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)

Tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) gene expression is regulated by the tumor-promoting phorbol ester, phorbol-12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), by cyclic AMP analogues, and the cAMP agonist, forskolin. Based on nuclear "run-on" transcription assays, t-PA expression is modulated by PMA on the level of transcription. 8-Bromo-cyclic AMP and forskolin do not induce t-PA gene transcription alone but act synergistically with PMA. These effects are confirmed by transient expression assays in HeLa cells employing deletion mutants of the t-PA gene promoter fused to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter gene. Constitutive expression and most of the PMA-mediated induction requires sequences downstream of position -145. DNase I protection ("footprint") analysis of this region reveals two protein-binding sites: one between position -102 and -115, differing from the consensus sequence of the cAMP-responsive element (CRE) by the substitution of an adenine for a guanine in the middle of the core motif (TGACATCA), and another, located in the first exon (between position +60 and +74), displaying homology to the consensus sequence of the activator protein 2- (AP-2) binding site (CCCCACCCCC). Base substitutions in the core of either the CRE-like element or the AP-2 site suppress constitutive CAT expression by over 80%, whereas the relative PMA- and PMA plus cAMP-mediated responses are retained. CAT expression is below the detection limit when both elements are mutagenized together. Hence, the CRE-like element and the exon-located AP-2-binding site have a cooperative impact on basal transcription, but each element can independently convey the effect of activators of the protein kinase C- and A-dependent pathways of signal transduction. The results of band-shift analysis and competition titration experiments demonstrate that the CRE-like element acts as a low affinity binding site for the same proteins which recognize the authentic CRE.
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PMID:A DNA motif related to the cAMP-responsive element and an exon-located activator protein-2 binding site in the human tissue-type plasminogen activator gene promoter cooperate in basal expression and convey activation by phorbol ester and cAMP. 216 21

The rate of transcription of the beta 2-adrenergic receptor gene is increased in response to beta-adrenergic agonist stimulation of the receptor at the cell surface. This effect is mediated by stimulation of adenylyl cyclase and elevation of intracellular cAMP levels. We have previously shown that this responsiveness to cAMP resides in the 5'-flanking region of the human beta 2-adrenergic receptor gene (Collins, S., Bouvier, M., Bolanowski, M. A., Caron, M. G., and Lefkowitz, R. J. (1989) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 86, 4853-4857). A 34-base pair sequence derived from the beta 2-adrenergic receptor promoter region (-70 to -37 base pairs), containing the sequence GTACGTCA, confers responsiveness to cAMP when present in either orientation 5' to the thymidine kinase promoter on the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter gene. Overexpression of the catalytic subunit of protein kinase A fully substituted for forskolin in inducing expression through this sequence, indicating that the cAMP induction is mediated through this kinase. Mutations within the GTACGTCA sequence completely abolished the stimulation. A 43-kDa transcription factor (cAMP response element-binding protein) confers cAMP responsiveness through binding to specific sequences. In gel mobility shift assays, purified cAMP response element-binding protein bound to the 34-base pair oligonucleotide from the beta 2-adrenergic receptor gene with an affinity similar to that for the well-characterized cAMP response element from the human glycoprotein hormone alpha-subunit gene, and failed to bind to mutated elements. Thus, positive autoregulation of the beta 2-adrenergic receptor gene appears to occur through receptor-mediated stimulation of adenylyl cyclase, with consequent activation of cAMP response element-binding protein and stimulation of beta 2-adrenergic receptor gene transcription. These results demonstrate a novel mechanism by which a receptor (beta 2-adrenergic receptor) stimulatory for adenylyl cyclase can exert positive feedback regulation on its own expression.
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PMID:A cAMP response element in the beta 2-adrenergic receptor gene confers transcriptional autoregulation by cAMP. 217 52

H4IIE rat hepatoma cells were stably transfected with various phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (PEPCK-CAT) expression vectors. The regulation of the transfected genes was qualitatively similar to that of the endogenous PEPCK gene. CAT expression was increased in response to cAMP and dexamethasone and insulin overrode these effects at concentrations known to be effective in suppressing transcription of the endogenous gene. The effect of insulin was dominant, as it is with the endogenous gene. A series of 5',3', and internal deletions of the PEPCK gene promoter were used to show that this insulin response requires at least two separate elements. One insulin-responsive sequence is located between -468 and -402, relative to the transcription initiation site. The other is between -271 and +69.
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PMID:Regulation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase gene expression by insulin. Use of the stable transfection approach to locate an insulin responsive sequence. 217 98

A strong lymphocyte-specific transcriptional enhancer was identified within a DNase I hypersensitive site at the 3' end of the human CD2 gene. Full activity, in a transient expression assay, was contained within a region of 550 bp (minimal enhancer). T cells which express CD2 could use the enhancer to activate transcription from the reporter gene chloramphenicol acetyltransferase in the context of a heterologous promoter. Lower levels of transcription were detected in non-CD2-expressing T cells and in B cells. In contrast, the enhancer did not function in the epithelial cell line HeLa or in Colo 320 HSR, a cell line of neuroendocrine origin. Low levels of enhancement were detectable from two core regions, which acted synergistically with other cis-acting sequences to generate the complete enhancer. DNase I footprinting studies identified six cis-acting sequences to which proteins bound. Five of these sequence motifs were novel; the sixth was a canonical cAMP response element. Topoisomerase II, and scaffold attachment region consensus sequences were also found within an A/T-rich area downstream of the minimal enhancer. Neither region was bound to the nuclear matrix. The CD2 enhancer is modular in structure, it is constructed of novel cis-acting sequences and it is a major component of the regulatory system that controls expression of the CD2 gene.
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PMID:A 3' transcriptional enhancer regulates tissue-specific expression of the human CD2 gene. 220 39

