In
biochemistry, a 'reverse transcriptase', also known as 'RNA-dependent DNA polymerase', is a
DNA polymerase enzyme that
transcribes single-stranded
RNA into single-stranded
DNA. Normal transcription involves the synthesis of RNA from DNA, hence reverse transcription is the ''reverse'' of this.
Reverse transcriptase was discovered by
Howard Temin at the
University of Wisconsin-Madison, and independently by
David Baltimore in 1970. The two shared the 1975
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with
Renato Dulbecco for their discovery.
Commonly used examples of reverse transcriptases include:
★ HIV-1 reverse transcriptase from the
human immunodeficiency virus type 1 ()
★ M-MLV reverse transcriptase from the
Moloney murine leukemia virus
★ AMV reverse transcriptase from the
avian myeloblastosis virus
★
Telomerase reverse transcriptase that maintains the
telomeres of
eukaryotic chromosomes
Function
Viruses
The enzyme is encoded and used by
reverse-transcribing viruses, which use the enzyme during the process of replication. Reverse-transcribing
RNA viruses, such as
retroviruses, use the enzyme to reverse-transcribe their RNA genomes into DNA, which is then integrated into the host genome and replicated along with it. Reverse-transcribing
DNA viruses, such as the
hepadnaviruses, transcribe their genomes into an RNA intermediate and then, using reverse transcriptase, back into DNA.
Eukaryotes
Self-replicating stretches of
eukaryotic genomes known as
retrotransposons utilise reverse transcriptase to move from one position in the genome to another via a RNA intermediate. They are found abundantly in the genomes of plants and animals.
Telomerase is another reverse transcriptase found in many eukaryotes, including humans, which carries its own
RNA template; this RNA is used as a template for
DNA replication[1].
Prokaryotes
Reverse transcriptases are also found in bacterial
retrons, distinct sequences which code for reverse transcriptase, and are used in the synthesis of
msDNA.
Structure
Reverse transcriptase enzymes include an RNA-dependent
DNA polymerase and a DNA-dependent DNA polymerase, which work together to perform transcription. In addition to the transcription function, retroviral reverse transcriptases have a domain belonging to the
RNase H family which is vital to their replication.
Replication fidelity
Reverse transcriptase has a high error rate when transcribing RNA into DNA as unlike
DNA polymerases it has no
proofreading ability. This high error rate allows
mutations to accumulate at an accelerated rate relative to proofread forms of replication. The commercially available reverse transcriptases produced by
Promega are quoted by their manuals as having error rates in the range of 1 in 17,000 bases for AMV and 1 in 30,000 bases for M-MLV
[2]
Applications

The molecular structure of
zidovudine (Retrovir®), a drug used to inhibit
HIV reverse transcriptase
Antiviral drugs
As
HIV uses reverse transcriptase to copy its genetic material and generate new viruses (part of a retrovirus proliferation circle), specific drugs have been designed to disrupt the process and thereby suppress its growth. Collectively, these drugs are known as
reverse transcriptase inhibitors and include the nucleoside and nucleotide analogues
zidovudine (Retrovir®),
lamivudine (Epivir®) and
tenofovir (Viread®), as well as non-nucleoside inhibitors, such as
nevirapine (Viramune®).
Molecular biology
Reverse transcriptase is commonly used in research to apply the
polymerase chain reaction technique to
RNA in a technique called
reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). The classical
PCR technique can only be applied to
DNA strands, but with the help of reverse transcriptase, RNA can be transcribed into DNA, thus making
PCR analysis of RNA molecules possible. Reverse transcriptase is also used to create
cDNA libraries from
mRNA. The commercial availability of reverse transcriptase greatly improved knowledge in the area of molecular biology as, along with other enzymes, it allowed scientists to clone, sequence and characterise DNA.
See also
★
cDNA library
★
DNA polymerase
★
msDNA
★
Reverse transcribing virus
★
RNA polymerase
★
Telomerase
★
Retrotransposon marker
External links
★
animation of reverse transcriptase action and three reverse transcriptase inhibitors
★
Molecule of the month (September 2002) at the
Protein Data Bank
★
BRENDA database entry - highly detailed information from a protein database
★
★
References
1. Lodish, et al, ''Molecular Cell Biology'' (2004), 5th edn, W. H. Freeman and Company, New York, ISBN 0-7167-4366-3
2. Promega kit instruction manual (1999)