Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.3.1.28 (chloramphenicol acetyltransferase)
5,100 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In the present study, the mechanism by which dexamethasone (DEX) inhibited IL-1beta gene expression in bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-activated RAW 264.7 cells was investigated. The decrease in LPS-induced IL-1beta mRNA expression was demonstrated by quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Since the promoter in IL-1beta gene contains binding motifs for NF-kappaB/Rel, AP-1, NF-IL6, and CREB/ATF, which appear to be important in LPS-mediated IL-1beta induction, the effects of DEX on the activation of these transcription factors were examined. Treatment of DEX to RAW 264.7 cells induced a dose-related inhibition of NF-kappaB/Rel and AP-1 in chloramphenicol acetyltransferase activity, while neither NF-IL6 nor CREB/ATF activation was affected by DEX. Treatment of RAW 264.7 cells with DEX inhibited DNA binding of NF-kappaB/Rel and AP-1 proteins to their cognate DNA sites as measured by electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA). DEX treatment caused a significant reduction in nuclear c-rel, p65, and p50 protein contents, and these decreases were paralleled by the accumulation of cytoplasmic c-rel, p65, and p50. DEX treatment of RAW 264.7 cells did not inhibit the nuclear translocation of c-jun and c-fos. We found that the inhibition of IL-1beta production by DEX is not related to p38, which is important in the IL-1beta induction. These results suggest that DEX may inhibit IL-1beta gene expression by a mechanism involving the blocking of LPS-induced NF-kappaB/Rel and AP-1 activation.
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PMID:Dexamethasone inhibits IL-1 beta gene expression in LPS-stimulated RAW 264.7 cells by blocking NF-kappa B/Rel and AP-1 activation. 1093 15

DNA polymerase delta consists of at least four subunits: p125, p68, p50, and p12 [Liu et al., J. Biol. Chem. 275 (2000) 18739-18744]. We have isolated genomic DNA clones covering the gene for the human DNA polymerase delta 50 kDa subunit (POLD2) and its 5'-flanking sequence. The POLD2 gene is composed of 11 exons and is distributed over 10 kb of genomic DNA. All exon-intron splice junctions conformed to the GT/AG consensus sequence. The 5'-flanking region of human POLD2 is G+C-rich and does not have a typical TATA box. A computer-based search for potential transcription factor binding sites revealed the existence of a number of motifs including those for AP1, AP2, Sp1, NF-1 and CREB. The functional activity of the regulatory region of the human POLD2 gene was demonstrated by its ability to drive the expression of a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter gene in COS-7 cells.
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PMID:Characterization of the 5'-flanking region of the gene encoding the 50 kDa subunit of human DNA polymerase delta. 1097 29

Reactivation of latent cytomegalovirus (CMV) is an important cause of disease in susceptible patients. We previously demonstrated that an adenovirus early gene product can transactivate the CMV major immediate early (IE) promoter in inflammatory cells. This effect was due to the conserved region 3 (CR3) of the adenovirus E1A 13S gene product. There are two domains in the CR3 region, a zinc finger (aa 147-177) and a carboxyl (aa 180-188) domain. Both are crucial for transactivation of downstream promoter elements of adenovirus in E1A 13S. We sought to determine if either or both of these specific domains is also necessary for transactivation of the CMV IE promoter by the adenovirus E1A 13S gene product. We cotransfected T-lymphocyte Jurkat cells and monocyte/macrophage-like THP-1 cells with plasmids expressing wild-type (WT) or CR3 mutant E1A 13S and a CMV IE chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter construct. With extracts of cells coinfected with E1A WT set to 100%, mutation in the zinc finger domain, the carboxyl domain, or both domains decreased CMV IE CAT activity by >/= 96%. In contrast, a mutation in the region between the zinc finger and carboxyl domains reduced CMV IE CAT activity by only 24 to 26%. Mixing studies in Jurkat cells confirmed the importance of these domains. We also evaluated the active site of the CMV IE promoter involved in transactivation in THP-1 cells using CMV IE promoter deletions and single promoter element constructs. These studies showed that progressive deletion of the 19-bp CMV IE repeats containing cyclic AMP response element binding protein/activating transcription factor (CREB/ATF) sites resulted in progressive loss of activity. The importance of this element was confirmed using single promoter elements containing CMV IE 16-, 18-, 19-, and 21-bp repeats. Finally, using a 19-bp single promoter element construct and the CR3 mutants we demonstrated that mutations in the zinc finger (C171S) carboxyl region (S185N) or both regions (C171S/ S185N) resulted in significant (83, 94, and 85%) loss of activity. We conclude that the zinc finger and carboxyl domains of the CR3 region of E1A 13S are necessary for transactivation of the CMV promoter and that this occurs mainly through activation of the 19-bp CREB/ATF site of the promoter.
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PMID:Zinc finger and carboxyl regions of adenovirus E1A 13S CR3 are important for transactivation of the cytomegalovirus major immediate early promoter by adenovirus. 1106 46

