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Interaction of p55 reverse transcriptase from the Saccharomyces cerevisiae retrotransposon Ty3 with conformationally distinct nucleic acid duplexes

  1. Author:
    Rausch, J. W.
    Bona-Le Grice, M. K.
    Nymark-McMahon, M. H.
    Miller, J. T.
    Le Grice, S. F. J.
  2. Author Address

    Rausch JW NCI, HIV Drug Resistance Program, Div Basic Sci, Frederick Canc Res & Dev Ctr Bldg 535 Frederick, MD 21702 USA NCI, HIV Drug Resistance Program, Div Basic Sci, Frederick Canc Res & Dev Ctr Frederick, MD 21702 USA Sci Applicat Int Corp Frederick, MD 21702 USA Univ Calif Irvine, Coll Med, Dept Biol Chem Irvine, CA 92697 USA
    1. Year: 2000
  1. Journal: Journal of Biological Chemistry
    1. 275
    2. 18
    3. Pages: 13879-13887
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    The 55-kDa reverse transcriptase (RT) domain of the Ty3 POL3 open reading frame was purified and evaluated on conformationally distinct nucleic acid duplexes. Purified enzyme migrated as a monomer by size exclusion chromatography. Enzymatic footprinting indicate Ty3 RT protects template nucleotides +7 through -21 and primer nucleotides -1 through -24, Contrary to previous data with retroviral enzymes, a 4-base pair region of the template-primer duplex remained nuclease accessible. The C-terminal portion of Ty3 RT encodes a functional RNase H domain, although the hydrolysis profile suggests an increased spatial separation between the catalytic centers. Despite conservation of catalytically important residues in the RNase H domain, Fe2+ fails to replace Mg2+ in the RNase H catalytic center for localized generation of hydroxyl radicals, again suggesting this domain may be structurally distinct from its retroviral counterparts. RNase H Specificity was investigated using a model system challenging the enzyme to select the polypurine tract primer from within an RNA/DNA hybrid, extend this into (+) DNA, and excise the primer from nascent DNA, purified RT catalyzed each of these three steps but was almost inactive on a non-polypurine tract RNA primer. Our studies provide the first detailed characterization of the enzymatic activities of a retrotransposon reverse transcriptase. [References: 55]

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