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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)
Northern-blot analysis was used to demonstrate that an increase in extracellular glucose concentration increased the content of preproinsulin mRNA 2.3-fold in the beta-cell line HIT T15. A probe for the constitutively expressed glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase was used as a control. Mannoheptulose blocked this effect of glucose. A stimulatory effect on preproinsulin mRNA levels was also observed in response to mannose and to 4-methyl-2-oxopentanoate. However, galactose and arginine were ineffective. Glucagon, forskolin and dibutyryl cyclic AMP also elicited an increase in HIT-cell preproinsulin mRNA. The ability of the 5' upstream region of the preproinsulin gene to mediate the effect of glucose and other metabolites on transcription was studied by using a bacterial reporter gene technique. HIT cells were transfected with a plasmid, pOK1, containing the upstream region of the rat insulin-1 gene (-345 to +1) linked to
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
(
CAT
). Co-transfection with a plasmid pRSV beta-gal containing beta-galactosidase driven by the Rous sarcoma virus promoter was used as a control for the efficiency of transfection; expression of
CAT
activity in transfected HIT cells was normalized by reference to expression of beta-galactosidase. Glucose caused a dose-dependent increase in expression of
CAT
activity, with a half-maximal effect at 5.5 mM and a maximum response of 4-fold. Mannoheptulose blocked this effect of glucose. Other metabolites (mannose, 4-methyl-2-oxopentanoate and leucine plus glutamine) were also able to increase insulin promoter-driven
CAT
expression, but galactose and arginine were ineffective. The stimulatory effect of glucose on
CAT
expression was not blocked by verapamil and was inhibited by increasing extracellular Ca2+ from 0.4 to 5 mM. Both dibutyryl cyclic AMP and forskolin caused an increase in insulin promoter-driven gene expression in the presence of 1 mM-glucose, but neither agent further increased the level of expression occurring in the presence of a maximally stimulating glucose concentration. The phorbol ester phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) also increased insulin promoter-driven
CAT
expression in the presence of 1 mM-, but not 11 mM-glucose.
Staurosporine
blocked the stimulatory effect not only of PMA but also of glucose and of dibutyryl cyclic AMP. We conclude that the 5' upstream region of the insulin gene contains sequences responsible for mediating the stimulatory effect of glucose on insulin-gene transcription.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Control of insulin gene expression by glucose. 132 37
We have examined the effect of the protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor, staurosporine, on tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-induced cytotoxic action and augmentation of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) expression on the chronically HIV-infected T-cell line, MOLT-4/HIV (HTLV-IIIB strain).
Staurosporine
enhanced the decrease in the number of viable cells caused by TNF treatment for 3 days (1 ng/ml of TNF, 43% decrease; 1 ng/ml of TNF + 20 nM staurosporine, 94%), whereas the cytotoxic action on that cell line induced by 10 ng/ml of 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA), which was known to be an activator of PKC, was partially inhibited by staurosporine. In addition, staurosporine augmented the TNF cytotoxic activity against other cell lines including HIV-uninfected U937 cells(100 ng/ml of TNF, 53% decrease in the number of viable cells; 100 ng/ml of TNF + 5 nM staurosporine, 86%). However, staurosporine did not change the sensitivity of cells to TNF; thus, those insensitive to TNF were not changed to TNF sensitive by staurosporine. Furthermore, staurosporine did not affect the augmentative effect of TNF on HIV expression evaluated by levels of p24 antigen. Moreover, HIV long terminal repeat (LTR)-directed
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
assay showed that staurosporine strongly inhibited the TPA-induced activation of HIV LTR, while that caused by TNF was little affected (10 ng/ml of TPA, 98.4% conversion; 10 ng/ml of TPA + 40 nM staurosporine, 22.2%, 1 ng/ml of TNF, 98.5%; 10 ng/ml of TNF + 40 nM staurosporine, 93.9%). These results suggest that TPA and TNF facilitate HIV replication by different pathways and that staurosporine augments TNF cytotoxicity by possible suppression of PKC activity in both HIV-infected and uninfected cells.
...
