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)

The fluoroquinolone antibiotic, ciprofloxacin (cipro), induces hyperproduction of interleukin 2 (IL-2) and interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) in stimulated human peripheral blood lymphocytes. In this investigation an enhanced and prolonged IL-2 and IL-2 mRNA response was also detected in both stimulated (T cell mitogens or alloantigens) murine splenocytes and in the stimulated murine T cell line EL-4 in the presence of ciprofloxacin (5-80 micrograms/ml) as compared to control cells without antibiotics. However, in contrast to human lymphocytes, IFN-gamma production was inhibited and IFN-gamma mRNA levels were unaffected at 24 h and only slightly upregulated at 48 and 72 h of culture in murine splenocytes incubated with cipro (20 micrograms/ml). EL-4 cells were transfected with a plasmid containing the IL-2 promoter and enhancer region linked to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter gene. Analysis of CAT activity revealed that cipro enhanced IL-2 gene induction. In addition, EL-4 cells incubated with ciprofloxacin showed an early peak and more activated nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT-1) as compared to control cells without antibiotics. Cipro did not affect the nuclear transcription factors AP-1 or NFIL-2A. Taken together, cipro inhibited IFN-gamma synthesis, but enhanced IL-2 production in murine lymphocytes by means of influencing NFAT-1 and causing an increased IL-2 transcription.
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PMID:Increased interleukin 2 transcription in murine lymphocytes by ciprofloxacin. 801 29

Prolonged expression of activated ras mutants resulted in both neoplastic transformation and suppression of serum-induced c-fos expression in Rat1 fibroblasts. Expression of other serum-inducible genes, including c-jun and beta-actin, was not suppressed in ras-transformed Rat1 cells, indicating that these effects are specific for c-fos and that growth-factor signal transduction pathways remain essentially intact. Run-on transcription studies indicated that c-fos transcription was blocked at the level of initiation in these cells. Transient transfection studies using 360 bp from the wild-type c-fos promoter as well as a series of mutated c-fos promoter fragments linked to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene indicated that repression of c-fos was mediated by approximately 49 bp immediately upstream of the dyad symmetry element (DSE). Deletion of this region, referred to as the upstream repressor region (URR), restored serum inducibility to the c-fos promoter in ras-transformed cells. In contrast, suppression of c-fos transcription was not affected by either deletion of 240 bp between the DSE and the TATA element or by base-substitution mutations that inactive the ternary complex factor and fos-AP-1-like binding sites. In addition, in vitro competition studies indicated that ras-transformed cells express one or more repressor factors that interact with as-yet-unidentified elements within the c-fos promoter (possibly the URR) and block serum induction of c-fos. These findings suggest that prolonged expression of activated ras results in the activation of one or more as-yet-unidentified proteins that suppress transcription of the c-fos gene by interacting with the URR.
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PMID:Mediation of suppression of c-fos transcription in rasT24-transformed rat cells by a cis-acting repressor element. 803 67

To define the mechanisms of 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA)-induced transcription of the ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) gene, we isolated a genomic clone (hODC41B) of ODC from a human leukocyte genomic DNA library. The restriction endonuclease map, in comparison with the previously published sequences of the human ODC gene, indicated that hODC41B contained a 15.7-kb sequence that extended from the sixth exon to about 10 kb upstream of the ODC gene. A 2.5-kb genomic fragment containing the 5' flanking region and the first exon was subcloned and sequenced. Sequence analysis revealed multiple putative promoter/enhancer elements (a TATA box, a CAAT box, 17 GC boxes, and a cAMP-responsive element) but no consensus AP-1 sequences (TGAGTCA) in the 2.5-kb 5' flanking region. However, three AP-1 sequences were located in introns 3, 5, and 11. We constructed a series of chimeric genes containing part of the first exon and increasingly longer 5' flanking sequences of the ODC gene fused to either bacterial chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) or luciferase reporter genes. TPA inducibility was determined by transient transfection and measurement of CAT or luciferase expression in HeLa cells. The induction of CAT activity by TPA decreased with decreasing lengths of the 5' flanking sequences up to nt -82. The TPA induction from the construct -72 ODC CAT was threefold to sevenfold, and the TPA inducibility of the same fragment was about ninefold to 30-fold with the luciferase reporter gene. Further deletion analysis revealed TPA-responsive sequences in ODC nt -42 to +54. Gel mobility shift assays using alpha-32P-end labeled ODC nt -42 to +60 revealed that nt -42 to +60 specifically bound HeLa cell nuclear proteins. HeLa cell nuclear protein binding to ODC nt -42 to +60 could not be completely competed by AP-1-, AP-2-, AP-3-, or SP1-responsive sequences.
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PMID:Non-AP-1 tumor promoter 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate-responsive sequences in the human ornithine decarboxylase gene. 804 98

