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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11154/140235

Title: On the early emergence of reverse transcription: theoretical basis and experimental evidence
Authors: Lazcano Araujo Reyes, Antonio Eusebio
Valverde, V
Hernández, G
Gariglio, P
Fox, GE
Oró, J
Issue Date: 1992
Citation: Lazcano, A., Valverde, V., Hernández, G., Gariglio, P., Fox, G. E. and Oró, J. 1992. On the early emergence of reverse transcription: theoretical basis and experimental evidence. Journal of Molecular Evolution. 35: 524-536
Abstract: (2) the existence of homologous regions of the subunit tau of the E. coli DNA polymerase III with the simian immunodeficiency virus RT, the hepatitis B virus RT, and the beta' subunit of the E. coli RNA polymerase (McHenry et al. 1988)
Reverse transcriptase (RT) was first discovered as an essential catalyst in the biological cycle of retroviruses. However, in the past years evidence has accumulated showing that RTs are involved in a surprisingly large number of RNAmediated transpositional events that include both viral and nonviral genetic entities. Although it is probable that some RTbearing genetic elements like the different types of AIDS viruses and the mammalian LINE family have arisen in recent geological times, the possibility that reverse transcription first took place in the early Archean is supported by (1) the hypothesis that RNA preceded DNA as cellular genetic material
(3) the presence of several conserved motifs, including a 14aminoacid segment that consists of an AspAsp pair flanked by hydrophobic amino acids, which are found in all RTs and in most cellular and viral RNA polymerases. However, whether extant RTs descend freom the primitive polymerase involved in the RNAtoDNA transition remains unproven. Substrate specificity of the AMV and HIV1 RTs can be modified in the presence of Mn2+, a cation which allows them to add ribonucleotides to an oligo (dG) primer in a templatedependent reaction. This change in specificity is comparable to that observed under similar conditions in other nucleic acid polymerases. This experimentally induced change in RT substrate specificity may explain previous observations on the misincorporation of ribonucleotides by the Maloney murine sarcoma virus RT in the minus and plus DNA of this retrovirus (Chen and Temin 1980). Our results also suggest that HIVinfected macrophages and Tcell cells may contain mixed polynucleotides containing both ribo and deoxyribonucleotides. The evolutionary significance of these changes in substrate specificities of nucleic acid polymerases is also discussed.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11154/140235
ISSN: 14321432
Appears in Collections:Departamento de Biología Evolutiva

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