Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:1.16.3.1 (ceruloplasmin)
5,074 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To characterize the mechanisms determining tissue-specific ceruloplasmin gene expression during development, the rat ceruloplasmin gene was isolated in a series of overlapping phage clones. The 5'-flanking region was characterized and the transcription initiation site was identified by primer extension and RNase protection. Nucleotide sequence analysis of this region revealed a typical eukaryotic promotor structure, but no obvious homology with cis-acting elements previously characterized as determining tissue-specific gene expression. Transient expression of chimeric ceruloplasmin-reporter gene constructs containing up to 5200 base pairs (bp) of the 5'-flanking region revealed that sequences 732 bp upstream of the start nucleotide were sufficient to confer hepatocyte-specific expression. The region from -393 to -348 was determined by deletion analysis to contain a positive-acting element, and includes sequence partially homologous to the rat albumin D site. Mobility shift analysis revealed that this region specifically binds a heat-labile nuclear protein from rat liver and from newborn but not adult rat lung. Binding to this region was competed by oligonucleotides corresponding to the albumin D site, but not by oligonucleotides corresponding to binding sites for the hepatocyte transcription factors HNF-1, HNF-3, HNF-4, and C/EBP. These data indicate that ceruloplasmin gene expression is determined in part by a cis-acting region 393 bp upstream of the transcription start site, which binds a previously uncharacterized nuclear protein. The tissue distribution of this nuclear protein suggests that it plays a role in directing ceruloplasmin gene expression in lung and liver during development.
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PMID:Structural and functional analysis of the 5'-flanking region of the rat ceruloplasmin gene. 173 Jun 11

A site of rat DNA (about 1800 b. p.) adjacent to the first ceruloplasmin gene contains, apart from regulatory sequences common for all eukaryotic promotors, cis-elements, which are potential binding sites for soluble nuclear receptors of some hormones. Sequences characteristic of genes expressed in liver cells and mammary gland cells during lactation were detected. Full-length fragment of this locus of ceruloplasmin gene (1800 b. p.) was synthesized by PCR and used in gel shift experiments. It was found that soluble proteins extracted from purified nuclei of mammary gland cells during lactation and from the liver of adult and newborn rats, contain proteins specifically interacting with the PCR product. A fragment of chromosome gene containing exons encoding the central part of rat ceruloplasmin was cloned in pTZ19 bacterial vector. Gel shift assay showed that the cloned fragment contained binding sites for specific transcription factor YY1, whose level in nuclear protein fractions varied during ontogeny (according to immunoblotting data). Monoclonal antibodies detected protein YY1 in the complex of cloned DNA-nuclear proteins. Possible mechanisms of tissue-specific regulation of ceruloplasmin gene varying during ontogeny are discussed.
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PMID:Regulation of ceruloplasmin gene in mammals. 1545 25