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

Glutamine synthetase catalyzes the formation of glutamine from glutamate and ammonia. It plays a central role in both amino acid neurotransmitter metabolism and ammonia detoxification in the central nervous system. Glutamine synthetase expression is regulated in developmental, hormonal, and in tissue- and cell-specific manners. We have cloned a full-length cDNA coding for rat glutamine synthetase, and have found an AT-rich area of conservation in the 3' untranslated regions between rat, mouse, and chicken, which may play a part in the regulation of the stability of the glutamine synthetase message. We have also cloned and mapped the gene coding for rat glutamine synthetase, and identified, by sequence analysis, areas potentially important for the regulation of glutamine synthetase transcription. Transient transfection of a variety of cell lines with deletion constructs of the glutamine synthetase promoter driving a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter gene functionally demonstrates regions of the promoter containing elements important for transcriptional regulation.
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PMID:Cloning and functional characterization of the rat glutamine synthetase gene. 167 54

Glutamine synthetase (GS) converts ammonia and glutamate into glutamine. We assessed the activity of the 5' regulatory region of the GS gene in developing transgenic mice carrying the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene under the control of 3150 bp of the upstream sequence of the rat GS gene to obtain insight into the spatiotemporal regulation of its pattern of expression. To determine the organ-specific activity of the 5' regulatory region CAT and GS mRNA expression were compared by ribonuclease-protection and semi-quantitative in situ hybridization analyses. Three patterns were observed: the 5' region is active and involved in the regulation of GS expression throughout development (pericentral hepatocytes, intestines and epididymis); the 5' region shows no activity at any of the ages investigated (periportal hepatocytes and white adipose tissue); and the activity of the 5' region becomes repressed during development (stomach, muscle, brown adipose tissue, kidney, lung and testis). In the second group, an additional element must be responsible for the activation of GS expression. The last group included organs in which the 5' regulatory region is active, but not in the cells that express GS. In these organs, the activity of the 5' regulatory region must be repressed by other regulatory regions of the GS gene that are missing from the transgenic construct. These findings indicate that in addition to the 5' regulatory region, at least two unidentified elements are involved in the spatiotemporal pattern of expression of GS.
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PMID:Organ-specific activity of the 5' regulatory region of the glutamine synthetase gene in developing mice. 934 14