The induction of the AP-1 transcription factor has been ascribed to the early events leading to T lymphocyte activation. We have examined the possibility that stimulation of phospholipase D (PLD) may regulate activation of transcription factor AP-1 in human T cells by transfecting human T lymphocyte Jurkat cells with a plasmid containing an AP-1 enhancer element and a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter gene. We have detected activatable PLD in Jurkat cells, and we have found that addition of phosphatidic acid (PA), the physiologic product of PLD action on phospholipids, is rapidly incorporated into Jurkat cells and leads to activation of transcription factor AP-1. Treatment of Jurkat cells with anti-CD3 mAb activated both PLD and transcription factor AP-1. Wortmannin, an inhibitor of receptor-coupled PLD activation, blocked the anti-CD3-induced increases in both PLD activity and AP-1 enhancer activity. We found a good correlation in the transfected cells between PLD activation and induction of AP-1 enhancer activity under different experimental conditions. Furthermore, ethanol, an inhibitor of the PLD pathway, blocked the anti-CD3-stimulated AP-1 enhancer activity. However, this anti-CD3-mediated response was not inhibited by neomycin, an inhibitor of phosphoinositide hydrolysis. The increases in AP-1 enhancer activity induced by PA or anti-CD3 mAb were efficiently abrogated by the presence of propranolol, an inhibitor of PA phosphohydrolase and protein kinase C (PKC). Furthermore, the PA- and the anti-CD3-induced increases in AP-1 enhancer activity were blocked by the presence of PKC inhibitors or by PKC down-regulation. These data indicate that PLD stimulation can activate the transcription factor AP-1 in T lymphocytes, and suggest that the induction of AP-1 enhancer factor activity by PA is mediated via PKC stimulation, either through a direct activating effect of PA or through PA-derived diacylglycerol formation. These data also provide evidence for a role of PLD-derived lipids in the induction of AP-1 enhancer activity resulting from stimulation of the TCR/CD3 complex, suggesting that increased PLD activity can play an important role in T lymphocyte activation.
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PMID:Involvement of phospholipase D in the activation of transcription factor AP-1 in human T lymphoid Jurkat cells. 807 60

Allelic deletions in the nm23, a metastasis suppressor gene, are known to occur in neuroblastomas, breast and colorectal carcinomas. Down-regulation of nm23 expression has been reported in various rodent and human tumor cells with high metastasis phenotype. Colorectal tumors showed overexpression of nm23. To elucidate the regulatory mechanisms of nm23, we isolated, cloned and sequenced the presumptive regulatory DNA fragment spanning the 5' region of the human nm23-H1 gene. The region's nucleotide sequence shows the presence of motifs typical for transcriptional elements such as TFIID, AP-1 and CTF/NF1. A common transcription initiation site is located at -136 upstream from the first ATG codon in placenta tissue, in breast, colorectal, prostate tumor cell lines and in primary colorectal tumor. Multiple transcription start sites were identified in tumor cell lines and colorectal tumor. When the promoter element was linked to a reporter gene, chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) and transfected in human 2fTGH cells, strong CAT activity was detected, which also showed that the presence of AP-1 and CTF/NF1 elements are essential for promoter activity. A detailed study of the structure and function of the promoter element of the nm23-H1 gene will help in understanding the regulatory mechanisms of nm23 expression and its role in tumor progression, especially in metastasis.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of the promoter region of human nm23-H1, a metastasis suppressor gene. 808 95

