首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
D K Dube  L A Loeb 《Biochemistry》1976,15(16):3605-3611
The association of avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV) DNA polymerase with polynucleotide templates during catalysis has been studied. During the course of polymerization, different template-primer complexes were added and the ability of the enzyme to switch from one polynucleotide template to another was determined. At 37 degrees C as well as at 4 degrees C, the polymerase is able to switch from certain template-primer complexes to others. For example, the addition of poly(A)-oligo(dT) during the course of synthesis with poly(C)-oligo(dG) results in the immediate cessation of dGMP polymerization and the start of dTMP polymerization without any lag. Early during the course of polymerization, the size of the product, as determined by alkaline sucrose gradient centrifugation, is, in part, a function of the ratio of the template-primer complex to the enzyme. These cumulative experiments indicate that catalysis on polynucleotide templates with avian myeloblastosis virus DNA polymerase under the conditions tested is not processive in a classical sense. Similar to cellular DNA polymerases the enzyme can shift from one template-primer to another. Using autoradiography after gel electrophoresis to estimate the product size, it can be calculated that the enzyme switches from one template to another within 0.25 min at 37 degrees C which corresponds to the incorporation of greater than 25 nucleotides. At 4 degrees C, switching can be calculated to occur in less than three nucleotide addition steps. Thus, with certain homopolymers, conditions can be found by which AMV DNA polymerase can switch from one template-primer complex to another, perhaps after each nucleotide addition step.  相似文献   

6.
The secondary structure of the hydrogen bonded hybrids polycytidylate-oligodeoxguanylate (poly(rC)-(dG)12-18 and poly (2'-oMe) cytidylate-oligodeoxyguanylate (poly (rCm)-(dG)12-18 was studied at several magnesium and manganese ion concentrations. These hybrids are effective template-primer complexes for the synthesis of poly(dG) by avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV) DNA polymerase under disparate ionic conditions. Circular dichroism spectra and thermal melting data were obtained as a function of ion concentration, including conditions that allow optimum rates of poly (dG) synthesis by each complex. These studies demonstrate that both hybrids can change conformation and stability depending on their ionic environment. Comparison of enzyme activity and physical data suggest that the polymerase recognizes particular secondary structure features. Changes in the activity of the AMV polymerase can be induced by varying the Mg++ and Mn++ concentrations alone and in combination. These variations in enzyme activity are correlated with observed changes in the base-stacking alignment of the synthetic template primers. The ions, therefore, seem to affect enzyme activity by altering the conformation of the polnucleotide complexes.  相似文献   

7.
RNA sequence relatedness among avian RNA tumor virus genomes was analyzed by inhibition of DNA-RNA hybrid formation between 3H-labeled 35S viral RNA and an excess of leukemic or normal chicken cell DNA with increasing concentrations of unlabeled 35S viral RNA. The avian viruses tested were Rous associated virus (RAV)-3, avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV), RAV-60, RAV-61, and B-77 sarcoma virus. Hybridization of 3H-labeled 35S AMV RNA with DNA from normal chicken cells was inhibited by unlabeled 35S RAV-0 RNA as effeciently (100%) as by unlabeled AMV RNA. Hybridization between 3H-labeled 35S AMV RNA and DNA from leukemic chicken myeloblasts induced by AMV was suppressed 100 and 68% by unlabeled 35S RNA from AMV and RAV-0, respectively. Hybridization between 3H-labeled RAV-0 and leukemic chicken myeloblast DNA was inhibited 100 and 67% by unlabeled 35S RNA from RAV-0 and AMV, respectively. It appears therefore that the AMV and RAV-0 genomes are 67 to 70% homologous and that AMV hybridizes to RAV-0 like sequences in normal chicken DNA. Hybridization between AMV RNA and leukemic chicken DNA was inhibited 40% by RNA from RAV-60 or RAV-61 and 50% by B-77 RNA. Hybridization between RAV-0 RNA and leukemic chicken DNA was inhibited 80% by RAV-60 or RAV-61 and 70% by B-77 RNA. Hybridization between 3H-labeled 35S RNA from RAV-60 or RAV-61 and leukemic chicken myeloblast DNA was reduced equally by RNA from RAV-60, RAV-61, AMV or RAV-0; this suggests that RNA from RAV-60 and RAV-61 hybridizes with virus-specific sequences in leukemic DNA which are shared by AMV, RAV-0, RAV-60, and RAV-61 RNA'S. Hybridization between 3H-labeled 35S RNA from RAV-61 and normal pheasant DNA was inhibited 100% by homologous viral RNA, 22 TO 26% BY RNA from AMV or RAV-0, and 30 to 33% by RNA from RAV-60 or B-77. Nearly complete inhibition of hybricization between RAV-0 RNA and leukemic chicken DNA by a mixture of AMV and B-77 35S RNAs indicates that the RNA sequences shared by B-77 virus and RAV-0. It appears that different avian RNA tumor virus genomes have from 50 to 80% homology in nucleotide sequences and that the degree of hybridization between normal chicken cell DNA and a given viral RNA can be predicted from the homology that exists between the viral RNA tested and RAV-0 RNA.  相似文献   

