User:Irfan Saleh/sandbox 1
From Proteopedia
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The RNase III family can be divided into four classes based on increasing molecular weight and complexity of the polypeptide chain. The four classes are bacterial RNase III, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Rnt1p, Drosophila melanogaster Drosha, and Homo sapiens Dicer.The bacterial RNase III proteins, such as Escherichia coli RNase III (Ec-RNase III) and Aquifex aeolicus RNase III (Aa-RNase III), are composed of an endonuclease domain (endoND) followed by a dsRNA binding domain (dsRBD).The homodimeric Ec-RNase III was first discovered in 1968 and ever since it has become the most extensively studied member of the family. RNase III has the ability to affect the gene expression in either of two ways: as a processing enzyme or as a binding protein. As a processing enzyme, RNase III cleaves both natural and synthetic dsRNA into small duplex products averaging 10–18 base pairs in length. As a binding protein, RNase III binds and stabilizes certain RNAs, thus suppressing the expression of certain genes. Here the crystal structure of an RNase III-product complex, the first catalytic complex observed for the family.The RNase III-product complex has a 7 residue linker within the protein, which facilitates induced fit in protein-RNA recognition. A pattern of protein-RNA interactions known as four RNA binding motifs in RNase III and three protein-interacting boxes in dsRNA, is responsible for substrate specificity.Meanwhile conserved amino acid residues and divalent cations are responsible for scissile-bond cleavage. Studying the structure of RNase III is important, because it can be extrapolated to other structures of the RNase III family. | The RNase III family can be divided into four classes based on increasing molecular weight and complexity of the polypeptide chain. The four classes are bacterial RNase III, Saccharomyces cerevisiae Rnt1p, Drosophila melanogaster Drosha, and Homo sapiens Dicer.The bacterial RNase III proteins, such as Escherichia coli RNase III (Ec-RNase III) and Aquifex aeolicus RNase III (Aa-RNase III), are composed of an endonuclease domain (endoND) followed by a dsRNA binding domain (dsRBD).The homodimeric Ec-RNase III was first discovered in 1968 and ever since it has become the most extensively studied member of the family. RNase III has the ability to affect the gene expression in either of two ways: as a processing enzyme or as a binding protein. As a processing enzyme, RNase III cleaves both natural and synthetic dsRNA into small duplex products averaging 10–18 base pairs in length. As a binding protein, RNase III binds and stabilizes certain RNAs, thus suppressing the expression of certain genes. Here the crystal structure of an RNase III-product complex, the first catalytic complex observed for the family.The RNase III-product complex has a 7 residue linker within the protein, which facilitates induced fit in protein-RNA recognition. A pattern of protein-RNA interactions known as four RNA binding motifs in RNase III and three protein-interacting boxes in dsRNA, is responsible for substrate specificity.Meanwhile conserved amino acid residues and divalent cations are responsible for scissile-bond cleavage. Studying the structure of RNase III is important, because it can be extrapolated to other structures of the RNase III family. | ||
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The is the complete crystal structure of the(RNase III)<scene name='76/769328/2ez6/1'>Complete (RNase III) Structure </scene> | The is the complete crystal structure of the(RNase III)<scene name='76/769328/2ez6/1'>Complete (RNase III) Structure </scene> | ||
| + | This is the scene for the dsRBD1 binding to RNA<scene name='76/769328/Dsrbd1_binding_site/1'>dsRBD1 Binding to RNA</scene> | ||
Revision as of 23:44, 9 October 2017
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