Search results for "Base Sequence"

showing 10 items of 1146 documents

Mouse embryonic stem cells are hypersensitive to apoptosis triggered by the DNA damage O(6)-methylguanine due to high E2F1 regulated mismatch repair.

2007

Exposure of stem cells to genotoxins may lead to embryonic lethality or teratogenic effects. This can be prevented by efficient DNA repair or by eliminating genetically damaged cells. Using undifferentiated mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells as a pluripotent model system, we compared ES cells with differentiated cells, with regard to apoptosis induction by alkylating agents forming the highly mutagenic and killing DNA adduct O(6)-methylguanine. Upon treatment with N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG), ES cells undergo apoptosis at much higher frequency than differentiated cells, although they express a high level of the repair protein O(6)-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT). Apo…

Pluripotent Stem CellsMethylnitronitrosoguanidineDNA ComplementaryGuanineDNA damageDNA repairCellular differentiationApoptosisBiologyDNA Mismatch RepairModels BiologicalDNA AdductsMiceO(6)-Methylguanine-DNA MethyltransferaseDNA adductAnimalsMolecular BiologyEmbryonic Stem CellsSwiss 3T3 CellsBase SequenceCell DifferentiationCell BiologyDNA MethylationFibroblastsEmbryonic stem cellMolecular biologyDNA-Binding ProteinsMutS Homolog 2 ProteinDNA methylationDNA mismatch repairStem cellE2F1 Transcription FactorDNA DamageCell death and differentiation
researchProduct

BASE-SPECIFIC RIBONUCLEASES POTENTIALLY INVOLVED IN HETEROGENEOUS NUCLEAR-RNA PROCESSING AND POLY(A) METABOLISM

1984

Abstract Polyadenylation and splicing of heterogeneous nuclear RNA, two crucial steps in mRNA processing, are apparently enzymically mediated processes. This contribution summarizes the properties and the presumed functions of the known poly(A) catabolic enzymes (endoribonuclease IV and V, 2′,3′-exoribonuclease) as well as those of the pyrimidine-specific endoribonucleases associated with snRNP—hnRNP complexes (endoribonuclease VII, acidic p I 4.1 endoribonuclease and poly(U)-specific U1 snRNP-nuclease).

Poly UPolyadenylationRNA SplicingsnRNPEndoribonucleaseBiophysicsPolyadenylationSplicingenvironment and public healthBiochemistryRibonucleaseRibonucleasesEndoribonucleasesPoly(A)+ mRNAStructural BiologyGeneticsAnimalssnRNPRNA MessengerRibonucleaseMolecular Biologychemistry.chemical_classificationMessenger RNABase SequencebiologyCell BiologyRibonucleoproteins Small NuclearhnRNA processingEnzymeRibonucleoproteinschemistryBiochemistryRNA splicingbiology.proteinNucleic Acid ConformationRNA Heterogeneous NuclearPoly A
researchProduct

Genetic Analysis of Sequences in the 3′ Nontranslated Region of Hepatitis C Virus That Are Important for RNA Replication

2002

ABSTRACT The genome of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a plus-strand RNA molecule that carries a single long open reading frame. It is flanked at either end by highly conserved nontranslated regions (NTRs) that mediate crucial steps in the viral life cycle. The 3′ NTR of HCV has a tripartite structure composed of an about 40-nucleotide variable region, a poly(U/UC) tract that has a heterogeneous length, and a highly conserved 98-nucleotide 3′-terminal sequence designated the X tail or 3′X. Conflicting data as to the role the sequences in the 3′ NTR play in RNA replication have been reported. By using the HCV replicon system, which is based on the self-replication of subgenomic HCV RNAs in hu…

Poly URNA StabilityHepatitis C virusImmunologyMolecular Sequence DataRNA-dependent RNA polymeraseReplicationHepacivirusBiologymedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologychemistry.chemical_compoundVirologymedicineTumor Cells CulturedHumansReplicon3' Untranslated RegionsSubgenomic mRNAGeneticsBase SequenceThree prime untranslated regionRNAVirologychemistryMutagenesisInsect ScienceNucleic Acid ConformationRNA ViralCytosine
researchProduct

