'Ribonuclease', abbreviated commonly as 'RNase', is a
nuclease that
catalyzes the
hydrolysis of
RNA into smaller components. They can be divided into
endoribonucleases and
exoribonucleases, and comprise several sub-classes within the EC 2.7 (for the phosphorolytic enzymes) and 3.1 (for the hydrolytic enzymes) classes of enzymes.
Function
RNases are extremely common, resulting in very short lifespans for any RNA that is not in a protected environment. One mechanism of protection is '
ribonuclease inhibitor (RI)', which comprises a relatively large fraction of cellular protein (~0.1%) and which binds to certain ribonucleases with the highest affinity of any
protein-protein interaction; the
dissociation constant for the RI-RNase A complex is ~20 fM under physiological conditions. RI is used in most laboratories that study RNA to protect their samples against degradation from environmental RNases.
Perhaps surprisingly, RNases tend to be insensitive to the cleaved sequence. There appear to be no RNase analogs of the
restriction enzymes, which cleave highly specific sequences of double-stranded
DNA. This deficit may be overcome using RNase H and single-stranded DNA complementary to the desired cleavage sequence.
RNases play a critical role in many biological processes, including
angiogenesis and
self-incompatibility in
flowering plants (angiosperms).
Classification
Major types of endoribonucleases

Structure of RNase A
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RNase A' is an RNase that is commonly used in research. RNase A (e.g., bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A: ) is one of the hardiest enzymes in common laboratory usage; one method of isolating it is to boil a crude cellular extract until all enzymes other than RNase A are
denatured. It is sequence specific for single stranded RNAs. It cleaves 3'end of unpaired C and U residues, leaving a 3'-phosphorylated product.
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RNase P' is a type of ribonuclease and is currently under heavy research. RNase P is unique from other RNases in that it is a
ribozyme – a
ribonucleic acid that acts as a catalyst in the same way that a
protein based enzyme would. Its function is to cleave off an extra, or precursor, sequence of RNA on
tRNA molecules. Further RNase P is one of two known multiple turnover ribozymes in nature (the other being the
ribosome).
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RNase H' is a ribonuclease that cleaves the RNA in a DNA/RNA duplex to produce ssDNA. RNase H is a non-specific endonuclease and catalyzes the cleavage of RNA via a hydrolytic mechanism, aided by an enzyme-bound divalent metal ion. RNase H leaves a 5'-phosphorylated product.
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RNase III' is a type of ribonuclease that cleaves rRNA (16s rRNA and 23s rRNA) from transcribed polycistronic RNA operon in prokaryotes.
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RNase T1' is sequence specific for single stranded RNAs. It cleaves 3'-end of unpaired G residues.
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RNase T2' is sequence specific for single stranded RNAs. It cleaves 3'-end of all 4 residues, but preferentially 3'-end of As.
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RNase U2' is sequence specific for single stranded RNAs. It cleaves 3'-end of unpaired A residues.
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RNase V1' is non-sequence specific for double stranded RNAs. It cleaves base-paired nucleotide residues.
★
EC number 3.1.??: '
RNase I' cleaves 3'-end of all 4 residues with no base preference
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EC number 3.1.??: '
RNase L' is an interferon-induced nuclease which, upon activation, destroys all RNA within the cell
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EC number 3.1.??: '
RNase PhyM' is sequence specific for single stranded RNAs. It cleaves 3'-end of unpaired A and U residues.
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RNase V'
Major types of exoribonucleases
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EC number : '
Polynucleotide Phosphorylase (PNPase)' functions both as an
exonuclease as well as a
nucleotidyltransferase.
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EC number : '
RNase PH' functions both as an
exonuclease as well as a
nucleotidyltransferase.
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EC number 3.1.??: '
RNase II' is responsible for the processive 3'-to-5' degradation of single-stranded
RNA.
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EC number 3.1.??: '
RNase R' is a close homolog of RNase II, but it can, unlike RNase II, degrade RNA with secondary structures without help of accessory factors.
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EC number : '
RNase D' is involved in the 3'-to-5' processing of pre-
tRNAs.
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EC number 3.1.??: '
RNase T' is the major contributor for the 3'-to-5' maturation of many stable RNAs.
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Oligoribonuclease' degrades short oligonucleotides to mononucleotides.
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Exoribonuclease I' degrades single-stranded RNA from 5'-to-3', exists only in eukaryotes.
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Exoribonuclease II' is a close homolog of Exoribonuclease I.
External links
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IUBMB Enzyme Database for EC 3.1
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Integrated Enzyme Database for EC 3.1
References
★ D'Alessio G and Riordan JF, eds. (1997) ''Ribonucleases: Structures and Functions'', Academic Press.