8.
RNA sequence relatedness among avian RNA tumor virus genomes was analyzed by inhibition of DNA-RNA hybrid formation between 3H-labeled 35S viral RNA and an excess of leukemic or normal chicken cell DNA with increasing concentrations of unlabeled 35S viral RNA. The avian viruses tested were Rous associated virus (RAV)-0, avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV), RAV-60, RAV-61, and B-77 sarcoma virus. Hybridization of 3H-labeled 35S AMV RNA with DNA from normal chicken cells was inhibited by unlabeled 35S RAV-0 RNA as efficiently (100%) as by unlabeled AMV RNA. Hybridization between 3H-labeled 35S AMV RNA and DNA from leukemic chicken myeloblasts induced by AMV was suppressed 100 and 68% by unlabeled 35S RNA from AMV and RAV-0, respectively. Hybridization between 3H-labeled RAV-0 and leukemic chicken myeloblast DNA was inhibited 100 and 67% by unlabeled 35S RNA from RAV-0 and AMV, respectively. It appears therefore that the AMV and RAV-0 genomes are 67 to 70% homologous and that AMV hybridizes to RAV-0 like sequences in normal chicken DNA. Hybridization between AMV RNA and leukemic chicken DNA was inhibited 40% by RNA from RAV-60 or RAV-61 and 50% by B-77 RNA. Hybridization between RAV-0 RNA and leukemic chicken DNA was inhibited 80% by RAV-60 or RAV-61 and 70% by B-77 RNA. Hybridization between 3H-labeled 35S RNA from RAV-60 or RAV-61 and leukemic chicken myeloblast DNA was reduced equally by RNA from RAV-60, RAV-61, AMV or RAV-0; this suggests that RNA from RAV-60 and RAV-61 hybridizes with virus-specific sequences in leukemic DNA which are shared by AMV, RAV-0, RAV-60, and RAV-61 RNAs. Hybridization between 3H-labeled 35S RNA from RAV-61 and normal pheasant DNA was inhibited 100% by homologous viral RNA, 22 to 26% by RNA from AMV or RAV-0, and 30 to 33% by RNA from RAV-60 or B-77. Nearly complete inhibition of hybridization between RAV-0 RNA and leukemic chicken DNA by a mixture of AMV and B-77 35S RNAs indicates that the RNA sequences shared by B-77 virus and RAV-0 are different from the sequences shared by AMV and RAV-0. It appears that different avian RNA tumor virus genomes have from 50 to 80% homology in nucleotide sequences and that the degree of hybridization between normal chicken cell DNA and a given viral RNA can be predicted from the homology that exists between the viral RNA tested and RAV-0 RNA.  相似文献   

9.
10.
DNA polymerases from avian, feline, murine and simian RNA tumor viruses exhibit substantial differences in optimal assay conditions and vary widely in their template-primer preferences. Avian DNA polymerase utilizes both natural and synthetic template-primers efficiently in the presence of Mg++ as well as Mn++. By contrast, the mammalian viral DNA polymerases are much more responsive to poly(A)·oligo(dT) than to other template-primers, and exhibit up to 20-fold greater activity with Mn++ than with Mg++. In addition, simian sarcoma virus DNA polymerase shows no detectable response to poly(C)·oligo(dG) over a wide variety of conditions stimulatory to the other viral enzymes.  相似文献   

