prevented partially with alpha-cyclodextrin (0.15 M) and completely with urea at concentrations >3 M. Aggregation was probably due to intermolecular hydrophobic interaction favored by minimum charge-charge repulsion at the pI of the enzyme. Both urea and temperature-induced denaturation studies showed that RNase Rs unfolds through a two-state F right arrow over left arrow U mechanism. The pH dependence of stability described by DeltaG(H(2)O) (urea) and DeltaG (25 degrees C) suggested that electrostatic interactions among the charged groups make a significant contribution to the conformational stability of RNase Rs. Since RNase Rs is a disulfide-containing protein, the major element for structural stability are the covalent disulfide bonds.  相似文献   

9.
The transfer RNA 5' maturation enzyme RNase P has been characterized in Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya. The purified enzyme from all three kingdoms is a ribonucleoprotein containing an essential RNA subunit; indeed, the RNA subunit of bacterial RNase P RNA is the sole catalytic component. In contrast, the RNase P activity isolated from spinach chloroplasts lacks an RNA component and appears to function as a catalytic protein. Nonetheless, the chloroplast enzyme recognizes a pre-tRNA substrate for E. coli RNase P and cleaves it as efficiently and precisely as does the bacterial enzyme. To ascertain whether there are differences in catalytic mechanism between an all-RNA and an all-protein RNase P, we took advantage of the fact that phosphodiester bond selection and hydrolysis by the E. coli RNase P ribozyme is directed by a Mg2+ ion coordinated to the nonbridging pro-Rp oxygen of the scissile bond, and is blocked by sulfur replacement of this oxygen. We therefore tested the ability of the chloroplast enzyme to process a precursor tRNA containing this sulfur substitution. Partially purified RNase P from spinach chloroplasts can accurately and efficiently process phosphorothioate-substituted pre-tRNAs; cleavage occurs exclusively at the thio-containing scissile bond. The enzymatic throughput is fivefold slower, consistent with a general chemical effect of the phosphorothioate substitution rather than with a metal coordination deficiency. The chloroplast RNase P reaction mechanism therefore does not involve a catalytic Mg2+ bonded to the pro-Rp phosphate oxygen, and hence is distinct from the mechanism of the bacterial ribozyme RNase P.  相似文献   

10.
Ribonuclease T1 (RNase T1) cleaves the phosphodiester bond of RNA specifically at the 3'-end of guanosine. 2'-guanosinemonophosphate (2'-GMP) acts as inhibitor for this reaction and was cocrystallized with RNase T1. X-Ray analysis provided insight in the geometry of the active site and in the parts of the enzyme involved in the recognition of guanosine. RNase T1 is globular in shape and consists of a 4.5 turns alpha-helix lying "below" a four-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet containing recognition center as well as active site. The latter is indicated by the position of phosphate and sugar residues of 2'-GMP and shows that Glu58, His92 and Arg77 are active in phosphodiester hydrolysis. Guanine is recognized by a stretch of protein from Tyr42 to Tyr45. Residues involved in recognition are peptide NH and C = O, guanine O6 and N1H which form hydrogen bonds and a stacking interaction of Tyr45 on guanine. Although, on a theoretical basis, many specific amino acid-guanine interactions are possible, none is employed in the RNase T1.guanine recognition.  相似文献   

11.
We have characterized cloned His-tag human RNase H1. The activity of the enzyme exhibited a bell-shaped response to divalent cations and pH. The optimum conditions for catalysis consisted of 1 mM Mg(2+) and pH 7-8. In the presence of Mg(2+), Mn(2+) was inhibitory. Human RNase H1 shares many enzymatic properties with Escherichia coli RNase H1. The human enzyme cleaves RNA in a DNA-RNA duplex resulting in products with 5'-phosphate and 3'-hydroxy termini, can cleave overhanging single strand RNA adjacent to a DNA-RNA duplex, and is unable to cleave substrates in which either the RNA or DNA strand has 2' modifications at the cleavage site. Human RNase H1 binds selectively to "A-form"-type duplexes with approximately 10-20-fold greater affinity than that observed for E. coli RNase H1. The human enzyme displays a greater initial rate of cleavage of a heteroduplex-containing RNA-phosphorothioate DNA than an RNA-DNA duplex. Unlike the E. coli enzyme, human RNase H1 displays a strong positional preference for cleavage, i.e. it cleaves between 8 and 12 nucleotides from the 5'-RNA-3'-DNA terminus of the duplex. Within the preferred cleavage site, the enzyme displays modest sequence preference with GU being a preferred dinucleotide. The enzyme is inhibited by single-strand phosphorothioate oligonucleotides and displays no evidence of processivity. The minimum RNA-DNA duplex length that supports cleavage is 6 base pairs, and the minimum RNA-DNA "gap size" that supports cleavage is 5 base pairs.  相似文献   