PMID:Augmentation of cytotoxic effect of tumor necrosis factor on human immunodeficiency virus-infected cells by staurosporine, a potent protein kinase C inhibitor. 238 36
All-trans-retinoic acid (RA) and retinoids induce synthesis of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) in endothelial and neuroblastoma cells in vitro and in rats in vivo. In HT1080 fibrosarcoma cells, induction of t-PA-related antigen secretion and t-PA mRNA steady state levels by RA were found to depend on de novo protein and mRNA synthesis. Fragments derived from the 5'-flanking region of the t-PA gene (+197 to -9578 base pairs (bp)) were linked to the
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
gene. Transfection studies demonstrated that the region spanning bp -7145 to -9578 mediated induction by RA. A functional retinoic acid response element (RARE), consisting of a direct repeat of the GGGTCA motif spaced by 5 nucleotides (t-PA/DR5), was localized at -7.3 kilobases. The t-PA/DR5 element interacted with the heterodimer composed of retinoic acid receptor alpha and retinoid X receptor alpha in vitro, whereas its mutation abolished induction by RA in transient expression. In human EA.hy926 hybrid endothelial and in SK-N-SH neuroblastoma cells, the activity of t-PA/DR5 was found to be independent of the intervening sequence (-632 to -7144 bp) and of its distance from the transcription initiation site.
Staurosporine
, an inhibitor of protein kinase activity, inhibited induction by RA, suggesting that it required protein phosphorylation.
...
PMID:Retinoic acid induction of human tissue-type plasminogen activator gene expression via a direct repeat element (DR5) located at -7 kilobases. 770 55
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) generates reactive oxygen species which initiate the cytotoxic events of this tumor treatment. We demonstrate that PDT mediated oxidative stress induced a transient increase in the early response genes c-fos, c-jun, c-myc, and egr-1 in murine radiation-induced fibrosarcoma cells. Incubation of exponentially growing cells with porphyrin based photosensitizers in the dark also induced an increase in mRNA levels of early response genes. However, the xanthine photosensitizer, rose bengal, produced increased c-fos mRNA levels only following light treatment. Nuclear runoff experiments confirmed that the induction of c-fos mRNA is controlled in part at the level of transcription. Likewise, a
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
reporter construct containing the major c-fos transcriptional response elements was inducible by porphyrin and PDT. Signal transduction pathways associated with PDT mediated c-fos activation were examined by treating cells with protein kinase inhibitors.
Staurosporine
and 1-(5-isoquinolinesulfonyl)-2-methylpiperazine inhibited PDT mediated c-fos activation while N-(2-guanidinoethyl)-5-isoquinoline-sulfonamide had no effect. In addition, quinacrine, which can inhibit phospholipase activity, blocked PDT induced c-fos mRNA expression. These results suggest that photosensitizer mediated oxidative stress acts through protein kinase-mediated signal transduction pathway(s) to activate early response genes.
...
PMID:Photodynamic therapy mediated induction of early response genes. 811 27
The addition of phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) to renal LLC-PK1-F+ cells caused a rapid decrease in the level of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PCK) mRNA and reversed the stimulatory effects of exposure to acidic medium (pH 6.9, 10 mM HCO-3) or cAMP. In contrast, prolonged treatment with PMA increased the levels of PCK mRNA. The two effects correlated with the membrane translocation and downregulation of the alpha-isozyme of protein kinase C and were blocked by pretreatment with specific inhibitors of protein kinase C. The rapid decrease in PCK mRNA caused by PMA occurred with a half-life (t1/2 = 1 h) that is significantly faster than that measured during recovery from acid medium or following inhibition of transcription (t1/2 = 4 h). The effect of PMA was reversed by staurosporine, which apparently acts by inhibiting a signaling pathway other than protein kinase C.
Staurosporine
had no effect on the half-life of the PCK mRNA, but it stimulated the activity of a
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
gene that was driven by the initial 490 base pairs of the PCK promoter and transiently transfected into LLC-PK1-F+ cells. This effect was additive to that of cAMP, and neither stimulation was reversed by PMA. The stimulatory effect of staurosporine was mapped to the cAMP response element (CRE-1) and P3(II) element of the PCK promoter. The data indicate that, in LLC-PK1-F+ cells, activation of protein kinase C decreases the stability of the PCK mRNA, whereas transcription of the PCK gene may be suppressed by a kinase that is inhibited by staurosporine.
...
PMID:PMA and staurosporine affect expression of the PCK gene in LLC-PK1-F+ cells. 972 8