Search results for "Poly A"

showing 10 items of 59 documents

Alteration of poly (ADP-Rib) synthesis during progesterone- caused gene expression in oviducts of quails.

1976

Summary The biological model of the selective induction of RNA synthesis in oviducts of estrogen stimulated immature quails by progesterone has been used to clarify whether poly (ADP-Rib) is involved in DNA transcription. The chromatin-bound as well as the soluble poly (ADP-Rib) polymerase has been isolated from oviducts and the optimal reaction conditions have been determined. The activities, as measured by the incorporation rates of NAD + into poly (ADP-Rib), of both, chromatin-bound « endogenouspolymerase (in the absence of « exogenousDNA and histones) and soluble enzyme (native DNA - lysine-rich histone ratio: 4.3) from progesterone treated quail oviducts, have been determined to be onl…

Poly Adenosine Diphosphate Riboseanimal structuresTime FactorsMuscle ProteinsCoturnixOviductsBiochemistryHistoneschemistry.chemical_compoundNAD+ NucleosidaseGene expressionAnimalsDiethylstilbestrolPolymeraseProgesteronechemistry.chemical_classificationCell NucleusbiologyNucleoside Diphosphate SugarsGeneral MedicineAvidinMolecular biologyEnzyme assayKineticsEnzymeHistonechemistrybiology.proteinOviductFemaleNAD+ kinaseDNABiochimie
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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
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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
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Influence of the xyloadenosine analogue of 2?,5?-oligoriboadenylate on poly(A)-specific, 2?,5?-oligoriboadenylate degrading 2?,3?-exoribonuclease and…

1984

The homogeneous poly(A)-specific 2′,3′-exoribonuclease from calf thymus gland, which cleaves both 3′,5′-and 2′,5′-linked oligoriboadenylates, does not degrade (xyloA2'p)2 xyloA, the xylofuranosyladenosine analogue of the 2-5A core. This oligonucleotide, which is supposed to enter intact cells rapidly, was found to possess an increased stability and an enhanced antiherpesvirus activity compared to the natural (A2'p)2A (Eppstein, D. A., Barnett, J. W., Marsh, Y. V., Gosselin, G. and Imbach, J.-L. (1983) Nature 302, 723–724). The poly(A) anabolic enzyme, poly(A) polymerase (Mn2+-dependent), from the same source, which is initiated by (A3'p)2A and its higher oligomers, does not accept 2–5A core…

PolyadenylationOligonucleotidesIn Vitro TechniquesOligomerchemistry.chemical_compoundExoribonucleaseEndoribonucleasesGeneticsAnimalsRNA MessengerMolecular BiologyPolymerasechemistry.chemical_classificationOligoribonucleotidesbiologyAdenine NucleotidesOligonucleotidePolynucleotide AdenylyltransferaseGeneral MedicineMolecular biologyPost-transcriptional modificationEnzymeRibonucleoproteinsBiochemistrychemistryExoribonucleasesbiology.proteinCattlePrimer (molecular biology)Poly AMolecular Biology Reports
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Immunolocalization of Poly ADP-Ribose on Drosophila Polytene Chromosomes

2011

Poly ADP-ribosylation (PARylation) is a posttranslational protein modification catalyzed by poly -ADP-ribose polymerases (PARPs). Poly ADP-ribose metabolism is involved in a wide range of biological processes, such as maintenance of genome stability, transcriptional regulation, energy metabolism, and programed cell death. Recently, chromatin components, including histones, have been shown to be targets of PARylation. Unlike mammals, which have several PARP-encoded genes, the model organism Drosophila melanogaster has only one PARP gene, highly related to mammalian PARP1. These features make flies a great model system to study PARP biology. Commercially available antibodies recognizing this …

Polytene chromosomebiologyved/biologyPoly ADP ribosylationPoly ADP ribose polymeraseved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesbiology.organism_classificationChromatinCell biologyHistonePARP1Melanogasterbiology.proteinDrosophila melanogasterModel organism
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Evidence for a direct interaction of Rev protein with nuclear envelop mRNA-translocation system.

1991

The interaction of the Rev protein from human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) with the nucleocytoplasmic mRNA-transport system was investigated. In gel-shift assay, the recombinant Rev protein used in this study selectively bound to the Rev-responsive element (RRE) region of HIV-1 env-specific RNA. Nitrocellulose-filter-binding studies and Northern/Western-blotting experiments revealed an association constant of approximately 1 x 10(10) M-1. The Rev protein also strongly bound to isolated nuclear envelopes from H9 cells, containing the poly(A)-binding site (= mRNA carrier) and the nucleoside triphosphatase (= NTPase), which are thought to be involved in nuclear export of poly(A)-rich …

Pore complexPolyadenylationNuclear EnvelopevirusesBlotting WesternBiologyBiochemistryCell LineAdenosine TriphosphateAnimalsRNA MessengerNuclear porePhosphorylationNuclear export signalMessenger RNAVesicleRNABiological Transportrev Gene Products Human Immunodeficiency VirusBlotting NorthernNucleoside-TriphosphataseMolecular biologyPhosphoric Monoester HydrolasesRecombinant ProteinsCell biologyRatsBlotGene Products revHIV-1RNA ViralPoly AEuropean journal of biochemistry
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Cisplatin-induced apoptosis in 43-3B and 27-1 cells defective in nucleotide excision repair

