These findings suggest that direct measurement of HIV levels in semen is necessary to assess the potential for sexual transmission, most cell-free HIV in seminal plasma arises distal to the vas deferens, and vasectomy may have minimal impact on the infectiousness of HIV seropositive men on sexual partners.
We have previously identified a set of tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins with apparent molecular masses of 44-46 kDa as some of the major tyrosine phosphorylated species in the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma brucei. We now show that these molecules, herein named Nopp44/46, are localized in the nucleolus. Using monoclonal antibodies, we have isolated Nopp44/46 cDNA clones from expression libraries. Sequence analysis reveals that the predicted amino acid sequence of the molecule is composed of an N-terminal unique region, an internal acidic region, and C-terminal repeat region. Analysis of the cDNA clones and genomic Southern analysis indicated that Nopp44/46 belongs to a multigene family in which different gene copies are very similar but vary in the number of repeats. Interestingly, the repetitive amino acid sequence motif contains multiple RGG (Arg-Gly-Gly) boxes characteristic of RNA-binding proteins. In vitro binding experiments demonstrated that Nopp44/46 is indeed capable of binding nucleic acids. Competition experiments with different RNA homopolymers demonstrated that Nopp44/46 preferentially binds to poly(U). These studies suggest that Nopp44/46 may play a role in RNA metabolism in trypanosomes and raise the possibility that tyrosine phosphorylation may regulate the process.
Tn5 transposase (Tnp), a 53.3-kDa protein, enables the movement of transposon Tn5 by a conservative mechanism. Within the context of a protein and DNA synaptic complex, a single Tnp molecule catalyzes four sequential DNA breaking and joining reactions at the end of a single transposon. The three amino acids of the DDE motif (Asp-97, Asp-188, and Glu-326), which are conserved among transposases and retroviral integrases, have been shown previously to be absolutely required for all catalytic steps. To probe the effect of active site geometry on the ability to form synaptic complexes and perform catalysis, single mutations at each position of the DDE motif were constructed. The aspartates were changed to glutamates, and the glutamate was changed to an aspartate. These mutants were studied by performing in vitro binding assays using short oligonucleotide substrates simulating the natural substrates for the synaptic complex formation and subsequent transposition steps. The results indicate that the aspartate to glutamate mutations restrict synaptic complex formation with substrates resembling the natural transposon prior to transferred strand nicking. This suggests a structural model in which the donor backbone DNA, prior to nicking, occupies the same space that is invaded by the longer side chains present in the aspartate to glutamate mutants. Additionally, catalytic assays support the previous proposal that the active site coordinates two divalent metal ions.
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