scholarly journals Transcription termination in vitro at the tryptophan operon attenuator is controlled by secondary structures in the leader transcript.

1983 ◽  
Vol 80 (8) ◽  
pp. 2206-2210 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Stroynowski ◽  
M. Kuroda ◽  
C. Yanofsky
1982 ◽  
Vol 152 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-56
Author(s):  
M Blumenberg ◽  
C Yanofsky

The trp operon of Klebsiella aerogenes was cloned, and its regulatory region was sequenced. Comparison with previously reported trp regulatory sequences of other enteric bacteria indicates that the K. aerogenes trp promoter-operator region is most similar to the corresponding region of Salmonella typhimurium. The trp leader regions of K. aerogenes and other enteric bacteria are organized similarly, but there are significant differences in the stabilities of the predicted secondary structures in their leader transcripts. These differences should make the K. aerogenes attenuator a weaker transcription termination site than any of the other attenuator regions studied; this was confirmed in in vitro transcription experiments. The sequence of the leader transcript and the precise site of in vitro termination were determined.


2010 ◽  
Vol 439-440 ◽  
pp. 1456-1462 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiang Zheng ◽  
Yu Bao Li ◽  
Jia Xiang Li ◽  
Jun Wang ◽  
Yong Quan Su

Detection of pathogenic microorganism is very necessary in the control of infectious disease prevailing in aquiculture animals. However, most of the present techniques can not meet the need of the quick field inspection. Systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment (SELEX) is a new molecular recognition way for generating high affinity oligonucleotide acid aptamers, a new nucleotide acid material, which have been widely used in the detections of proteins, cells and so on. In the present paper, the technology was applied to select the high affinity aptamers against pathogenic microorganism Vibrio alginolyticus, which could be used for the rapid field detection of the microorganism. Based on the designment of the ssDNA library of 76 nucleotide acids with 35-base random region, the SELEX system for the selection of the high affinity aptamers against Vibrio alginolyticus was established. In the SELEX system, asymmetric PCR was proved to be a better amplification method for the ssDNA library than the reported affinity magnetic bead method, and the corresponding parameters of the asymmetric PCR were also studied and optimized. The affinity of the final ssDNA library increased by nearly 200% compared with the original library. Cloning and sequencing of the final ssDNA library showed that there were at least two kinds of ssDNAs with different length in the affinity ssDNA library: one was 76 bases, another was 149 bases. Simulation of the secondary structures showed that the secondary structures of the two fragments were different greatly, suggesting that the two fragments could bind to different sites of V. alginolyticus surface.


1987 ◽  
Vol 7 (9) ◽  
pp. 3194-3198 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Solnick ◽  
S I Lee

We set up an alternative splicing system in vitro in which the relative amounts of two spliced RNAs, one containing and the other lacking a particular exon, were directly proportional to the length of an inverted repeat inserted into the flanking introns. We then used the system to measure the effect of intramolecular complementarity on alternative splicing in vivo. We found that an alternative splice was induced in vivo only when the introns contained more than approximately 50 nucleotides of perfect complementarity, that is, only when the secondary structure was much more stable than most if not all possible secondary structures in natural mRNA precursors. We showed further that intron insertions containing long complements to splice sites and a branch point inhibited splicing in vitro but not in vivo. These results raise the possibility that in cells most pre-mRNA secondary structures either are not maintained long enough to influence splicing choices, or never form at all.


Author(s):  
Michela Zuffo ◽  
Aurélie Gandolfini ◽  
Brahim Heddi ◽  
Anton Granzhan

ABSTRACTDNA is polymorphic since, despite its ubiquitous presence as a double-stranded helix, it is able to fold into a plethora of other secondary structures both in vitro and in cells. Despite the considerable advances that have been made in understanding this structural diversity, its high-throughput investigation still faces severe limitations. This mainly stems from the lack of suitable label-free methods, combining a fast and cheap experimental workflow with high information content. Here, we explore the use of intrinsic fluorescence emitted by nucleic acids for this scope. After a preliminary assessment of the suitability of this phenomenon for tracking the conformational changes of DNA, we examined the intrinsic steady-state emission spectra of an 89-membered set of synthetic oligonucleotides with reported conformation (G-quadruplexes, i-motifs, single- and double stranded DNA) by means of multivariate analysis. Specifically, principal component analysis of emission spectra resulted in successful clustering of oligonucleotides into three corresponding conformational groups, albeit without discrimination between single- and double-stranded structures. Linear discriminant analysis of the same training set was exploited for the assessment of new sequences, allowing the evaluation of their G4-forming propensity. Our method does not require any labelling agent or dye, avoiding the related intrinsic bias, and can be utilized to screen novel sequences of interest in a high-throughput and cost-effective manner. In addition, we observed that left-handed (Z-) G4 structures were systematically more fluorescent than most other G4 structures, almost reaching the quantum yield of 5′-d[(G3T)3G3]-3′ (G3T), the most fluorescent G4 structure reported to date. This property is likely to arise from the similar base-stacking geometry in both types of structures.


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