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)

Transformation of secondary Sprague-Dawley rat embryo (RE) cells with type 5 adenovirus (Ad5) results in morphologically transformed cells which can undergo a series of sequential changes resulting in enhanced expression of the transformed phenotype, a process termed progression. Selection for a progressed phenotype often occurs after growth in agar or tumor formation in nude mice, and this process is reversible following treatment of cells with 5-azacytidine. In the present study we have analyzed a series of clonal populations of Ad5-transformed RE cells representing different stages in a defined progression lineage. Progression was not associated with alterations in the steady-state levels of mRNA produced by the viral transforming genes, E1A and E1B, or the cellular gene, c-myc. In addition, the tumor-promoting agent 12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate (TPA), which induces expression of a progressed phenotype in Ad5-transformed RE cells, did not significantly alter the RNA transcription rates of the Ad5 E1A or E1B genes, the TPA-inducible gene TPA-S1 or the TPA-responsive genes Pro1 or protein kinase C. TPA did, however, increase by 1 h the steady-state level of c-fos mRNA, but this effect was similar in both progressed and unprogressed cells. Progression also did not involve a change in the RNA transcription rate of a number of cellular and viral genes, including actin, c-Ha-ras, c-myc, v-fos, erbB, TGF-alpha, TGF-beta, Pro-2, transin, TPA-R1, v-myb and c-mos, or other adenovirus genes in addition to E1A and E1B, including E2A and E4. Immunoblotting analysis using E1B polyclonal antiserum further indicated that progression was not associated with changes in the levels of an Mr 21,000 polypeptide encoded by E1B. Similarly, immunoprecipitation analysis with an Ad2 E1A monoclonal antibody indicated similar levels of the Mr 55,000 and 48,000 E1A polypeptides, as well as coprecipitated proteins of Mr 300,000, 107,000 and 105,000 [which is the retinoblastoma (Rb) protein], in E11 and E11-NMT cells. Immunoprecipitation of cell lysates with a monoclonal antibody specific for the Mr 105,000 Rb protein further demonstrated that progression also was not associated with a change in the level or state of phosphorylation of the Rb protein. However, transfection of a human Rb gene (also containing a neomycin resistance gene) into Ad5-transformed RE cells was more inhibitory, with respect to formation of G418-resistant colonies, in unprogressed than in progressed Ad5-transformed RE cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Analysis of viral and cellular gene expression during progression and suppression of the transformed phenotype in type 5 adenovirus-transformed rat embryo cells. 192 6

Upstream sequences of the human P450IA1 gene were inserted into a promoterless expression vector (pSVO-cat) containing the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene, with and without the Harvey murine sarcoma virus (Ha-MSV) core enhancer, and either plasmid was transfected into human breast carcinoma MCF-7 and MDA-231 and mouse hepatoma Hepa-1 cell lines. In most instances constitutive and inducible CAT activities in the transient CAT expression assay were similar (within 3-fold) to those in the stable transformation CAT assay (selection of G418-resistant colonies following co-transfection with pSV2-neo). In the case of Ha-MSV-containing constructs stably integrated in the two human breast cancer lines, however, CAT expression was more than two orders of magnitude greater than that transiently expressed in these cells. Since the major difference between these two assays is plasmid copy number, these data suggest the presence of limiting amounts of tissue-specific positive-control enhancer-binding factor(s) in the breast carcinoma cell lines.
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PMID:Human P45IA1 upstream regulatory sequences expressing the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene. Effect of Ha-MSV enhancer and comparison of transient with stable transformation assays. 282 73

A recombinant murine retrovirus was constructed which contains, within its genome, a truncated version of the gene encoding the murine H-2Ld major histocompatibility antigen. The H-2Ld gene, which was inserted 3' of the env splice acceptor site in the recombinant retrovirus MSV-neo, lacked the 5' promoter and TATA sequences and the 3' transcription termination and polyadenylate addition sites of the normal H-2Ld gene. Transfection of the MSV-neo/H-2Ld plasmid (pLTV-11) into Y-2 cells resulted in the production of the transmissible recombinant retrovirus LTV-11. Cells infected with LTV-11 virus were resistant to the eucaryotic antibiotic G418 and expressed H-2Ld on the cell surface. These infected cells contained a viral RNA species which possessed both the H-2Ld and the neomycin resistance gene sequences but did not contain significant levels of the smaller H-2Ld-specific mRNA. The H-2Ld antigen expressed on the surface of infected cells functioned as a target for cytolytic T cells specific for the H-2Ld antigen.
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PMID:H-2Ld antigen encoded by a recombinant retrovirus genome is expressed on the surface of infected cells. 299 61

