CHAPTER 6
Reverse Transcriptase (EC 2.7.7.49)
The Use of Cloned Moloney Murine Leukemia Virus
Reverse Transcriptase to Synthesize DNA from RNA
Gary F. Gerard and James M. D'Alessio
- Introduction
The conversion of mRNA into cDNA is the essential first step in the
study of eukaryotic cell products expressed from cloned genes. The
key enzyme used first in this process, retroviral RNA-directed DNA
polymerase (reverse transcriptase), catalyzes the synthesis of a DNA
copy of an RNA template in the presence of a suitable primer. Reverse
transcriptase (RT) was discovered in 1970 (1,2) and was first used to
copy a eukaryotic cell mRNA in 1971 (3-5); the first cDNA clones
prepared using RT were reported in 1976 (6). Until recently, the only
enzyme available was purified from avian myeloblastosis virus (AMV).
The overall quality and consistency of commercially available AMV
RT preparations have improved dramatically in the last six years,
although considerable differences in performance characteristics still
exist among enzyme preparations from different commercial suppli-
ers (7). In addition, parameters for carrying out first-strand cDNA
synthesis from poly(A) ÷ mRNA populations with AMV RT have been
optimized thoroughly (8); standard optima exist for pH, nucleotide
concentration, and monovalent and divalent cation concentration; also
essential stimulatory additives (such as sodium pyrophosphate and
spermidine-HC1) have been identified. Furthermore, conditions have
From: Methods in Molecular Biology, VoL 16: Enzymes of Molecular Biology
Edited by: M. M. Burrell Copyright ©1993 Humana Press Inc., Totowa, NJ
73