Wilhelm M., Wilhelm F. X.
Reverse transcription of retroviruses and LTR retrotransposons Article de journal
Dans: Cell Mol Life Sci, vol. 58, no. 9, p. 1246-62, 2001, (1420-682x Journal Article Review Review, Academic).
Résumé | BibTeX | Étiquettes: *Retroelements, *Terminal, Acid, Alignment, Amino, Animals, Base, Conformation, Data, DNA, Homology, Human, Molecular, Nucleic, Polymerase/*chemistry/*metabolism, Repeat, Retroviridae/*enzymology/*genetics, RNA-Directed, Sequence, Sequences
@article{,
title = {Reverse transcription of retroviruses and LTR retrotransposons},
author = { M. Wilhelm and F. X. Wilhelm},
year = {2001},
date = {2001-01-01},
journal = {Cell Mol Life Sci},
volume = {58},
number = {9},
pages = {1246-62},
abstract = {Retroelements are mobile genetic entities that replicate via reverse transcription of a template RNA. A key component to the life cycle of these elements is the enzyme reverse transcriptase (RT), which copies the single-stranded genomic RNA of the element into a linear double-stranded DNA that is ultimately integrated into the host genome by the element-encoded integrase. RT is a multifunctionnal enzyme which possesses RNA-dependent and DNA-dependent DNA polymerase activities as well as RNase H activity that specifically degrades the RNA strand of RNA-DNA duplexes. At some stages of the replication a strand-displacement activity of RT is also necessary. All activities are essential for the conversion of single-stranded genomic RNA into the double-stranded preintegrative DNA. This review focuses on the role of RT in the different steps of the replication process of retroelements. The features of retrotransposon replication which differ from the retroviral ones will be emphasized. In a second part of the review, the biochemical and enzymatic properties of two newly characterized retrotransposon RTs will be described. The role of the integrase domain in reverse transcriptase activity of some retroviral and retrotransposon RTs will be discussed.},
note = {1420-682x
Journal Article
Review
Review, Academic},
keywords = {*Retroelements, *Terminal, Acid, Alignment, Amino, Animals, Base, Conformation, Data, DNA, Homology, Human, Molecular, Nucleic, Polymerase/*chemistry/*metabolism, Repeat, Retroviridae/*enzymology/*genetics, RNA-Directed, Sequence, Sequences},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Wilhelm M., Boutabout M., Wilhelm F. X.
Expression of an active form of recombinant Ty1 reverse transcriptase in Escherichia coli: a fusion protein containing the C-terminal region of the Ty1 integrase linked to the reverse transcriptase-RNase H domain exhibits polymerase and RNase H activities Article de journal
Dans: Biochem J, vol. 348, no. Pt 2, p. 337-42, 2000, (0264-6021 Journal Article).
Résumé | BibTeX | Étiquettes: &, Acid, affinity, Alignment, Amino, Calf, cerevisiae/*enzymology/*genetics, Chromatography, Cloning, Codon, coli, Comparative, Data, DNA, DNA/metabolism, Escherichia, Frames, Fusion, Genetic, Gov't, H, Heteroduplexes/metabolism, HIV-1, Homology, Integrases/chemistry/metabolism, Kinetics, Molecular, Non-U.S., Nucleic, Open, Polymerase/chemistry/isolation, Proteins/chemistry/isolation, purification/*metabolism, purification/metabolism, Reading, Recombinant, Retroelements/*genetics, Reverse, Ribonuclease, RNA-Directed, RNA/metabolism, Saccharomyces, Sequence, Study, Support, Templates, Terminator, Thymus/isolation, Transcriptase/chemistry
@article{,
title = {Expression of an active form of recombinant Ty1 reverse transcriptase in Escherichia coli: a fusion protein containing the C-terminal region of the Ty1 integrase linked to the reverse transcriptase-RNase H domain exhibits polymerase and RNase H activities},
author = { M. Wilhelm and M. Boutabout and F. X. Wilhelm},
year = {2000},
date = {2000-01-01},
journal = {Biochem J},
volume = {348},
number = {Pt 2},
pages = {337-42},
abstract = {Replication of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Ty1 retrotransposon requires a reverse transcriptase capable of synthesizing Ty1 DNA. The first description of an active form of a recombinant Ty1 enzyme with polymerase and RNase H activities is reported here. The Ty1 enzyme was expressed as a hexahistidine-tagged fusion protein in Escherichia coli to facilitate purification of the recombinant protein by metal-chelate chromatography. Catalytic activity of the recombinant protein was detected only when amino acid residues encoded by the integrase gene were added to the N-terminus of the reverse transcriptase-RNase H domain. This suggests that the integrase domain could play a role in proper folding of reverse transcriptase. Several biochemical properties of the Ty1 enzyme were analysed, including the effect of MgCl(2), NaCl, temperature and of the chain terminator dideoxy GTP on its polymerase activity. RNase H activity was examined by monitoring the cleavage of a RNA-DNA template-primer. Our results suggest that the distance between the RNase H and polymerase active sites corresponds to the length of a 14-nucleotide RNA-DNA heteroduplex. The recombinant protein produced in E. coli should be useful for further biochemical and structural analyses and for a better understanding of the role of integrase in the activation of reverse transcriptase.},
note = {0264-6021
Journal Article},
keywords = {&, Acid, affinity, Alignment, Amino, Calf, cerevisiae/*enzymology/*genetics, Chromatography, Cloning, Codon, coli, Comparative, Data, DNA, DNA/metabolism, Escherichia, Frames, Fusion, Genetic, Gov't, H, Heteroduplexes/metabolism, HIV-1, Homology, Integrases/chemistry/metabolism, Kinetics, Molecular, Non-U.S., Nucleic, Open, Polymerase/chemistry/isolation, Proteins/chemistry/isolation, purification/*metabolism, purification/metabolism, Reading, Recombinant, Retroelements/*genetics, Reverse, Ribonuclease, RNA-Directed, RNA/metabolism, Saccharomyces, Sequence, Study, Support, Templates, Terminator, Thymus/isolation, Transcriptase/chemistry},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Bergdoll M., Eltis L. D., Cameron A. D., Dumas P., Bolin J. T.
