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)

We previously identified a major enhancer of the mouse ferritin H gene (FER-1) that is central to repression of the ferritin H gene by the adenovirus E1A oncogene (Tsuji, Y., Akebi, N., Lam, T. K., Nakabeppu, Y., Torti, S. V., and Torti, F. M. (1995) Mol. Cell. Biol. 15, 5152-5164). To dissect the molecular mechanism of transcriptional regulation of ferritin H, E1A mutants were tested for their ability to repress FER-1 enhancer activity using cotransfection with ferritin H-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter constructs. Here we report that p300/CBP transcriptional adaptor proteins are involved in the regulation of ferritin H transcription through the FER-1 enhancer element. Thus, E1A mutants that failed to bind p300/CBP lost the ability to repress FER-1, whereas mutants of E1A that abrogated its interaction with Rb, p107, or p130 were fully functional in transcriptional repression. Transfection with E1A did not affect endogenous p300/CBP levels, suggesting that repression of FER-1 by E1A is not due to repression of p300/CBP synthesis, but to E1A and p300/CBP interaction. In addition, we have demonstrated that transfection of a p300 expression plasmid significantly activated ferritin H-CAT containing the FER-1 enhancer, but had a marginal effect on ferritin H-CAT with FER-1 deleted. Furthermore, both wild-type p300 and a p300 mutant that failed to bind E1A but retained an adaptor function restored FER-1 enhancer activity repressed by E1A. Sodium butyrate, an inhibitor of histone deacetylase, mimicked p300/CBP function in activation of ferritin H-CAT and elevation of endogenous ferritin H mRNA, suggesting that the histone acetyltransferase activity of p300/CBP or its associated proteins may contribute to the activation of ferritin H transcription. Recruitment of these broadly active transcriptional adaptor proteins for ferritin H synthesis may represent an important mechanism by which changes in iron metabolism are coordinated with other cellular responses mediated by p300/CBP.
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PMID:Transcriptional regulation of the mouse ferritin H gene. Involvement of p300/CBP adaptor proteins in FER-1 enhancer activity. 1006 17

Lipofection, a lipid-mediated DNA transfection procedure, was used to transfect synchronized L929 mouse fibroblast cells with a reporter plasmid containing the bacterial chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene. The efficiency of gene expression was investigated on transfection of cells at different stages of the cell cycle. Our data show that expression of the reporter gene was minimal when transfection was performed in G0-phase and parallel experimental data disproved the possibility that the reduced expression observed was due to differential uptake at different times in the cell cycle. Investigation into the condensation state of the plasmid has shown that the low chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene expression could be a direct consequence of the packaging of the plasmid into condensed chromatin when transfection occurs in G0-phase. The inactivation of the reporter gene is not reversed by growth of the cells in high serum or by treatment with Trichostatin A, a specific inhibitor of histone deacetylase, suggesting that the inactive chromatin formed in G0-phase cells lacks associated histone acetylase activity. In contrast, the high activity seen when cells in S-phase are transfected is enhanced even further by treatment with Trichostatin A.
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PMID:Efficiency of expression of transfected genes depends on the cell cycle. 1063 9

The androgen receptor (AR) is a member of the steroid receptor superfamily that binds to the androgen response element to regulate target gene transcription. AR may need to interact with some selected coregulators for maximal or proper androgen function. Here we report the isolation of a new AR coregulator with a calculated molecular mass of 267 kDa named the androgen receptor-associated protein 267-alpha (ARA267-alpha). ARA267-alpha contains 2427 amino acids, including one Su(var)3-9, Enhancer-of-zeste, and Trithorax (SET) domain, two LXXLL motifs, three nuclear translocation signal (NLS) sequences, and four plant homeodomain (PHD) finger domains. Northern blot analyses reveal that ARA267-alpha is expressed predominantly in the lymph node as 13- and 10-kilobase transcripts. HepG2 is the only cell line tested that does not express ARA267-alpha. Yeast two-hybrid and glutathione S-transferase pull-down assays show that both the N and C terminus of ARA267-alpha interact with the AR DNA- and ligand-binding domains. Unlike other coregulators, such as CBP, which enhance the interaction between the N and C terminus of AR, we found that ARA267-alpha had little influence on the interaction between the N and C terminus of AR. Luciferase and chloramphenicol acetyltransferase assays show that ARA267-alpha can enhance AR transactivation in a dihydrotestosterone-dependent manner in PC-3 and H1299 cells. ARA267-alpha can also enhance AR transactivation with other coregulators, such as ARA24 or PCAF, a histone acetylase, in an additive manner. Together, our data demonstrate that ARA267-alpha is a new AR coregulator containing the SET domain with an exceptionally large molecular mass that can enhance AR transactivation in prostate cancer cells.
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PMID:Identification and characterization of a novel androgen receptor coregulator ARA267-alpha in prostate cancer cells. 1150 67