11.
12.
13.
A model RNA template-primer system is described for the study of RNA-directed double-stranded DNA synthesis by purified avian myeloblastosis virus DNA polymerase and its associated RNase H. In the presence of complementary RNA primer, oligo(rI), and the deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates dGTP, dTTP, and dATP, 3'-(rC)30-40-poly(rA) directs the sequential synthesis of poly(dT) and poly(dA) from a specific site at the 3' end of the RNA template. With this model RNA template-primer, optimal conditions for double-stranded DNA synthesis are described. Analysis of the kinetics of DNA synthesis shows that initially there is rapid synthesis of poly(dT). After a brief time lag, poly(dA) synthesis and the DNA polymerase-associated RNase H activity are initiated. While poly(rA) is directing the synthesis of poly(dT), the requirements for DNA synthesis indicate that the newly synthesized poly(dT) is acting as template for poly(dA) synthesis. Furthermore, selective inhibitor studies using NaF show that activation of RNase H is not just a time-related event, but is required for synthesis of the anti-complementary strand of DNA. To determine the specific role of RNase H in this synthetic sequence, the primer for poly(dA) synthesis was investigated. By use of formamide--poly-acrylamide slab gel electrophoresis, it is shown that poly(dT) is not acting as both template and primer for poly(dA) synthesis since no poly(dT)-poly(dA) covalent linkages are observed in radioactive poly(dA) product. Identification of 2',3'-[32P]AMP on paper chromatograms of alkali-treated poly(dA) product synthesized with [alpha-32P]dATP as substrate demonstrates the presence of rAMP-dAMP phosphodiester linkages in the poly(dA) product. Therefore, a new functional role of RNase H is demonstrated in the RNA-directed synthesis of double-stranded DNA. Not only is RNase H responsible for the degradation of poly(rA) following formation of a poly(rA)-poly(dT) hybrid but also the poly(rA)fragments generated are serving as primers for initiation of synthesis of the second strand of the double-stranded DNA.  相似文献   

14.
Adenine residues of 70S avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV) RNA are modified when reacted with chloroacetaldehyde. This modification introduces characteristic fluorescent epsilon-adenosine (epsilonA) probes which were used to monitor the reaction. Under suitable conditions, modified 70S(epsilonA) RNA was maintained intact and was inactive as a template for the AMV DNA polymerase. Furthermore, it inhibited the reaction catalyzed by AMV polymerase when 70S RNA was used as template-primer and had no effect on the two tested bacterial polymerases. Protection against the 70S (epsilonA) RNA inhibition was observed when 70S RNA was primed with oligo(dT) indicating preference of the polymerase for the oligo(dT) primed regions.  相似文献   

15.
3H-labeled 35S RNA from avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV), Rous associated virus (RAV)-0, RAV-60, RAV-61, RAV-2, or B-77(w) was hybridized with an excess of cellular DNA from different avian species, i.e., normal or leukemic chickens, normal pheasants, turkeys, Japanese quails, or ducks. Approximately two to three copies of endogenous viral DNA were estimated to be present per diploid of normal chicken cell genome. In leukemic chicken myeloblasts induced by AMV, the number of viral sequences appeared to have doubled. The hybrids formed between viral RNA and DNA from leukemic chicken cells melted with a Tm 1 to 6 C higher than that of hybrids formed between viral RNA and normal chicken cell DNA. All of the viral RNAs tested, except RAV-61, hybridized the most with DNA from AMV-infected chicken cells, followed by DNA from normal chicken cells, and then pheasant DNA. RAV-61 RNA hybridized maximally (39%) with pheasant DNA, followed by DNA from leukemic (34%), and then normal (29%) chicken cells. All viral RNAs tested hybridized little with Japanese quail DNA (2 to 5%), turkey DNA (2 to 4%), or duck DNA (1%). DNA from normal chicken cells contained only 60 to 70% of the RAV-60 genetic information, and normal pheasant cells lacked some RAV-61 DNA sequences. RAV-60 and RAV-61 genomes were more homologous to the RAV-0 genome than to the genome of RAV-2, AMV, or B-77(s). RAV-60 and RAV-61 appear to be recombinants between endogenous and exogenous viruses.  相似文献   