All in the family: structural and evolutionary relationships among three modular proteins with diverse functions and variable assembly Article de journal
Dans: Protein Sci, vol. 7, no. 8, p. 1661-70, 1998, (0961-8368 Journal Article).
Résumé | BibTeX | Étiquettes: *Acetyltransferases, *Evolution, Acid, Amino, Bacterial, Burkholderia/*chemistry, Crystallography, Data, Genetic, Gov't, Homology, Human, Lactoylglutathione, Lyase/*chemistry, Models, Molecular, Non-U.S., Oxygenases/chemistry, P.H.S., Phylogeny, Protein, Proteins/*chemistry, Secondary, Sequence, structure, Support, U.S., X-Ray
@article{,
title = {All in the family: structural and evolutionary relationships among three modular proteins with diverse functions and variable assembly},
author = { M. Bergdoll and L. D. Eltis and A. D. Cameron and P. Dumas and J. T. Bolin},
year = {1998},
date = {1998-01-01},
journal = {Protein Sci},
volume = {7},
number = {8},
pages = {1661-70},
abstract = {The crystal structures of three proteins of diverse function and low sequence similarity were analyzed to evaluate structural and evolutionary relationships. The proteins include a bacterial bleomycin resistance protein, a bacterial extradiol dioxygenase, and human glyoxalase I. Structural comparisons, as well as phylogenetic analyses, strongly indicate that the modern family of proteins represented by these structures arose through a rich evolutionary history that includes multiple gene duplication and fusion events. These events appear to be historically shared in some cases, but parallel and historically independent in others. A significant early event is proposed to be the establishment of metal-binding in an oligomeric ancestor prior to the first gene fusion. Variations in the spatial arrangements of homologous modules are observed that are consistent with the structural principles of three-dimensional domain swapping, but in the unusual context of the formation of larger monomers from smaller dimers or tetramers. The comparisons support a general mechanism for metalloprotein evolution that exploits the symmetry of a homooligomeric protein to originate a metal binding site and relies upon the relaxation of symmetry, as enabled by gene duplication, to establish and refine specific functions.},
note = {0961-8368
Journal Article},
keywords = {*Acetyltransferases, *Evolution, Acid, Amino, Bacterial, Burkholderia/*chemistry, Crystallography, Data, Genetic, Gov't, Homology, Human, Lactoylglutathione, Lyase/*chemistry, Models, Molecular, Non-U.S., Oxygenases/chemistry, P.H.S., Phylogeny, Protein, Proteins/*chemistry, Secondary, Sequence, structure, Support, U.S., X-Ray},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Gabus C., Ficheux D., Rau M., Keith G., Sandmeyer S., Darlix J. L.
The yeast Ty3 retrotransposon contains a 5'-3' bipartite primer-binding site and encodes nucleocapsid protein NCp9 functionally homologous to HIV-1 NCp7 Article de journal
Dans: EMBO J, vol. 17, no. 16, p. 4873-80, 1998, (0261-4189 Journal Article).
Résumé | BibTeX | Étiquettes: *Capsid, *Retroelements, Acid, Base, Binding, Capsid/*genetics, cerevisiae/*genetics, dimerization, gag/*genetics, Gene, Gov't, Homology, Met/genetics/*metabolism, Non-U.S., Nucleic, P.H.S., Products, Proteins, RNA, Saccharomyces, Sequence, Sites, Support, Transfer, U.S.
@article{,
title = {The yeast Ty3 retrotransposon contains a 5'-3' bipartite primer-binding site and encodes nucleocapsid protein NCp9 functionally homologous to HIV-1 NCp7},
author = { C. Gabus and D. Ficheux and M. Rau and G. Keith and S. Sandmeyer and J. L. Darlix},
year = {1998},
date = {1998-01-01},
journal = {EMBO J},
volume = {17},
number = {16},
pages = {4873-80},
abstract = {Retroviruses, including HIV-1 and the distantly related yeast retroelement Ty3, all encode a nucleoprotein required for virion structure and replication. During an in vitro comparison of HIV-1 and Ty3 nucleoprotein function in RNA dimerization and cDNA synthesis, we discovered a bipartite primer-binding site (PBS) for Ty3 composed of sequences located at opposite ends of the genome. Ty3 cDNA synthesis requires the 3' PBS for primer tRNAiMet annealing to the genomic RNA, and the 5' PBS, in cis or in trans, as the reverse transcription start site. Ty3 RNA alone is unable to dimerize, but formation of dimeric tRNAiMet bound to the PBS was found to direct dimerization of Ty3 RNA-tRNAiMet. Interestingly, HIV-1 nucleocapsid protein NCp7 and Ty3 NCp9 were interchangeable using HIV-1 and Ty3 RNA template-primer systems. Our findings impact on the understanding of non-canonical reverse transcription as well as on the use of Ty3 systems to screen for anti-NCp7 drugs.},
note = {0261-4189
Journal Article},
keywords = {*Capsid, *Retroelements, Acid, Base, Binding, Capsid/*genetics, cerevisiae/*genetics, dimerization, gag/*genetics, Gene, Gov't, Homology, Met/genetics/*metabolism, Non-U.S., Nucleic, P.H.S., Products, Proteins, RNA, Saccharomyces, Sequence, Sites, Support, Transfer, U.S.},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}