ISOLATION OF RAT CDNA CLONES CODING FOR THE AUTOANTIGEN SS-B/LA - DETECTION OF SPECIES-SPECIFIC VARIATIONS

1993

Clones of cDNA coding for the autoantigen La (or SS-B) were isolated from a library made from rat liver. A comparison of the rat La cDNA (encoding from nt 38 to 1281 for rat La protein) with the sequences known for human and bovine La protein resulted in the identification of species-specific inserts. The inserts seem to be the result of multiplication of flanking sequences during evolution. In addition to these variations, we observed that rat La cDNAs exhibit non-canonical polyadenylation sites. Finally, a databank search resulted in the identification of a DNA sequence originally termed as TAG or TSG20X (GenBank accession No. X61893) which represents the C terminus of mouse La/SS-B prote…

PolyadenylationMolecular Sequence DataAutoantigensSingle-stranded binding proteinSpecies SpecificityComplementary DNASequence Homology Nucleic AcidGeneticsAnimalsHumansGenomic libraryAmino Acid SequenceCloning MolecularRibonucleoproteinGeneticsbiologyBase SequenceC-terminusNucleic acid sequenceGenetic VariationGeneral MedicineDNAMolecular biologyIntronsRatsRibonucleoproteinsGenBankbiology.protein
researchProduct

Noncanonical RNAs from transcripts of the Drosophila muscleblind gene.

2006

It has become increasingly evident that eukaryotic cells produce RNA molecules from coding genes with constitutions other than those of typically spliced mRNA transcripts. Here we describe new cDNAs from the Drosophila melanogaster muscleblind (mbl ) locus that identify two such atypical RNA molecules: RNAs containing an incomplete exon 2 tandem repetition (mblE2E2#) or having exons with a different order compared to the corresponding genomic DNA (mblE2E3#E2#; exon scrambling). The existence of exon duplications and rearrangements in the genomic locus that might explain such cDNAs was ruled out by genomic Southern blotting and in silico analysis of the Drosophila genome sequence. The incomp…

PolyadenylationMolecular Sequence DataBiologyExonRapid amplification of cDNA endsComplementary DNAGeneticsAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsAmino Acid SequenceRNA MessengerMolecular BiologyGeneGenetics (clinical)DNA PrimersGeneticsBase SequenceReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionRNANuclear ProteinsExonsgenomic DNARNA splicingDrosophilaPoly ABiotechnologyThe Journal of heredity
researchProduct

Spectroscopic Studies of Oligonucleotide Adducts and Base Sequence Preference of Adducts Formed by the Stereoisomers of 7,8-Dihydroxy-9,10-epoxy-7,8,…

1996

Abstract 5′-d(CCTATAGATATCC) has been reacted with BPDE and the adducts derived from binding of BPDE to the exocyclic amino group of deoxyguanosine (dG) were studied with spectroscopic methods. The major dG-adducts of (+)- and (-)-anti-BPDE and a minor adduct of (+)-syn-BPDE showed the characteristics of trans-adducts. The major products formed with (+)- and (-)-syn-BPDE exhibit cis-adduct characteristics. Annealing of BPDE-modified oligonucleotides to complementary or partially complementary strands results in reduced fluorescence intensity in several cases and in others the intensity is markedly increased. These differences demonstrate that the adduct microenvironment is strongly influenc…

Polymers and PlasticsOligonucleotideStereochemistryOrganic ChemistryEpoxyPhotochemistryAdductchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryDuplex (building)visual_artpolycyclic compoundsMaterials Chemistryvisual_art.visual_art_mediumPyreneDeoxyguanosineThermal stabilityBase sequencePolycyclic Aromatic Compounds
researchProduct

A multiplex polymerase chain reaction protocol for the simultaneous analysis of the glutathione S-transferase GSTM1 and GSTT1 polymorphisms.

1996

Polymorphism GeneticbiologyBase Sequencebusiness.industryMolecular Sequence DataBiophysicsCell BiologyBiochemistryMolecular biologyPolymerase Chain ReactionReverse transcription polymerase chain reactionGlutathione S-transferaseReal-time polymerase chain reactionMultiplex polymerase chain reactionbiology.proteinMedicineHumansbusinessMolecular BiologyNested polymerase chain reactionDNA PrimersGlutathione TransferaseAnalytical biochemistry
researchProduct

Demonstration of an endocrine signaling circuit for insulin in the sponge Geodia cydonium.

