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Transcriptional Analysis of the DNA Polymerase Gene of Bombyx mori Parvo-like Virus (China Isolate)

  • Wang, Yong-Jie;Chen, Ke-Ping;Yao, Qin;Han, Xu
    • Journal of Microbiology
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    • v.45 no.2
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    • pp.139-145
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    • 2007
  • The Bombyx mori parvo-like virus (China isolate) DNA polymerase (BmDNV-3 dnapol) gene has been tentatively identified based on the presence of conserved motifs. In the present study, we perform a transcriptional analysis of the BmDNV-3 dnapol gene using the total RNA isolated from BmDNV-3 infected silkworm at different times. Northern blot analysis with a BmDNV-3 dnapol-specific riboprobe showed a major transcript of 3.3 kb. 5'-RACE revealed that the major transcription start point was located 20 nucleotides downstream of the TATA box. In a temporal expression analysis using differential RT-PCR, BmDNV-3 dnapol transcript was detected at low levels at 6 h.p.i., increased from 6 to 36 h.p.i., and remained fairly constant thereafter. Analysis of the predicted DNA polymerase sequence using neighborjoining and protein parsimony algorithms indicated that the predicted 1115-residue polypeptide contained five motifs associated with DNA polymerases synthetic activities and three additional motifs associated with polymerases possessing 3' to 5' exonuclease activity. The molecular phylogenetic analysis of this gene supported the placement of Bombyx mori parvo-like virus in a separate virus family.

An early transcription checkpoint ; A dual role of capping enzyme in RNA polymerase II transcription

  • Cho Eun-Jung
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society of Applied Pharmacology
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    • 2005.04a
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    • pp.5-14
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    • 2005
  • Recently, data from several groups have raised the concept of 'checkpoint' in transcription. As capping of nascent RNA transcript is tightly coupled to RNA polymerase II transcription, we seek to obtain direct evidence that transcripiton checkpoint via capping enzyme functions in this early regulatory step. One of temperature sensitive (ts) alleles of ceg1, a guanylyltransferase subunit of the Saccharomyces cerevisiaecapping enzyme, showed 6-azauracil (6AU) sensitivity at the permissive growth temperature, which is a phenotype that is correlated with a transcription elongational defect. This ts allele, ceg1-63 also has an impaired ability to induce PUR5 in response to a 6AU treatment. However, this cellular and molecular defect is not due to the preferential degradation of the transcript attributed from a lack of guanylyltransferase activity. On the contrary, the data suggests that the guanylyltransferase subunit of the capping enzyme plays a role in transcription elongation. First, in addition to the 6AU sensitivity, ceg1-63is synthetically lethal with elongation defective mutations of the largest subunit of RNA polymerase II. Secondly, it exhibited a lower GAL1 mRNA turn-over after glucoseshut off. Third, it decreased the transcription read through a tandem array of promoter proximal pause sites in an orientation dependent manner. Interestingly, this mutant also showed lower pass through a pause site located further downstream of the promoter. Taken together, these results suggest that the capping enzyme plays the role of an early transcription checkpoint possibly in the step of the reversion of repression by stimulating polymerase to escape from the promoter proximal arrest once RNA becomes appropriately capped.

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Characterization of Excision Repair Genes Related to Damaged DNA Repair from Eukaryotic Cells

  • Choi, In-Soon;Jin, Yong-Hwan;Park, Sang-Dai
    • Environmental Mutagens and Carcinogens
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    • v.17 no.1
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    • pp.1-6
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    • 1997
  • The RAD4 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is essential for the incision step of UV-induced excision repair. A yeast RAD4 gene has been previously isolated by functional complementation. In order to identify the RAD4 homologous gene from fungus Coprinus cinereus, we have constructed cosmid libraries from electrophoretically separated chromosomes of the C. cinereus. The 13 C. cinereus chromosomes were resolved by pulse-field gel electrophoresis, hybridized with S. cerevisiae RAD4 DNA, and then isolated homologous C. cinereus chromosome. The insert DNA of the RAD4 homolog was contained 3.2 kb. Here, we report the partial cloning and characterization of fungus C. cinereus homolog of yeast RAD4 gene. Southern blot analysis confirmed that C. cinereus contains the sequence homologous DNA to RAD4 gene and this gene exists as a single copy in C. cinereus genome. When total RNA isolated from C. cinereus cells was hybridized with the 1.2 kb PvuII DNA fragment of the S. cerevisiae RAD4 gene, a 2.5 kb of transcript was detected. The level of the transcript did not increase upon UV-irradiation, suggesting that the RAD4 homologous gene in C. cinereus is not UV-inducible.

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Expression of Taurine Transporter in Cell Lines and Murine Organs (세포주와 마우스 조직에서 타우린수송체의 발현분석)

  • 김하원;안희창;안혜숙;현진원;이은방
    • Biomolecules & Therapeutics
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    • v.10 no.2
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    • pp.78-84
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    • 2002
  • Taurine (2-ethaneaminosulfonic acid, $^+{NH}_3{CH_2}{CH_2}{SO_3^{-}}$) is endogenous amino acid with functions as modulator of osmoregulation, antioxidation, detoxification, transmembrane calcium transport, and a free radical scavenger in mammalian tissues. Taurine transporter(TAUT) contains 12 transmembrane helices, which are typical of the $Na^+$- and $Cl^-$-dependent transporter gene family, and has been cloned recently from several species and tissues. To analyze the expression of TAUT mRNA, one step RT-PCR was performed from human and mouse cultured cell lines and from various mouse tissues. The primers were designed to encode highly conserved amino acid sequences at the second transmembrane domain and at the fourth and fifth intracellular domains. RT-PCR analysis showed both of the human intestine HT-29 and mouse macrophage RAW264.7 cell lines expressed mRNA of TAUT. To define the expression patterns of the TAUT mRNA in the murine organs, RT-PCR was performed to detect cDNA representing TAUT mRNA from seven different mouse tissues. The TAUT was detected in all of the mouse tissues analyzed such as heart, lung, thymus, kidney, liver, spleen and brain. A large amount of transcript was fecund from heart, liver, spleen, kidney, and brain, while lung contained a very small amount of transcript.

High Copy Rme1p Suppresses Iron-Induced Cell Growth Defect of Saccharomyces cerevisiae

  • Park, Yong-Sung;Yun, Cheol-Won;Kong, Jae-Yang;Kim, Tae-Hyoung;Sung, Ha-Chin
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.14 no.3
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    • pp.470-473
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    • 2004
  • In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, iron can be toxic. Because of this phenomenon, its metabolism of iron is strictly regulated. We have constructed a model system in which cell growth is defected during periods of iron over-load. When $Aft1-1^{up}$ protein was overexpressed with Ga110 promoter, a galactose inducible promoter, cell growth was defected and levels of CLN2 transcript decreased. However transcript levels of AFT1 and FET3 genes increased over time in a consistent manner throughout the course of $AFT1-1^{up}$ overexpression. We have screened to find genes to suppress cell growth defect by iron overload with YEp-derived high copy yeast genomic DNA library and found that high copy of Rmelp suppressed cell growth defects. Rme1p has been known as an activator protein of CLN2 gene expression. Taking these results together, we suggest that the yeast cell cycle is arrested at the $G_1$, phase by iron overload via Cln2p.