Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:2.3.1.28 (
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
)
5,100
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) is an endogenous murine retrovirus that is expressed in the epithelial cells of the mammary and salivary glands, lungs, kidneys, and
seminal vesicles
and in the lymphoid cells of the spleen and thymus. Several studies have shown that the long terminal repeat (LTR) of this virus can direct the expression of reporter genes to the same tissues in transgenic mice. To determine whether multiple regulatory elements within the LTR are involved in this tissue-specific expression, we have established lines of transgenic mice containing transgenes that have deletions in the MMTV LTR. Deletions of all LTR sequences upstream of -364 or of LTR sequences from -165 to -665 both result in the expression of linked reporter genes such as the simian virus 40 early region or the bacterial enzyme
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
in novel sites, such as the heart, brain, and skeletal muscle; expression of endogenous MMTV and transgenes containing the full-length LTR is not detected in these organs. Negative regulation appears to involve more than one region, since deletion of sequences between either -201 and -471 or -201 and -344, as well as sequences upstream of -364, results in inappropriate expression in heart, brain, and skeletal muscle. Therefore, a negative regulatory element(s) in the MMTV LTR can suppress transcription from the viral promoter in several different organs. This represents the first example of generalized negative regulatory elements that act in many different tissues in transgenic mice to prevent inappropriate expression of a gene.
...
PMID:Negative regulation in correct tissue-specific expression of mouse mammary tumor virus in transgenic mice. 170 Feb 74
An expression cassette carrying 426 basepairs of the rat probasin (PB) gene promoter and 28 basepairs of 5'-untranslated region is sufficient to target the expression of the bacterial
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
(
CAT
) gene specifically to the prostate in transgenic mice. The PB-
CAT
transgene was expressed in three of five (60%) independent lines of mice, and this expression, as reported previously for the endogenous rat gene, was male specific, restricted primarily to the lateral, dorsal, and ventral lobes of the prostate, with only very low levels of
CAT
activity detected in the anterior prostate and
seminal vesicles
. The developmental and hormonal regulation of the transgene also paralleled that reported for the rat gene, with a 70-fold increase in
CAT
activity in the mouse prostate observed between 2-7 weeks of age, a time corresponding to sexual maturation. PB-
CAT
activity in the prostate declined after castration to 3.5% of the precastration level, and the
CAT
activity in castrated males approached precastration levels when mice were supplemented with testosterone. Transgene expression in castrated males was not induced by dexamethasone. Coinjection of PB-
CAT
with a chicken lysozyme gene matrix attachment region resulted in their cointegration and further restricted the pattern of PB-
CAT
to the dorsolateral prostate, with suppressed expression observed in the ventral prostate. These studies demonstrate that a minimal rat probasin promoter can target heterologous gene expression specifically to the prostate in a developmentally and hormonally regulated fashion.
...
PMID:The rat probasin gene promoter directs hormonally and developmentally regulated expression of a heterologous gene specifically to the prostate in transgenic mice. 817 Apr 79