Multidrug resistance in mammalian cells is often associated with the overproduction of a membrane glycoprotein, P-glycoprotein, that is encoded by mdr genes. Multidrug resistance cell lines selected with either vinblastine, colchicine, or taxol from the drug-sensitive murine macrophage-like cell line J774.2 overexpress the mdr1a and/or mdr1b genes, and overproduce P-glycoprotein. To elucidate the mechanisms of mdr1b gene expression, the mdr1b 5'-flanking sequences have been isolated from a normal mouse liver genomic library and analyzed by gel shift and DNase I footprinting assays. These analyses have demonstrated three nuclear protein binding sites, from -82 to -59 (site 1), from -123 to -101 (site 2), and from -272 to -249 (site 3), which interact with proteins present in nuclear extracts from both sensitive and resistant cells. Although site 1 contains a partially conserved AP-2 consensus sequence, our results indicate that the nuclear protein binding to site 1 is not AP-2 protein. The sequence of site 2 is conserved in the murine mdr1a, human mdr1, and hamster pgp1 promoters. Such conservation suggests that this sequence may have an important role in mdr gene expression. The use of a transient chloramphenicol acetyltransferase expression vector containing the basal promoter for herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (tkCAT) and either site 1 or site 2 or both revealed that the sequences of sites 1 and 2 enhanced tkCAT activity. DNase I footprinting analyses demonstrated that site 3 is recognized by human AP-1 protein, indicating that the nuclear protein binding to this site is an AP-1-like protein. These observations suggest that mdr1b gene expression is mediated by preexisting transcription factors present in sensitive and resistant cells.
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PMID:Three distinct nuclear protein binding sites in the promoter of the murine multidrug resistance mdr1b gene. 809 13

We have stably expressed a trans-activation suppressing deletion mutant of the human c-jun gene (TAM-67) in the malignant mouse epidermal cell lines 10Gy5 and PDV. Expression of the p26 mJUN protein blocked both constitutive and inducible transcriptional trans-activation of several AP-1 responsive reporter chloramphenicol acetyltransferase constructs. p26 mJUN was able to block both 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) and okadaic acid induced expression of the mouse stromelysin gene in 10Gy5 cells and TPA induced expression of the urokinase-type plasminogen activator gene in PDV cells as determined by Northern analyses. Both genes contain TPA response elements in their promoter regions and are known to be AP-1 responsive. The presence of p26 mJUN in nuclear extracts, as determined by Western blotting, did not detectably alter the DNA binding activity of endogenous AP-1 as determined by gel shift analysis with an oligonucleotide containing a single high affinity AP-1 binding site. UV cross-linking studies coupled with Western analyses identified DNA bound cJUN but not mJUN in nuclear extracts of stably transfected cell lines, suggesting that the mutant JUN protein may exert some of its antioncogenic effects in malignant mouse epidermal cells by a mechanism(s) not involving DNA binding. Malignant mouse epidermal cells which stably expressed the mutant JUN protein were not only inhibited in their AP-1 trans-activation response, but also in their ability to form s.c. tumors in nude mice. These results indicate that inhibition of AP-1 mediated transcriptional trans-activation alone can be sufficient to suppress the tumorigenic phenotype in a subset of malignant mouse epidermal cells.
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PMID:Stable expression of a c-JUN deletion mutant in two malignant mouse epidermal cell lines blocks tumor formation in nude mice. 812 97

Nuclear protein binding sites in the long terminal repeat (LTR) of feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) were identified by the method of DNase I footprinting. Using nuclear protein extracts from a feline T lymphoma cell line, several discrete footprints were generated upstream of the transcriptional initiation site (-50 to -150). The specificity of protein binding was examined by competition with oligonucleotides representing consensus DNA binding sites for known transcription factors. Binding to AP-1 (-124) and ATF (-58) motifs was observed, with cross-competition between these sites. A strong footprint signal was also detected over a tandemly repeated C/EBP motif (-94, -86) and an adjacent weaker footprint was found to be specific for an NF1 motif (-72/-63). The effect on FIV LTR promoter activity of progressively deleting these nuclear factor binding sites was examined by linking LTR deletion mutants to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene. Deletion of the AP-1 site caused a 10- to 25-fold loss of CAT activity whereas deletion past the ATF site reduced activity virtually to background levels. The effects of deleting the C/EBP and NF1 sites were less marked and varied according to cell type. Transactivation of the LTR was assayed using constructs linked to a CAT reporter gene. The full-length FIV LTR was not significantly trans-activated. However, the expression of a deleted LTR construct lacking the AP-4/AP-1 site but retaining C/EBP and ATF sites was partially restored by co-infection with FIV or by co-transfection with an infectious molecular clone of FIV (FIV-PPR). These results show that host transcription factors responsive to cellular activation have a major role in regulating FIV expression, and suggest that virus-coded trans-activators acting through U3 may play a role in some cellular environments.
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PMID:Cis- and trans-regulation of feline immunodeficiency virus: identification of functional binding sites in the long terminal repeat. 812 51

