Reverse transcription of a naturally occurring nonretroviral RNA produces a precise deletion in the majority of its cDNA products


Autoria(s): Johnson, Karyn N.; Gordon, Karl H. J.; Hanzlik, Terry N.
Data(s)

01/01/2000

Resumo

A precise, reproducible deletion made during in vitro reverse transcription of RNA2 from the icosahedral positive-stranded Helicoverpa armigera stunt virus (Tetraviridae) is described. The deletion, located between two hexamer repeats, is a 50-base sequence that includes one copy of the hexamer repeat. Only the Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase and its derivative Superscript I, carrying a deletion of the carboxy-terminal RNase H region, showed this response, indicating a template-switching mechanism different from one proposed that involves a RNase H-dependent strand transfer, Superscript II, however, which carries point mutations to reduce RNase H activity, does not cause a deletion. A possible mechanism involves the enzyme pausing at the 3' side of a stem-loop structure and the 3' end of the nascent DNA strand separating from the template and reannealing to the upstream hexamer repeat.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:36410

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Taylor & Francis

Palavras-Chave #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Cell Biology #Mutations #Pcr #Recombination #Reverse Transcriptase #Rnase H #Rna Sequencing #Rna Structure #Strand Transfer #Helicoverpa-armigera #Internal Regions #Replication #Dna #Recombination #Amplification #Polymerase #Templates #Mutations #0601 Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Tipo

Journal Article