157 resultados para RNA secondary structure


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To classify Listeria monocytogenes using taxonomic characters derived from the rRNA operons and their flanking sequences, we studied a sample of 1346 strains within the taxon. DNA from each strain was digested with a restriction endonuclease, EcoRI. The fragments were separated by gel electrophoresis, immobilized on a membrane, and hybridized with a labeled rRNA operon from Escherichia coli. The pattern of bands, positions, and intensities of hybridized fragments were electronically captured. Software was used to normalize the band positions relative to standards, scale the signal intensity, and reduce the background so that each strain was reproducibly represented in a data base as a pattern. With these methods, L. monocytogenes was resolved into 50 pattern types differing in the length of at least one polymorphic fragment. Pattern types representing multiple strains were recorded as the mathematical average of the strain patterns. Pattern types were arranged by size polymorphisms of assigned rRNA regions into subsets, which revealed the branching genetic structure of the species. Subtracting the polymorphic variants of a specific assigned region from the pattern types and averaging the types within each subset resulted in reduced sets of conserved fragments that could be used to recognize strains of the species. Pattern types and reduced sets of conserved fragments were conserved among different strains of L. monocytogenes but were not observed in total among strains of other species.

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By using taxonomic characters derived from EcoRI restriction endonuclease digestion of genomic DNA and hybridization with a labeled rRNA operon from Escherichia coli, a polymorphic structure of Listeria monocytogenes, characterized by fragments with different frequencies of occurrence, was observed. This structure was expanded by creating predicted patterns through a recursive process of observation, expectation, prediction, and assessment of completeness. This process was applied, in turn, to normalized strain patterns, fragment bands, and positions of EcoRI recognition sites relative to rRNA regions. Analysis of 1346 strains provided observed patterns, fragment sizes, and their frequencies of occurrence in the patterns. Fragment size statistics led to the creation of unobserved combinations of bands, predicted pattern types. The observed fragment bands revealed positions of EcoRI sites relative to rRNA sequences. Each EcoRI site had a frequency of occurrence, and unobserved fragment sizes were postulated on the basis of knowing the restriction site locations. The result of the recursion process applied to the components of the strain data was an extended classification with observed and predicted members.

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Members of the winged helix/forkhead family of transcription factors are believed to play a role in cell-specific gene expression. A cDNA encoding a member of this family of proteins, termed hepatocyte nuclear factor/forkhead homologue 4 (HFH-4), has been isolated from rat lung and rat testis cDNA libraries. This cDNA contains an open reading frame of 421 amino acids with a conserved DNA binding domain and several potential transactivating regions. During murine lung development, a single species of HFH-4-specific transcript (2.4 kb long) is first detected precisely at the start of the late pseudoglandular stage (embryonic day 14.5) and, by in situ hybridization, is specifically localized to the proximal pulmonary epithelium. The unique temporal and spatial pattern of HFH-4 gene expression in the developing lung defines this protein as a marker for the initiation of bronchial epithelial cell differentiation and suggests that it may play an important role in cell fate determination during lung development. In addition to expression in the pulmonary epithelium, RNA blot analysis reveals 2.4-kb HFH-4 transcripts in the testis and oviduct. By using mice with genetic defects in spermatogenesis, HFH-4 expression in the testis is found to be associated with the appearance of haploid germ cells and in situ hybridization studies indicate that HFH-4 expression is confined to stages I-VII of spermatogenesis. This pattern of HFH-4 gene expression during the early stages of differentiation of haploid germ cells suggests that HFH-4 may play a role in regulating stage-specific gene expression and cell-fate determination during lung development and in spermatogenesis.

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The Escherichia coli rpoB gene, which codes for the 1342-residue beta subunit of RNA polymerase (RNAP), contains two dispensable regions centered around codons 300 and 1000. To test whether these regions demarcate domains of the RNAP beta subunit, fragments encoded by segments of rpoB flanking the dispensable regions were individually overexpressed and purified. We show that these beta-subunit polypeptide fragments, when added with purified recombinant beta', sigma, and alpha subunits of RNAP, reconstitute a functional enzyme in vitro. These results demonstrate that the beta subunit is composed of at least three distinct domains and open another avenue for in vitro studies of RNAP assembly and structure.

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We have prepared a family of peptide fragments of the 64-residue chymotrypsin inhibitor 2, corresponding to its progressive elongation from the N terminus. The growing polypeptide chain has little tendency to form stable structure until it is largely synthesized, and what structures are formed are nonnative and lack, in particular, the native secondary structural elements of alpha-helix and beta-sheet. These elements then develop as sufficient tertiary interactions are made in the nearly full-length chain. The growth of structure in the small module is highly cooperative and does not result from the hierarchical accretion of substructures.

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Transcription of downstream genes in the early operons of phage lambda requires a promoter-proximal element known as nut. This site acts in cis in the form of RNA to assemble a transcription antitermination complex which is composed of lambda N protein and at least four host factors. The nut-site RNA contains a small stem-loop structure called boxB. Here, we show that boxB RNA binds to N protein with high affinity and specificity. While N binding is confined to the 5' subdomain of the stem-loop, specific N recognition relies on both an intact stem-loop structure and two critical nucleotides in the pentamer loop. Substitutions of these nucleotides affect both N binding and antitermination. Remarkably, substitutions of other loop nucleotides also diminish antitermination in vivo, yet they have no detectable effect on N binding in vitro. These 3' loop mutants fail to support antitermination in a minimal system with RNA polymerase (RNAP), N, and the host factor NusA. Furthermore, the ability of NusA to stimulate the formation of the RNAP-boxB-N complex is diminished with these mutants. Hence, we suggest that boxB RNA performs two critical functions in antitermination. First, boxB binds to N and secures it near RNAP to enhance their interaction, presumably by increasing the local concentration of N. Second, boxB cooperates with NusA, most likely to bring N and RNAP in close contact and transform RNAP to the termination-resistant state.

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SPC2 and SPC3 are two members of a family of subtilisin-related proteases which play essential roles in the processing of prohormones into their mature forms in the pancreatic B cell and many other neuroendocrine cells. To investigate the phylogenetic origins and evolutionary functions of SPC2 and SPC3 we have identified and cloned cDNAs encoding these enzymes from amphioxus (Branchiostoma californiensis), a primitive chordate. The amino acid sequence of preproSPC2 contains 689 aa and is 71% identical to human SPC2. In contrast, amphioxus prproSPC3 consists of 774 aa and exhibits 55% identity to human SPC3. These results suggest that the primary structure of SPC2 has been more highly conserved during evolution than that of SPC3. To further investigate the function(s) of SPC2 and SPC3 in amphioxus, we have determined the regional expression of these genes by using a reverse transcriptase-linked polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay. Whole amphioxus was dissected longitudinally into four equal-length segments and RNA was extracted. Using RT-PCR to simultaneously amplify SPC2 and SPC3 DNA fragments, we found that the cranial region (section 1) expressed equal amounts of SPC2 and SPC3 mRNAs, whereas in the caudal region (section 4) the SPC2-to-SPC3 ratio was 5:1. In the mid-body sections 2 and 3 the SPC2-to-SPC3 ratio was 1:5. By RT-PCR we also determined that amphioxus ILP, a homologue of mammalian insulin/insulin-like growth factor, was expressed predominately in section 3. These results suggest that the relative levels of SPC2 and SPC3 mRNAs are specifically regulated in various amphioxus tissues. Furthermore, the ubiquitous expression of these mRNAs in the organism indicates that they are involved in the processing of other precursor proteins in addition to proILP.