Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: DrugBank:EXPT01586 (G418)
2,237 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report the construction of a cell line constitutively expressing the glycoprotein B (gB) of herpes simplex virus (HSV) 1. The cell line was constructed in two steps. In the first, a baby hamster kidney cell line was transfected with the DNA of a plasmid containing the neomycin phosphotransferase gene that confers resistance to the antibiotic G418 and the gene specifying a temperature-sensitive (ts-) alpha 4 protein of HSV-1, the major viral regulatory protein. A clonal cell line, alpha 4/c113, selected for resistance to the antibiotic G418, expressed high levels of alpha 4 protein constitutively. Superinfection of these cells with HSV-2 resulted in twofold induction of the resident HSV-1 alpha 4 gene. In the second step, alpha 4/c113 cells were transfected with the DNA of a plasmid carrying the gB gene and the mouse methotrexate resistance dihydrofolate reductase gene. A clonal cell line, alpha 4/c113/gB, selected for methotrexate resistance expressed gB constitutively. Expression of both gB and alpha 4 continued unabated for at least 32 serial passages. Cells passaged serially in medium containing both methotrexate and G418 after passage 10 contained a higher copy number of the alpha 4 gene and produced larger amounts of both gB and alpha 4 proteins than did cells maintained in medium containing methotrexate alone. Expression of gB was dependent on the presence of functional alpha 4 protein inasmuch as expression of gB ceased on shift up to nonpermissive temperatures, when shifted to permissive temperatures, the cell line reinitiated expression of gB after a delay commensurate with the length of incubation at the nonpermissive temperature, and the cell-resident HSV-1 gB gene was expressed at the nonpermissive temperature in cells infected with a recombinant expressing a ts+ alpha 4 protein and an HSV-2 gB. The properties of the alpha 4/c113 cell line suggest that it may express other viral genes induced by alpha 4 protein constitutively, provided that the product is not toxic to the cells.
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PMID:Construction and properties of a cell line constitutively expressing the herpes simplex virus glycoprotein B dependent on functional alpha 4 protein synthesis. 302 1

To establish stable culture conditions which support persistence of the human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) genome in a latent state, the expression of the bacterial neomycin phosphotransferase (neo) from HCMV recombinants was used for selection. Different cell lines were infected with HCMV recombinants. The human glioblastoma line U138-MG was rendered resistant to G418 and retained the viral genome. More than 90% of the cells expressed the viral IE1 protein of 72 kDa for a culture period of 18 months. Many fewer cells expressed IE2-encoded proteins. No late gene expression or infectious virus was detectable. IE2 gene expression in latently infected cells appeared to be restricted at the level of RNA accumulation. Treatment with TPA or retinoic acid led to enhanced expression of the IE2 gene and the early genes encoding pp65 (UL83) and p52 (UL44). Superinfection with wild-type HCMV led to replication of neo-recombinant virus, indicating that replication-competent virus had been retained in latently infected U138-MG and that the cells had kept their permissive phenotype. Latent HCMV infection in U138-MG cells provides a useful model system for studying the role of particular viral and cellular genes in latent and permissive infections.
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PMID:Reduced levels of IE2 gene expression and shutdown of early and late viral genes during latent infection of the glioblastoma cell line U138-MG with selectable recombinants of human cytomegalovirus. 809 45