The CDC37 gene was isolated from a round-spotted pufferfish genomic library and characterized. This gene is composed of nine exons spanning 3.5 kb. Exon 1 contains the 5'-untranslated region and exon 2 contains the putative translation initiation site. By 5'-RACE (rapid amplication of cDNA ends) and sequence analysis, we deduced the promoter region for the CDC37 gene and found that it does not contain typical TATA or CCAAT box. The 1.8 kb DNA fragment upstream of the putative transcription initiation site contains numerous potential binding sites for transcription factors including CREB, E2A, Ets-1, GATA, NF-IL6 and PEA3. When this DNA fragment was placed upstream of the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter gene and transfected into a carp CF cell line, it could drive the synthesis of CAT enzyme four times more efficiently than the promoterless pCAT-Basic did. In addition, the CDC37 gene is linked to the TYK2 gene in a tail-to-head manner with a small intergenic region of 292 bp.
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PMID:Genomic organization and the promoter region of the round-spotted pufferfish (Tetraodon fluviatilis) CDC37 gene. 1107 77

We have recently shown that IL-3R occupancy activates a phosphatidylcholine-specific phospholipase C, and the sustained diacylglycerol accumulation subsequently activates protein kinase C (PKC). In human IL-3-dependent myeloid cells (TF-1), the novel PKCepsilon isoform regulates bcl-2 expression and cell survival. The report of a PKC activatable cAMP response element (CRE) in the bcl-2 promoter and a role for PKC in bcl-2 expression in B cells led us to the hypothesis that PKC phosphorylation activates transcription factor CREB after IL-3R engagement. We found that IL-3 and GM-CSF induced phosphorylation of CREB on Ser(133) in TF-1 cells, and this phosphorylation was blocked by two structurally unrelated classes of PKC inhibitors. An inhibitor of cyclic nucleotide-dependent kinases did not block this phosphorylation. IL-4, which is biologically active in these cells but does not use the beta common subunit, did not phosphorylate CREB on Ser(133). Inhibition of mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase activity also inhibited IL3-induced CREB phosphorylation. The PKC inhibitors, but not a cyclic nucleotide-dependent kinase inhibitor, blocked IL-3 activation of CRE-dependent transcription from an egr-1 promoter/chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter construction transiently transfected into TF-1 cells. Finally, TF-1 cells stably overexpressing PKCepsilon, but not the delta isoform of PKC, enhanced CRE-dependent CAT expression from the promoter/reporter construction. Therefore, it is likely that a PKCepsilon kinase cascade resulting in CREB phosphorylation represents a novel signal transduction cascade for regulating cellular gene expression through the beta common cytokine receptor.
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PMID:betac cytokine receptor-induced stimulation of cAMP response element binding protein phosphorylation requires protein kinase C in myeloid cells: a novel cytokine signal transduction cascade. 1159 53

We previously reported that expression of the T-cell receptor (TCR) alpha and lck genes is extinguished in hybrids between mouse T-lymphoma EL4 cells and mouse fibroblast B82 cells. In the present study, we found that the activities of the TCRalpha minimum enhancer and the lck promoter monitored by the luciferase or chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) assays were markedly inhibited in the hybrids. Expression of the TCF-1, LEF-1, GATA-3, Ikaros, c-myb and Fli-1 genes, which encode the haematopoietic cell-restricted transcription factors that appear to be responsible for the activities of the enhancer and the promoter, was fully extinguished or markedly suppressed in the hybrids. On the other hand, expression of the transcription factor genes observed in both parental cells, such as the AML1 and c-ets-1 genes, and that of the genes encoding ubiquitously expressed transcription factors, such as the E2A, CREB and c-ets-2 genes, was not significantly suppressed in the hybrids. These results suggest that the genes encoding haematopoietic cell-restricted transcription factors are targets for negative regulation in fibroblastic background and that the repression of these genes may consequently lead to suppression of the promoter and/or enhancer activities of several T-cell-specific structural genes in T-lymphoma x fibroblast cell hybrids.
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PMID:Extinction of expression of the genes encoding haematopoietic cell-restricted transcription factors in T-lymphoma x fibroblast cell hybrids. 1168 56