12.
In order to study the state of tyrosyl residues in a ribouuclease from bovine semina vesicles [EC 3.1.4.22, RNase Vs1] several lines of experiments were carried out. Spectrophotometric titration of RNase Vs1 indicated that two out of 8 tyrosine residues were titrated very easily and their apparent pKa values were about 9.8. Next, about 4 residues were titrated at pH up to 13.5. The remaining 2 residues were titrated time-dependently at pH 13.5. In 8 M urea, about 6 tyrosine residues were titrated with apparent pK4 values of about 11.2 and about 2 residues were titrated time-dependently at pH 13.5. Acetylation of RNase Vs1 with N-acetylimidazole was studied at pH 7.5. In aqueous solution, about 1.1-3.5 tyrosine residues were acetylated, depending on the experimental conditions, and in 8 M urea, 5.3 tyrosine residues were modified. RNase Vs1 was nitrated with tetranitromethane at pH 7.5. In aqueous solution, about 2.5 tyrosine residues were nitrated very easily; the enzymatic activity of the modified enzymes was 130-200% of that of the native enzyme. In 8 M urea, the reactivity of the tyrosine residues increased and about 4-5.5 residues were modified. The results of chemical modification and spectrophotometric titration indicated that about two tyrosine residues in RNase Vs1 were exposed to the solvent and were more reactive to various reagents, and 3-4 tyrosine residues were less reactive. The final 2 residues were not accessible to the reagent even in the presence of urea, but were titraten at pH 13.5. The solvent perturbation difference spectrum using ethylene glycol as a perturbant indicated that about 4 tyrosine residues were perturbed. When the pH of the enzyme solution was changed from 7.0 to 1.0, the change in optical density of RNase Vs1 due to denaturation blue shift was about 1,600 at 287nm. The optical density change at 287 nm of native RNase Vs1 on exposure to 8 M urea and 6 M guanidine-HCl indicated that the environments of 2-3 and 4 tyrosine residues were changed by the addition of the denaturants, urea and guanidine-HCl, respectively. In RNase Vs1 having about four nitrotyrosine residues, the two most inaccessible tyrosine residues remained resistant to titration with alkali. On adding nucleotide, nitrated RNase Vs1 gave a difference spectrum in the ultraviolet region but not in 320-460 nm region, where nitrotyrosine residues absorb light. This may indicate that tyrosine residues located relatively near the surface of the molecule are not perturbed directly by nucleotide binding.  相似文献   

13.
Members of the RNase III family are the primary cellular agents of dsRNA (double-stranded RNA) processing. Bacterial RNases III function as homodimers and contain two dsRBDs (dsRNA-binding domains) and two catalytic sites. The potential for functional cross-talk between the catalytic sites and the requirement for both dsRBDs for processing activity are not known. It is shown that an Escherichia coli RNase III heterodimer that contains a single functional wt (wild-type) catalytic site and an inactive catalytic site (RNase III[E117A/wt]) cleaves a substrate with a single scissile bond with a k(cat) value that is one-half that of wt RNase III, but exhibits an unaltered K(m). Moreover, RNase III[E117A/wt] cleavage of a substrate containing two scissile bonds generates singly cleaved intermediates that are only slowly cleaved at the remaining phosphodiester linkage, and in a manner that is sensitive to excess unlabelled substrate. These results demonstrate the equal probability, during a single binding event, of placement of a scissile bond in a functional or nonfunctional catalytic site of the heterodimer and reveal a requirement for substrate dissociation and rebinding for cleavage of both phosphodiester linkages by the mutant heterodimer. The rate of phosphodiester hydrolysis by RNase III[E117A/wt] has the same dependence on Mg(2+) ion concentration as that of the wt enzyme, and exhibits a Hill coefficient (h) of 2.0+/-0.1, indicating that the metal ion dependence essentially reflects a single catalytic site that employs a two-Mg(2+)-ion mechanism. Whereas an E. coli RNase III mutant that lacks both dsRBDs is inactive, a heterodimer that contains a single dsRBD exhibits significant catalytic activity. These findings support a reaction pathway involving the largely independent action of the dsRBDs and the catalytic sites in substrate recognition and cleavage respectively.  相似文献   