16.
Two RNase H (RNA-DNA hybrid ribonucleotidohydrolase, EC 3.1.4.34) activities separable by Sephadex G-100 gel filtration were identified in lysates of Moloney murine sarcoma-leukemia virus (MSV). The larger enzyme, which we have called RNase H-I, represented about 10% of the RNase H activity in the virion. RNase H-I (i) copurified with RNA-directed DNA polymerase from the virus, (ii) had a sedimentation coefficient of 4.4S (corresponds to an apparent mol wt of 70,000), (iii) required Mn-2+ (2 mM optimum) for activity with a [3-h]poly(A)-poly(dT) substrate, (iv) eluted from phosphocellulose at 0.2 M KC1, and (v) degraded [3-H]poly(A)-poly(dT) and [3-H]poly(C)-poly(dG) at approximately equal rates. The smaller enzyme, designated RNase H-II, which represented the majority of the RNase H activity in the virus preparation, was shown to be different since it (i) had no detectable, associated DNA polymerase activity, (ii) had a sedmimentation coefficient of 2.6S (corresponds to an apparent mol wt of 30,000), (iii) preferred Mg-2+ (10 to 15 mM optimum) over Mn-2+ (5 to 10 mM optimum) 2.5-fold for the degradation of [3-H]poly(A)-poly(dT), and (iv) degraded [3-H]poly(A)-poly(dT) 6 and 60 times faster than [3-H]poly(C)-poly(dG) in the presence of Mn-2+ and Mg-2+, respectively. Moloney MSV DNA polymerase (RNase H-I), purified by Sephadex G-100 gel filtration followed by phosphocellulose, poly(A)-oligo(dT)-cellulose, and DEAE-cellulose chromatography, transcribed heteropolymeric regions of avian myeloblastosis virus 70S RNA at a rate comparable to avian myeloblastosis virus DNA polymerase purified by the same procedure.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The alpha beta DNA polymerase of avian myeloblastosis virus was treated with dimethyl sulfoxide to dissociate the enzyme subunits. The dimethyl sulfoxide treated enzymes were passed over phosphocellulose to purify and characterize the dissociated subunits as well as to remove the dimethyl sulfoxide. RNA-directed DNA polymerase, RNase H, and nucleic acid-binding activity were monitored, as well as the subunit structure (on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels) of the various enzyme species obtained. With 30% dimethyl sulfoxide, the majority of DNA polymerase and RNase H activities as well as the alpha subunit were displaced from the alpha beta DNA polymerase position on phosphocellulose (0.23 M potassium phosphate) to the alpha DNA polymerase position (0.1 M). The association of DNA polymerase and RNase H activities with the alpha subunit suggests that alpha is the enzymatically active subunit in alpha beta. In addition to alpha DNA polymerase, a minor polymerase species eluted from phosphocellulose at 0.4 M potassium phosphate. The dissociated beta subunit eluted from phosphocellulose at a wide range of salt concentrations (0.28 to 0.5 M potassium phosphate). The dissociated beta subunit bound 3H-labeled murine leukemia virus RNA and [3H]poly(dT)-poly(dA) approximately 20-fold more avidly than alpha DNA polymerase alone. In contrast to the results with the alpha subunit, there was no correlation between DNA polymerase and RNase H activity profiles and the elution profile of the beta subunit from phosphocellulose. These observations suggest the beta subunit is either enzymatically inactive or possesses limited DNA polymerase and RNase H activity when compared with the alpha subunit.  相似文献   

19.
Caffeine was found to inhibit RNA-dependent DNA polymerase activity of Rauscher leukemia virus when endogenous viral RNA and poly(rA)·(dT)12–18 were used as templates. Similar results were also obtained with purified RNA-dependent DNA polymerase (deoxynucleoside triphosphate; DNA nucleotidyl transferase; EC 2.7.7.7) from avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV) utilizing 70S and 35S RNA of AMV, poly(rA)·(dT)12–18, globin mRNA and activated calf thymus DNA as templates. The “caffeine effect” was evident only when it was present during the initiation of polymerization reaction. Increasing the template concentration in the reaction mixture partly reversed the effect of caffeine. Of the analogs of caffeine tested, only theophylline inhibited AMV DNA polymerase, whereas aminophylline showed no effect.  相似文献   

20.
The mode of action by aphidicolin on DNA polymerase alpha from the nuclear fraction of sea-urchin blastulae was studied. The inhibition of DNA polymerase alpha by aphidicolin was uncompetive with activated DNA and competitive with the four deoxynucleoside triphosphates using activated DNA as a template-primer. For truncated (residual or limited) DNA synthesis with only three deoxynucleoside triphosphates, aphidicolin inhibited the residual synthesis more strongly in the absence of dCTP than in the absence of each of the other three deoxynucleoside triphosphates. The inhibition was reversed with excess dCTP but not with the other three deoxynucleoside triphosphates. That is, aphidicolin inhibited DNA polymerase alpha by competing with dCTP with a Ki value of 0.5 microgram/ml and by not competing with the other three deoxynucleoside triphosphates. dTMP incorporation with the activated DNA was more sensitive to aphidicolin than dGMP or dTMP incorporation with poly(dC). (dG)12-18 or poly(dA) . (dT)12-18. Similar results were obtained for DNA polymerase alpha (B form) from mouse myeloma MOPC 104E.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号