The ORF74 or vGCR gene encoded by Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV; also called human herpesvirus 8) has properties of a ligand-independent membrane receptor signaling protein with angiogenic properties that is predicted to play a key role in the biology of the virus. We have examined the expression of vGCR mRNA and protein in primary effusion lymphoma (PEL) cell lines, PEL and multicentric Castleman's disease (MCD) tumors, Kaposi's sarcoma lesions and infected endothelial cell cultures. The vGCR gene proved to be expressed in PEL cell lines as a large spliced bicistronic mRNA of 3.2 kb that also encompasses the upstream vOX2 (K14) gene. This mRNA species was induced strongly by phorbol ester (TPA) and sodium butyrate treatment in the BCBL-1 cell line, but only weakly in the HBL6 cell line, and was classified as a relatively late and low-abundance delayed early class lytic cycle gene product. A complex bipartite upstream lytic cycle promoter for this mRNA was nestled within the intron of the 5'-overlapping but oppositely oriented latent-state transcription unit for LANA1/vCYC-D/vFLIP and responded strongly to both TPA induction and cotransfection with the KSHV RNA transactivator protein (RTA or ORF50) in transient reporter gene assays. A vGCR protein product of 45 kDa that readily dimerized was detected by Western blotting and in vitro translation and was localized in a cytoplasmic and membrane pattern in DNA-transfected Vero and 293T cells or adenovirus vGCR-transduced dermal microvascular endothelial cells (DMVEC) as detected by indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA) and immunohistochemistry with a specific rabbit anti-vGCR antibody. Similarly, a subfraction of KSHV-positive cultured PEL cells and of KSHV (JSC-1) persistently infected DMVEC cells displayed cytoplasmic vGCR protein expression, but only after TPA or spontaneous lytic cycle induction, respectively. The vGCR protein was also detectable by immunohistochemical staining in a small fraction (0.5 to 3%) of the cells in PEL and MCD tumor and nodular Kaposi's sarcoma lesion specimens that were apparently undergoing lytic cycle expression. These properties are difficult to reconcile with the vGCR protein's playing a direct role in spindle cell proliferation, transformation, or latency, but could be compatible with proposed contributions to angiogenesis via downstream paracrine effects. The ability of vGCR to transactivate expression of both several KSHV promoter-driven luciferase (LUC) reporter genes and an NFkappaB motif containing the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter gene may also suggest an unexpected regulatory role in viral gene expression.
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PMID:Patterns of gene expression and a transactivation function exhibited by the vGCR (ORF74) chemokine receptor protein of Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus. 1188 67

The lactoferrin gene in the mouse uterus is a target gene for natural estrogens and xenoestrogens. One of the xenoestrogens is methyoxychlor, an insecticide that displays both estrogenic and antiandrogenic activities. Recently, methyoxychlor was found to stimulate lactoferrin gene expression in the uterus of an estrogen receptor null mouse. The present study is designed to uncover the methoxychlor response region in the mouse lactoferrin gene promoter. A series of different lengths of the mouse lactoferrin gene 5' flanking region were linked to a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter construct and transfected into human endometrial carcinoma HEC-1B cells, an estrogen receptor null cell line, in order to examine the methoxychlor response. The transfected cells were treated with methoxychlor or the metabolite of methoxychlor, HPTE, and the CAT reporter activities were measured. Constructs that contain a mouse lactoferrin 5' region longer than 100 bp were activated more than twofold by both methoxychlor and HPTE. The activation of the CAT reporter by the chemicals was dose dependent and reached saturation. Additional deletion mutants within the 100-bp region were tested, and a GC-rich sequence (GC-II) that we have previously characterized as an epidermal growth factor (EGF) response element was identified to be the region for the methoxychlor response. GC-II binds Sp1, Sp3, and IKLF transcription factors, collaborates with the AP1/CREB binding element, and confers the EGF response. Whether the effect of methoxychlor requires the AP1/CREB binding element has yet to be established; however, the present finding provides an alternative signaling pathway for the xenoestrogens.
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PMID:Methoxychlor stimulates the mouse lactoferrin gene promoter through a GC-rich element. 1190 39