1989

Abstract The existence of an insulin-mediated cell-to-cell signaling in the sponge Geodia cydonium is demonstrated in this study by molecular biological and immunological techniques. The sequence of a sponge cDNA clone encoding preproinsulin was analyzed for the first time and determined to comprise a high homology to human preproinsulin (60-80% homology). The predicted polypeptide of preproinsulin from sponge contains two disulfide bridges which link the A- to the B-chain. The intra-A chain disulfide bridge is absent. Applying immunological and electron microscopical techniques it is shown that insulin is produced in specialized cells (spherulous cells). Experimental evidence is presented …

PreproinsulinAnnexinsCellular differentiationBlotting WesternMolecular Sequence DataBiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologySequence Homology Nucleic AcidAnimalsHumansInsulinAmino Acid SequenceProtein PrecursorsReceptorMolecular BiologyPancreatic hormoneProinsulinGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyBase SequenceGeneral NeuroscienceCalcium-Binding ProteinsDNAImmunohistochemistryReceptor InsulinPoriferaMicroscopy ElectronBiochemistryGene Expression RegulationHormone receptorSignal transductionHormoneResearch ArticleProinsulinSignal Transduction
researchProduct

Interaction of 68–kDa TAR RNA-binding protein and other cellular proteins with rpion protein-RNA stem-loop

1995

The RNA stem-loop structure of the trans-activating region TAR sequence of human immunodeficiency virus-1 mRNA is the binding site for a number of host cell proteins. A virtually identical set of proteins from HeLa nuclear extracts was found to bind to the predicted RNA hairpin element of prion protein (PrP) mRNA, as demonstrated in UV cross-linking/RNase protection and Northwestern assays. We show that the cellular TAR loop-binding protein, p68, is among those proteins which associate with PrP RNA. Competition experiments with various TAR RNA mutants revealed that binding of partially purified p68 to PrP RNA stem-loop occurs sequence-specifically. The 100-kDa 2-5A synthetase which is invol…

PrionsBlotting WesternMolecular Sequence DataRNA-dependent RNA polymeraseReceptors Cell SurfaceRNA-binding proteinBiologyBinding CompetitiveCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceVirology2'5'-Oligoadenylate SynthetaseHumansLymphocytesHIV Long Terminal RepeatBase SequenceRNA-Binding ProteinsRNABlotting NorthernNon-coding RNAMolecular biologyRNA silencingNeurologyMutagenesisRNA editingeIF4ANucleic Acid ConformationNeurology (clinical)Small nuclear RNAHeLa CellsJournal of Neurovirology
researchProduct

A family with various symptomatology suggestive of Anderson-Fabry disease and a genetic polymorphism of alpha galactosidase A gene.

2014

Background: Anderson/Fabry disease expresses a wide range of clinical variability in patients that it is possible to explain referring to a genetic variability with numerous mutations described in the literature (more than 600). Methods: We report some clinical cases of some members of a Sicilian family to express phenotypical variability of this disease in subjects with the same genetic mutation. Results: The first case was a 59-year-old female. Brain MRI revealed right frontal periventricular white matter of likely vascular-degenerative origin. The proband's alpha galactosidase A activity was 3.7. nmol/mL/h. Molecular genetics revealed a polymorphism: - 10 C. >. T; IVS 2-76_80del5; IVS…

ProbandAdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyPathologySettore MED/09 - Medicina InternaAdolescentClinical BiochemistryMolecular Sequence DataBiologyAnderson-Fabry diseaseNucleic Acid DenaturationGastroenterologyPolymorphism (computer science)Internal medicineMolecular geneticsmedicineHaplotypeHumansFamilyGenetic Predisposition to DiseaseGenetic variabilitySymptomatologyChildPolymorphism GeneticBase SequenceHaplotypeHeterozygote advantageGeneral MedicineMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseFabry diseaseMagnetic Resonance ImagingPedigreealpha-GalactosidaseFabry DiseaseMicroalbuminuriaFemaleHumanClinical biochemistry
researchProduct