RNase D, a reported new activity associated with HIV-1 reverse transcriptase, displays the same cleavage specificity as Escherichia coli RNase III

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Abstract

RNase D was recently reported as a new enzymatic activity associated with HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT), cleaving RNA at two positions within the double-stranded region of the tRNA primer-viral RNA template complex (Ben-Artzi et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 89 (1992) 927-931). This would make RNase D a fourth distinct activity of HIV-1 RT, in addition to RNA- and DNA-dependent DNA polymerase and RNase H. Using a specific substrate containing tRNALys,3 hybridized to the primer binding site, we were able to detect the reported RNase D activity in our preparations of recombinant HIV-1 RT. This activity was also present in several active-site mutants of RT, suggesting that it is independent of the RNase H and polymerase functionalities of RT. Furthermore, we found that the cleavage specificity of RNase D is the same as that of RNase III isolated from E.coli. A likely explanation of these result-that the observed RNase D activity is attributable to traces of RNase III contamination-was further strengthened by the finding that the recombinant preparations of HIV-1 RT can specifically cleave a phage T7-derived double-stranded RNA processing signal, which has been used as a model substrate for detection of E.coli RNase III. Moreover, RT purified from an RNase III- strain of E.coli displayed no cleavage of the tRNA primer-RNA template complex. © 1992 Oxford University Press.

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APA

Hostomsky, Z., Hudson, G. O., Rahmati, S., & Hostomska, Z. (1992). RNase D, a reported new activity associated with HIV-1 reverse transcriptase, displays the same cleavage specificity as Escherichia coli RNase III. Nucleic Acids Research, 20(21), 5819–5824. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/20.21.5819

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