Thyroid hormone receptors (TRs) and members of the myocyte enhancer factor 2 (MEF2) family are involved in the regulation of muscle-specific gene expression during myogenesis. Physical interaction between these two factors is required to synergistically activate gene transcription. p300/cAMP-response-element-binding-protein ('CREB')-binding protein (CBP) interacting with transcription factors is able to increase their activity on target gene promoters. We investigated the role of p300 in regulating the TR-MEF2A complex. To this end, we mapped the regions of these proteins involved in physical interactions and we evaluated the expression of a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter gene in U2OS cells under control of the alpha-myosin heavy chain promoter containing the thyroid hormone response element (TRE). Our results suggested a role of p300/CBP in mediating the transactivation effects of the TR-retenoid X receptor (RxR)-MEF2A complex. Our findings showed that the same C-terminal portion of p300 binds the N-terminal domains of both TR and MEF2A, and our in vivo studies demonstrated that TR, MEF2A and p300 form a ternary complex. Moreover, by the use of CAT assays, we demonstrated that adenovirus E1A inhibits activation of transcription by TR-RxR-MEF2A-p300 but not by TR-RxR-MEF2A. Our data suggested that p300 can bind and modulate the activity of TR-RxR-MEF2A at TRE. In addition, it is speculated that p300 might modulate the activity of the TR-RxR-MEF2A complex by recruiting a hypothetical endogenous inhibitor which may act like adenovirus E1A.
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PMID:p300/cAMP-response-element-binding-protein ('CREB')-binding protein (CBP) modulates co-operation between myocyte enhancer factor 2A (MEF2A) and thyroid hormone receptor-retinoid X receptor. 1237 7

The physiologic response to stress is highly dependent on the activation of corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) neurons by various neurotransmitters. A particularly rich innervation of hypophysiotropic CRH neurons has been detected by nerve fibers containing the neuropeptide PACAP, a potent activator of the cAMP-protein kinase A (PKA) system. Intracerebroventricular (icv) injections of PACAP also elevate steady-state CRH mRNA levels in the paraventricular nucleus (PVN), but it is not known whether PACAP effects can be associated with acute stress responses. Likewise, in cell culture studies, pharmacologic activation of the PKA system has stimulated CRH gene promoter activity through an identified cAMP response element (CRE); however, a direct link between PACAP and CRH promoter activity has not been established. In our present study, icv injection of 150 or 300 pmol PACAP resulted in robust phosphorylation of the transcription factor CREB in the majority of PVN CRH neurons at 15 to 30 min post-injection and induced nuclear Fos labeling at 90 min. Simultaneously, plasma corticosterone concentrations were elevated in PACAP-injected animals, and significant increases were observed in face washing, body grooming, rearing and wet-dog shakes behaviors. We investigated the effect of PACAP on human CRH promoter activity in alphaT3-1 cells, a PACAP-receptor expressing cell line. Cells were transiently transfected with a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter vector containing region - 663/+124 of the human CRH gene promoter then treated for with PACAP (100 nM) or with the adenylate cyclase activating agent, forskolin (2.5 muM). Both PACAP and forskolin significantly increased wild-type hCRH promoter activity relative to vehicle controls. The PACAP response was abolished in the CRE-mutant construct. Pretreatment of transfected cells with the PKA blocker, H-89, completely prevented both PACAP- and forskolin-induced increases in CRH promoter activity. Furthermore, CREB overexpression strongly enhanced PACAP-mediated stimulation of hCRH promoter activity, an effect which was also lost with mutation of the CRE. Thus, we demonstrate that icv PACAP administration to rats under non-stressed handling conditions leads to cellular, hormonal and behavioral responses recapitulating manifestations of the acute stress response. Both in vivo and in vitro data point to the importance of PACAP-mediated activation of the cAMP/PKA signaling pathway for stimulation of CRH gene transcription, likely via the CRE.
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PMID:Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) mimics neuroendocrine and behavioral manifestations of stress: Evidence for PKA-mediated expression of the corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) gene. 1588 14


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