14.
DNA sequences encoding hypothetical proteins homologous to S1 nuclease from Aspergillus oryzae are found in many organisms including fungi, plants, pathogenic bacteria, and eukaryotic parasites. One of these is the M1 nuclease of Mesorhizobium loti which we demonstrate herein to be an enzymatically active, soluble, and stable S1 homolog that lacks the extensive mannosyl-glycosylation found in eukaryotic S1 nuclease homologs. We have expressed the cloned M1 protein in M. loti and purified recombinant native M1 to near homogeneity and have also isolated a homogeneous M1 carboxy-terminal hexahistidine tag fusion protein. Mass spectrometry and N-terminal Edman degradation sequencing confirmed the protein identity. The enzymatic properties of the purified M1 nuclease are similar to those of S1. At acidic pH M1 is 25 times more active on single-stranded DNA than on double-stranded DNA and 3 times more active on single-stranded DNA than on single-stranded RNA. At neutral pH the RNase activity of M1 exceeds the DNase activity. M1 nicks supercoiled RF-I plasmid DNA and rapidly cuts the phosphodiester bond across from the nick in the resultant relaxed RF-II plasmid DNA. Therefore, M1 represents an active bacterial S1 homolog in spite of great sequence divergence. The biochemical characterization of M1 nuclease supports our sequence alignment that reveals the minimal 21 amino acid residues that are necessarily conserved for the structure and functions of this enzyme family. The ability of M1 to degrade RNA at neutral pH implies previously unappreciated roles of these nucleases in biological systems.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The nuclear tRNA 3' processing activity from wheat has been characterized and partially purified. Several characteristics of the wheat nuclear 3' processing enzyme now allow this activity to be distinguished from its mitochondrial counterpart. The nuclear enzyme is an endonuclease, which we termed nuclear RNase Z. The enzyme cleaves at the discriminator base and seems to consist only of protein subunits, since essential RNA subunits could not be detected. RNase Z leaves 5' terminal phosphoryl and 3' terminal hydroxyl groups at the processing products. It is a stable enzyme being active over broad temperature and pH ranges, with the highest activity at 35 degrees C and pH 8.4. The apparent molecular mass according to gel filtration chromatography is 122 kDa. The nuclear RNase Z does process 5' extended pretRNAs but with a much lower efficiency than 5' matured pretRNAs. Nuclear intron-containing precursor tRNAs as well as mitochondrial precursor tRNAs are efficiently cleaved by the nuclear RNase Z. Mitochondrial pretRNA(His) is processed by the nuclear RNase Z, generating a mature tRNA(His) containing an 8 base pair acceptor stem. The edited mitochondrial pretRNA(Phe) is cleaved easily, while the unedited version having a mismatch in the acceptor stem is not cleaved. Thus, an intact acceptor stem seems to be required for processing. Experiments with precursors containing mutated tRNAs showed that a completely intact anticodon arm is not necessary for processing by RNase Z. Comparison of the plant nuclear tRNA 3' processing enzyme with the plant mitochondrial one suggests that both activities are different enzymes.  相似文献   

17.
Uniformly modified nucleic acids analogues, oligonucleotide N3'-->P5' phosphoramidates, containing 3'-amino instead of 3'-hydroxyl nucleosides, were synthesized and studied. These compounds form very stable duplexes with complementary native phosphodiester DNA and exceptionally stable duplexes with RNA strands. Increases in duplex melting temperature, deltaTm, relatively to their phosphodiester counterparts, reaches 2.9-3.5 degrees C per modified nucleoside. Moreover, the phosphoramidate compounds form extremely stable triple stranded complexes with single or double stranded DNA oligomers under near physiological salt and pH conditions. Melting temperatures of these triplexes usually exceed that of the isosequential phosphodiester counterparts by up to 35 degrees C. For 11-15-mers 2'-deoxyphosphoramidates are structurally and functionally similar to the native RNA molecules and thus can be used as RNA decoys. They are resistant to enzymatic digestion by nucleases both in vitro and in vivo. Oligonucleotide phosphoramidates apparently are cell permeable, and they have a good bioavailability and biodistribution, while being non-toxic in mice at therapeutically relevant doses. Duplexes of the several studied phosphoramidates with complementary RNA strands apparently are not substrates for RNase H in vitro. Despite that, these compounds exerted high sequence-specific antisense activity in various cell lines and in SCID mice. The observed in vitro lack of RNase H recognition of the RNA:phosphoramidate duplexes may result in better specificity in biological activity of these compounds relative to RNase H inducing oligonucleotides. Experimental results also indicate that oligonucleotide phosphoramidates can be used as efficient and specific modulators of gene expression by an antigene mechanism of action. Finally, the oligo-2'-deoxyphosphoramidate double stranded complexes can structurally mimic native RNA complexes, which could be efficiently and specifically recognized by the RNA binding proteins, such as HIV-1 Rev and Tat.  相似文献   

18.
The cleavage of short chimeric oligonucleotides containing only one reactive ribonucleoside unit, all other nucleosides being 2′-O-methylated, has been studied at pH 8.5 and 35°C. Among the 20 different sequences that did not exhibit any tendency to form a defined secondary structure, the scissile 5′-UpA-3′ and 5′-CpA-3′ phosphodiester bonds experienced >100- and up to 35-fold reactivity differences, respectively. Compared with dinucleoside monophosphates, both rate accelerations and retardations of more than one order of magnitude were observed. Even a change of a single base several nucleosides away from the scissile bond markedly affected the reaction rate. Duplex formation at the 3′- and/or 5′-side of the scissile bond was also studied and observed to be strongly rate retarding. The origin of the high sensitivity of phosphodiester bonds to the molecular environment is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Two intracellular RNases which were easily separated by fractionation on strong anion- or cation-exchange resins were identified from Bacillus subtilis. One cleaved any phosphodiester bond, while the second cleaved only pyrimidine-N bonds. The enzyme with pyrimidine-N specificity was approximately 15 kDa, had a pH optimum of approximately 6.2, degraded C-C bonds approximately 10 times faster than U-U bonds, and was completely inactive against single-stranded DNA. The enzyme is called RNase C and may be the first reported broad-specificity endoribonuclease from B. subtilis.  相似文献   

20.
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