The involvement of altered c-jun activity in medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA)-induced growth responses in human endometrial carcinoma cells is examined in this paper. Under conditions of MPA-induced growth inhibition, c-jun mRNA and protein levels are decreased in Ishikawa cells. This decrease is accompanied by an overall decrease in endogenous AP-1 activity in these cells. Only a transient decrease in c-jun mRNA level without any effect on endogenous AP-1 activity is seen in HEC-50 human endometrial carcinoma cells after MPA treatment. Increased expression and activity of c-jun was achieved in Ishikawa cells by transient transfection of Rous sarcoma virus (RSV)-c-jun alone or RSV-c-jun plus AP-1 binding sites (5x-4-beta-phorobol 12-myristate 13-acetate response element-thymidine kinase-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase), respectively. These treatments were accompanied by an increase in cell numbers due to MPA treatment in Ishikawa cells. In contrast, MPA treatment of mock-transfected, RSV-jun-B-transfected, or 5x-4 beta-phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate response element-thymidine kinase-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase alone transfected Ishikawa cells resulted in the expected decrease in cell numbers. The data presented in this paper are consistent with the hypothesis that altered c-jun activity in a target cell can alter proliferative responsiveness to MPA and suggest that such a mechanism may be associated with resistance to hormonal manipulative therapies used in the treatment of both human breast and endometrial cancer.
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PMID:Enhanced c-jun activity alters responsiveness to medroxyprogesterone acetate in Ishikawa human endometrial carcinoma cells. 814 69

The involvement of protein kinase C (PKC), a 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) receptor, in the transcriptional regulation of TPA-inducible genes was determined. Expression plasmids harboring full-length or kinase domain of PKC alpha and PKC delta (PKC alpha K and PKC delta K) were constructed. Transient transfection of PKC alpha K and PKC delta K into COS cells resulted in approximately 20- and 16-fold increase in phospholipid-, calcium-independent protein kinase activity. To determine the effects of overexpression of PKC alpha K and PKC delta K on the AP-1-mediated TPA-inducible genes, we transfected into COS cells the PKC alpha K or PKC delta K expression plasmids with collagenase chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter construct containing one TPA responsive element (TRE), or a construct containing five synthetic TRE linked to a thymidine kinase promoter. PKC alpha K or PKC delta K overexpression resulted in a comparable increase (approximately 4-fold) in CAT activity. However, CAT activity was not increased after transfection of PKC constructs with non-TPA responsive thyroid hormone responsive elements CAT construct (delta MTV-TyRE-pCAT). We also found that deletion of the AP-1-like motif in the SV40 promoter abolished the PKC alpha K or PKC delta K-induced activity of luciferase (luc) reporter constructs. Overexpression of full-length PKC delta in COS cells also increased the activity of the CAT construct with TRE after TPA treatment. We determined the effects of overexpression of PKC alpha K and PKC delta K on transcription of the ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) gene, which has a non-AP-1 TRE. Cotransfection of PKC alpha K or PKC delta K expression plasmids with a TPA-inducible ODC luc construct (-72/+130-ODC-luc) into HeLa cells resulted in an increased luc activity. These results indicate that both PKC alpha (calcium dependent) and PKC delta (calcium independent) may mediate the transcription of TPA-inducible genes through both AP-1 and non-AP-1 sequences.
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PMID:Involvement of protein kinase C in the transcriptional regulation of 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate-inducible genes modulated by AP-1 or non-AP-1 transacting factors. 814 84


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