2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) is known to interact with a cytosolic receptor and, in turn, activate transcription of the mouse P1(450) gene. Various lengths of DNA upstream of the P1(450) gene were inserted into the pSV0-cat expression vector, with and without addition of the Harvey murine sarcoma virus (Ha-MSV) 72-bp repeat enhancer element. The constructs were cotransfected with pSV2-neo into mouse hepatoma wild-type cells and two variant cell lines. One variant is believed to result from a mutation in the P1(450) structural gene and expresses high levels of P1(450) mRNA constitutively; the other variant has a defect in nuclear translocation of the inducer-receptor complex. After selection in G418, the cells were treated with control medium, TCDD, cycloheximide, or TCDD plus cycloheximide and then assayed for chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) activity. The data are consistent with the presence of several functional regions within the upstream sequence: a promoter region, a region that is negatively autoregulated, possible repressor-binding and inducer-receptor complex-binding sites, and an upstream activation element that is required for transcriptional activation by TCDD. The Ha-MSV enhancer can substitute for this upstream activation element.
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PMID:Autoregulation plus upstream positive and negative control regions associated with transcriptional activation of the mouse P1(450) gene. 299 46

raf oncogenes have been implicated in hepatic carcinogenesis. We studied the effects of the v-raf of murine retrovirus 3611-MSV on the growth and differentiation of a simian virus 40 (SV40)-immortalized rat liver cell line (ALB-8) which maintained many of characteristics of differentiated hepatocytes. Cells were co-transfected with v-raf and the neo gene followed by selection with G418 for transfectants. In culture, the expression of v-raf stimulated cell proliferation without altering cell morphology or expression of liver-specific genes: albumin, fibrinogen, alpha-1-antitrypsin and alpha-1-acid glycoprotein. The v-raf-transfected cells induced rapidly growing tumors in 100% of nude mice, while control DNA-transfected cells were only weakly tumorigenic, producing slowly growing tumors in 2/7 mice after a long latency. These slowly growing tumors were histologically moderately to well-differentiated hepatocellular carcinomas in which the liver-specific genes were highly expressed. In contrast, v-raf-induced tumors were histologically poorly differentiated and showed a dramatic decline in the expression of the liver-specific genes. In a tumor cell culture established from a v-raf-induced tumor, however, expression of the liver-specific genes was coordinately recovered. These observations indicate that v-raf is capable of inducing progression of SV40-immortalized hepatocytes into highly malignant cells and the progression is accompanied by loss, in vivo, of the hepatic differentiation.
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PMID:The v-raf oncogene enhances tumorigenicity and suppresses differentiation in vivo in a rat hepatocyte cell line. 768 80

In producing mutant mice by gene targeting in embryonic stem (ES) cells, the efficient isolation of the homologous recombinants is still a critical step. We previously reported on a negative selection using the diphtheria toxin A (DT-A) fragment gene for homologous recombinants (1). It was efficient but limited to gene loci expressed in ES cells. For wider applicability of this negative selection to many gene loci not expressed or expressed at low levels in ES cells, we exploited a novel targeting vector composed of a polyA-less neo gene, a mRNA destabilizing signal, a pausing signal for RNA polymerase II from the minute virus of mice, and the DT-A gene. There was about a 30-fold decrease in frequency of G418-resistant colonies with this strategy against that using only the neo gene in the vector, and homologous recombinants were obtained at frequencies of more than 1/50 among G418 resistant cells at fyn, csk, c-mos, and insulin receptor substrate-1 gene loci.
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PMID:A novel negative selection for homologous recombinants using diphtheria toxin A fragment gene. 825 Feb 58

In order to determine the physiological significance of c-mos RNA expression in somatic cells, we introduced antisense c-mos under the control of an inducible promoter. NIH/3T3 cells were stably transfected with antisense mos under the control of the mouse mammary tumor virus long terminal repeat (MMTV-LTR). Positive transfectants were selected under G418 conditions. Following selection, NIH/3T3 cells that received the antisense mos failed to form foci, whereas sense mos transfected cells grew normally. Moreover, v-mos-transformed cells were unaffected by antisense mos transfection. Of: interest, NIH/3T3 antisense mos transfectants that survived selection were growth-arrested. Nuclear abnormalities and the extrusion of microvesicles containing cellular material were observed in these cells. In order to rescue these cells from growth inhibition, the v-mos gene was introduced into cells by acute infection with Moloney murine sarcoma virus. Following infection, these cells resumed growth and became rapidly transformed. In other experiments, mouse C2 cells stably transfected with antisense mos showed a slower growth rate and gross morphological changes. C2 cells containing antisense mos under the control of mouse metallothionein-1 promoter had a large and flattened morphology and a relatively high percentage (30%) of binucleated cells. Our results indicate that basal level expression of antisense mos (under uninduced conditions) results in either arrested or retarded cell growth. The phenotypes exhibited in both cell lines leads us to suggest that the c-mos expression may play a role in mitotic progression in some somatic cells, in particular affecting cytokinesis.
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PMID:The biological effects of antisense mos expression in fibroblasts. 2152 18