2001

Cisplatin is a highly potent cytotoxic and genotoxic agent used in the chemotherapy of various types of tumors. Its cytotoxic effect is supposed to be due to the induction of intra- and interstrand DNA cross-links which are repaired via the nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathway. Here, we elucidated the mechanism of cisplatin-induced cytotoxicity in mutants derived from CHO-9 cells defective in NER. We compared 43-3B and 27-1 cells deficient for ERCC1 and ERCC3, respectively, with the corresponding wild-type and ERCC1 complemented 43-3B cells. It is shown that cells defective in ERCC1 are more sensitive than cells defective in ERCC3 with regard to cisplatin-induced reproductive cell death…

Programmed cell deathTime FactorsDNA RepairCell SurvivalPoly ADP ribose polymeraseBlotting WesternDown-RegulationApoptosisCHO CellsToxicologyCell LineNecrosisCricetinaeGeneticsmedicineAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsCytotoxic T cellMolecular BiologyCaspaseCisplatinCaspase 8Dose-Response Relationship DrugbiologyCaspase 3ProteinsEndonucleasesMolecular biologyCaspase 9DNA-Binding ProteinsEnzyme ActivationApoptosisCaspasesMutationbiology.proteinCancer researchCisplatinPoly(ADP-ribose) PolymerasesERCC1Nucleotide excision repairmedicine.drugMutation Research/DNA Repair
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Interference by toxic metal ions with zinc-dependent proteins involved in maintaining genomic stability.

2002

Metal ions are essential components of biological systems; nevertheless, even essential elements may have toxic or carcinogenic properties. Thus, besides As(III) and Cd(II), also Ni(II) and Co(II) have been shown previously to disturb different types of DNA repair systems at low, non-cytotoxic concentrations. Since some metals exert high affinities for SH groups, we investigated whether zinc finger structures in DNA-binding motifs of DNA repair proteins are potential targets for toxic metal ions. The bacterial formamidopyrimidine-DNA glycosylase (Fpg protein) involved in base excision repair was inhibited by Cd(II), Cu(II) and Hg(II) with increasing efficiencies, whereas Co(II), As(III), Pb…

Protein FoldingDNA RepairDNA repairCations DivalentPoly ADP ribose polymeraseToxicologymedicine.disease_causechemistry.chemical_compoundMetals HeavymedicineMetallothioneinHumansN-Glycosyl HydrolasesChemistryRNA-Binding ProteinsZinc FingersGeneral MedicineBase excision repairXeroderma Pigmentosum Group A ProteinDNA-Binding ProteinsZincBiochemistryDNA glycosylaseZinc toxicityDNAFood ScienceNucleotide excision repairFood and chemical toxicology : an international journal published for the British Industrial Biological Research Association
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Determinants of intracellular RNA pharmacokinetics: Implications for RNA-based immunotherapeutics

2011

RNAs with optimized properties are increasingly investigated as a tool to deliver the genetic information of complete antigens into professional antigen-presenting dendritic cells for HLA haplotype-independent antigen-specific vaccination against cancer. As the dose of the antigen and duration of its presentation are critical factors for generating strong and sustained antigen-specific immune responses, improvement of the immunobioavailability of RNA-based vaccines has been a recurrent subject of research. Substantial increase of the amount of antigen produced from RNA can be achieved by optimizing RNA stability and translational efficiency. Both features are determined by cis-acting elemen…

RNA CapsRNA StabilityPolyadenylationTranslational efficiencyRNA Stabilitymedicine.medical_treatmentHuman leukocyte antigenComputational biologyBiologyPolyadenylationCancer VaccinesPoly(A)-Binding ProteinsAntigenNeoplasmsmedicineHumansDeoxyribonucleases Type II Site-Specific3' Untranslated RegionsMolecular BiologyAntigen PresentationThree prime untranslated regionRNADendritic CellsCell BiologyImmunotherapyVirologyRNAImmunotherapyPoly ARNA Biology
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Down-Regulation of Ku Autoantigen, DNA-Dependent Protein Kinase, and Poly(ADP-ribose) Polymerase during Cellular Senescence

1997

During aging and cellular senescence mutations accumulate in genomic and mitochondrial DNA. Ku autoantigens, DNA-dependent protein kinase, and poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase have an essential role in DNA damage recognition. Our purpose was to find out whether cellular senescence of fibroblasts affects the protein components that recognize DNA damage and induce the repair process. We compared presenescent and replicatively senescent human WI-38 fibroblasts with each other and with SV-40 immortalized and serum-deficient quiescent WI-38 cells. Our results showed that replicative senescence significantly decreased the nuclear level of both p70 and p86 components of Ku autoantigen. SV-40 immortali…

SenescenceDNA damagePoly ADP ribose polymeraseMolecular Sequence DataBiophysicsDown-RegulationP70-S6 Kinase 1DNA FragmentationDNA-Activated Protein KinaseProtein Serine-Threonine KinasesAutoantigensBiochemistryCell LineDownregulation and upregulationHumansAmino Acid SequenceProtein kinase AKu AutoantigenLungMolecular BiologyCellular SenescencePolymerasebiologyDNA HelicasesNuclear ProteinsAntigens NuclearCell BiologyFibroblastsMolecular biologyDNA-Binding ProteinsApoptosisbiology.proteinPoly(ADP-ribose) PolymerasesBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
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