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Search: swepub > Umeå University > (2000-2004) > Journal article > Schleucher Jurgen

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1.
  • Sparrman, Tobias, et al. (author)
  • Quantifying unfrozen water in frozen soil by high-field H-2 NMR
  • 2004
  • In: Environmental Science & Technology. - 0013-936X. ; 38:20, s. 5420-5425
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • To understand wintertime controls of biogeochemical processes in high latitude soils it is essential to distinguish between direct temperature effects and the effects of changes in water availability mediated by freezing. Efforts to separate these controls are hampered by a lack of adequate methods to determine the proportion of unfrozen water. In this study we present a high-field (H2O)-H-2 NMR method for quantifying unfrozen water content in frozen soil. The experimental material consisted of the humic layer of a boreal spruce forest soil mixed with varying proportions of quartz sand and humidified with deuterium-enriched water. The relative standard deviation of unfrozen water content (measured as NMR signal integral) was less than 2% for repeated measurements on a given sample and 3.5% among all samples, based on a total of 16 measurements. As compared to H-1 NMR, this H-2 NMR method was found to be superior for several reasons: it is less sensitive to field inhomogeneity and paramagnetic impurities, it gives a bigger line shape difference between the ice and liquid signal, it shows a sharper response to water fusion, and it excludes the possibility of hydrogen in the organic material interfering with the measurement.
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2.
  • Flodell, Sara, et al. (author)
  • Structure elucidation of the hepatitis B virus encapsidation signal by NMR on selectively labeled RNAs.
  • 2002
  • In: Journal of Biomolecular Structure and Dynamics. - 0739-1102 .- 1538-0254. ; 19:4, s. 627-636
  • Journal article (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • Hepatitis B virus (HBV) HBV is DNA virus with a unique replication strategy, which involves reverse transcription of its pregenomic RNA. Essential for this reverse transcription are the 5'- and 3'-ends of its pregenomic RNA (5'-RT-RNA and 3'-RT-RNA, respectively) which form conserved bulged stem-loop structures. The 5'-RT-RNA consists of a 67 nucleotide bulged stem-loop structure, epsilon, which constitutes the signal for encapsidation of the pregenomic RNA and subsequent reverse transcription. The reverse transcriptase (RT) initially binds to the completely conserved apical loop of epsilon and a 4-nucleotide primer is synthesized from the adjacent 6-nucleotide bulge. Structural studies of epsilon can provide important parameters required for the design of RNA targeted anti- viral drugs directed against Hepatitis B virus. NMR studies of large RNA systems (> ca. 50 nucleotides) require novel approaches, e.g., different labeling schemes and reduction of the system into separate structural building blocks. Recently, a new method of synthesizing (13)C/(15)N/(2)H labeled nucleotides has been developed based on converting specifically labeled glucose and bases into nucleotides by using enzymes from the pentose phosphate pathway and nucleotide and salvage pathways. These NTPs give a large freedom in designing different labeling patterns in in vitro synthesized RNAs under study for NMR. This opens up the way for NMR studies of RNAs that are considerably above the present size limit (up to 150 nucleotides). Here this new technique is applied for structural studies on 27, 36 and 61 nucleotides long RNA fragments, mimicking different regions of epsilon.
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3.
  • Flodell, Sara, et al. (author)
  • The apical stem-loop of the hepatitis B virus encapsidation signal folds into a stable tri-loop with two underlying pyrimidine bulges.
  • 2002
  • In: Nucleic Acids Research. - : Oxford University Press (OUP). - 0305-1048 .- 1362-4962. ; 30:21, s. 4803-4811
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Reverse transcription of hepatitis B virus (HBV) pregenomic RNA is essential for virus replication. In the first step of this process, HBV reverse transcriptase binds to the highly conserved encapsidation signal, epsilon (epsilon), situated near the 5' end of the pregenome. epsilon has been predicted to form a bulged stem-loop with the apical stem capped by a hexa- loop. After the initial binding to this apical stem- loop, the reverse transcriptase synthesizes a 4 nt primer using the bulge as a template. Here we present mutational and structural data from NMR on the apical stem-loop of epsilon. Application of new isotope-labeling techniques (13C/15N/2H-U-labeling) allowed resolution of many resonance overlaps and an extensive structural data set could be derived. The NMR data show that, instead of the predicted hexa-loop, the apical stem is capped by a stable UGU tri-loop closed by a C-G base pair, followed by a bulged out C. The apical stem contains therefore two unpaired pyrimidines (C1882 and U1889), rather than one as was predicted, spaced by 6 nt. C1882, the 3' neighbour to the G of the loop-closing C-G base pair, is completely bulged out, while U1889 is at least partially intercalated into the stem. Analysis of 205 of our own HBV sequences and 1026 strains from the literature, covering all genotypes, reveals a high degree of conservation of epsilon. In particular, the residues essential for this fold are either totally conserved or show rare non-disruptive mutations. These data strongly indicate that this fold is essential for recognition by the reverse transcriptase.
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  • Result 1-10 of 16

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