Short description: Ribonuclease enzyme found in the venom of the Caspian cobra
A Caspian cobra
Ribonuclease V1 (RNase V1) is a ribonucleaseenzyme found in the venom of the Caspian cobra (Naja oxiana).[1] It cleaves double-stranded RNA in a non-sequence-specific manner, usually requiring a substrate of at least six stacked nucleotides.[2] Like many ribonucleases, the enzyme requires the presence of magnesium ions for activity.[3]
Laboratory use
Purified RNase V1 is a commonly used reagent in molecular biology experiments. In conjunction with other ribonucleases that cleave single-stranded RNA after specific nucleotides or sequences – such as RNase T1 and RNase I – it can be used to map internal interactions in large RNA molecules with complex secondary structure or to perform footprinting experiments on macromolecular complexes containing RNA.[3]
RNase V1 is the only commonly used laboratory RNase that provides positive evidence for the presence of double-stranded helical conformations in target RNA.[4] Because RNase V1 has some activity against RNA that is base-paired but single-stranded,[5] dual susceptibility to both RNase V1 and RNase I at a single site in a target RNA molecule provides evidence of this relatively unusual conformation found in RNA loops.[6]
The distinctive secondary structure of transfer RNA, containing a series of double helices separated by flexible loops
Structural discoveries
RNase V1 played a particularly important role in the elucidation of the distinctive stem-loop structure of transfer RNA.[1][7] It has also been extensively used to study the highly structured RNA genomes of retroviruses, such as hepatitis C,[8] dengue virus,[9] and HIV.[10] Together with S1 nuclease, which specifically cleaves single-stranded RNA, it can be used to profile the secondary structure propensities of messenger RNA molecules, a procedure that can be applied to whole transcriptomes when paired with deep sequencing.[11][12]
References
↑ 1.01.1"Partial digestion of tRNA--aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase complexes with cobra venom ribonuclease". Biochemistry20 (4): 1006–11. February 1981. doi:10.1021/bi00507a055. PMID7011369.
↑"On the recognition of helical RNA by cobra venom V1 nuclease". The Journal of Biological Chemistry261 (12): 5396–403. April 1986. doi:10.1016/S0021-9258(19)57229-5. PMID2420800.
↑Silverman, Ian M.; Berkowitz, Nathan D.; Gosai, Sager J.; Gregory, Brian D. (2016). "Genome-Wide Approaches for RNA Structure Probing". in Yeo, Gene W.. RNA Processing. Springer. pp. 29–59. ISBN978-3-319-29071-3.
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