The versatile plant acyltransferase (VPAT) family is a recently identified protein family consisting of acyltransferases involved in secondary metabolism in plants along with numerous homologues with as yet unidentified biochemical functions. Malonyl-CoA:anthocyanin 5-O-glucoside-6' "-O-malonyltransferase of Salvia splendens flowers (Ss5MaT1) is a member of this family that catalyzes the regiospecific transfer of the malonyl group from malonyl-CoA to the 6' "-hydroxyl group of the 5-glycosyl moiety of anthocyanins. To elucidate the mechanism and functional amino acid residues of VPAT family enzymes, steady-state kinetic analyses and site-directed mutagenesis of Ss5MaT1 guided by sequence comparison studies were carried out. On the basis of the results of product and dead-end inhibition studies as well as sequence comparison studies, the kinetic mechanism of Ss5MaT1 could be most consistently described in terms of a ternary complex mechanism in which both substrates and the enzyme form a complex before catalysis can occur, as in the case of chloramphenicol O-acetyltransferase (CAT) and histone acetyltransferase (HAT). Eight polar or ionizable amino acid residues that are invariant among 12 VPAT family enzymes were replaced by alanine, and the mutant enzymes were kinetically characterized. A significant diminution of the k(cat) value was observed with the substitution of His167 (relative k(cat), 0.02%) and Asp390 (<0.01%), strongly suggesting that His167 and Asp390 are very important for catalytic activity. The log k(cat) versus pH plots of the Ss5MaT1-catalyzed malonyl transfer suggested that a deprotonated active site group of pK(a) = 7.0 +/- 0.1 may be involved in the catalytic steps of the "substrate to product" conversion in the ternary enzyme-substrate complex. Taking these lines of evidence together with the suggested similarity of the kinetic and catalytic mechanisms of Ss5MaT1 to those of CAT and HAT, the following Ss5MaT1 mechanism based on general acid/base catalysis was proposed: in the ternary complex, a general base deprotonates the 6' "-hydroxyl group of the anthocyanin substrate, thereby promoting a nucleophilic attack on the carbonyl of the thioester of malonyl-CoA; His167 and Asp390 appear to be involved in the general acid/base mechanism of Ss5MaT1.
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PMID:Proposed mechanism and functional amino acid residues of malonyl-CoA:anthocyanin 5-O-glucoside-6'''-O-malonyltransferase from flowers of Salvia splendens, a member of the versatile plant acyltransferase family. 1257 91

The human progesterone receptor (PR) contains multiple Ser-Pro phosphorylation sites that are potential substrates for cyclin-dependent kinases, suggesting that PR activity might be regulated during the cell cycle. Using T47D breast cancer cells stably transfected with an mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter (Cat0) synchronized in different phases of the cell cycle, we found that PR function and phosphorylation is remarkably cell cycle dependent, with the highest activity in S phase. Although PR expression was reduced in the G2/M phase, the activity per molecule of receptor was markedly reduced in both G1 and G2/M phases compared to the results seen with the S phase of the cell cycle. Although PR is recruited to the MMTV promoter equivalently in the G1 and S phases, recruitment of SRC-1, SRC-3, and, consequently, CBP is reduced in G1 phase despite comparable expression levels of SRC-1 and SRC-3. In G2/M phase, site-specific phosphorylation of PR at Ser162 and at Ser294, a site previously reported to be critical for transcriptional activity and receptor turnover, was abolished. Treatment with the histone deacetylase inhibitor trichostatin A elevated G1 and G2/M activity to that of the S phase, indicating that the failure to recruit sufficient levels of active histone acetyltransferase is the primary defect in PR-mediated transactivation.
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PMID:Human progesterone receptor displays cell cycle-dependent changes in transcriptional activity. 1579 79