The human renin gene is expressed in the kidney, placenta, and several other sites. The release of renin or its precursor, prorenin, can be affected by several regulatory agents. In this study, primary cultures of human placental cells were used to examine the regulation of prorenin release and renin mRNA levels and of the transfected human renin promotor linked to chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter sequences. Treatment of the cultures with a calcium ionophore alone, calcium ionophore plus forskolin (that activates adenylate cyclase), or forskolin plus a phorbol ester increased prorenin release and renin mRNA levels 1.3- to 6-fold, but several classes of steroids did not affect prorenin secretion or renin RNA levels. The transfected renin promoter (584 or 100 base pairs of 5'-flanking DNA) initiated at the correct start site in these cells and forskolin increased its expression 2.5- to 4-fold. Constructs containing renin 5'-flanking DNA linked to a heterologous promoter cotransfected into HeLa cells with either glucocorticoid or estrogen receptor expression vectors were not regulated by dexamethasone or 17 beta-estradiol. These results suggest that (i) the first 584 base pairs of the renin gene 5'-flanking DNA do not contain functional glucocorticoid or estrogen response elements, (ii) placental prorenin release and renin mRNA are regulated by calcium ion and by the combinations of cAMP with either C kinase or calcium ion, and (iii) the first 100 base pairs of the human renin 5'-flanking DNA direct accurate initiation of transcription and can be regulated by cAMP. Thus, some control of renin release in the placenta (and by inference in other tissues) occurs via transcriptional influences on its promoter.
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PMID:Regulation of human renin expression in chorion cell primary cultures. 221 88

The 5'-flanking region of protein kinase C (PKC) gamma gene was identified from a rat liver genomic library in a bacteriophage lambda Charon 4A. A 3.6-kilobase (kb) genomic fragment containing the 5'-flanking region, first exon, and first intron was isolated and sequenced. The transcriptional initiation site, identified by S1 mapping and primer extension, was located 243 base pairs upstream from the translational initiation site. Promoter activity of a DNA segment spanning the 5'-flanking region was demonstrated by both in vitro transcription using HeLa cell nuclear extracts and chloramphenicol acetyltransferase assay by transfection of 293 cells with a PKC gamma-CAT fusion construct. Chloramphenicol acetyltransferase assay revealed that a fragment of about 0.16 kb from the transcriptional initiation site was sufficient for promoter activity in these cells, and the construct containing up to 1.6 kb from the cap site was expressed at a similar level. This promoter-active fragment contains several regions similar to defined transcriptional elements in other mammalian promoters, such as those for stimulatory protein 1 (Sp1), activator proteins 1 and 2 (AP1, AP2), c-myc, cAMP regulatory element-binding protein (CREB), and enhancer core (EnhC). Investigation of the genomic structure of PKC gamma gene may lead to the identification of cis-elements controlling tissue-specific and developmental stage-specific expression of PKC gamma.
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PMID:Characterization of the 5'-flanking region of the rat protein kinase C gamma gene. 224 72

The expression of opioid genes was examined in isolated populations of glial cells in primary culture. Northern blot analysis of purified type I astrocytes, oligodendrocytes and mixed oligodendrocyte-type-2-astrocyte lineage cells derived from cerebral cortex demonstrated robust expression of proenkephalin mRNA exclusively in type I astrocytes. The expression of proenkephalin mRNA was stimulated by the beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol, and 8-(4-chlorophenyl thio)adenosine 3'-5'-cyclic monophosphate (cpt-cAMP). Both of these compounds regulated a proenkephalin-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase fusion gene transiently transfected into type I astrocytes. HPLC and immunoassay of the cell culture media revealed significant levels of unprocessed proenkephalin secreted by the cell and this secretion was stimulated by isoproterenol and cpt-cAMP. The relatively high levels of proenkephalin expressed suggest that enhanced expression in astrocytes may be important during neural development, in trauma-induced gliosis and in neuroimmune interactions.
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PMID:The regulation of proenkephalin expression in a distinct population of glial cells. 231 81

12-O-Tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) activated the c-fos gene enhancer linked to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase or luciferase reporter gene in the wild type PC-12 cells but not in the variant PC-12 cells that originated from the wild type cells. Transfection of the c-Ha-rasval12 complementary DNA (cDNA) or addition of dibutyryl cAMP to the wild type PC-12 cells as well as to the variant PC-12 cells activated the c-fos gene enhancer. Prolonged treatment of the wild type PC-12 cells with phorbol-12,13-dibutyrate caused down-regulation of protein kinase C. In these cells, TPA did not stimulate the c-fos gene enhancer any more, but transfection of the c-Ha-rasval12 cDNA still stimulated the c-fos gene enhancer to the same extent as induced in the control cells. Transfection of the c-Ha-rasval12 cDNA or addition of TPA to the wild type PC-12 cells stimulated the serum-response element but not the cAMP-response element. Dibutyryl cAMP stimulated both the serum-response element and the cAMP-response element in the wild type PC-12 cells. These results indicate that the c-Ha-rasval12 protein activates the serum-response element, but not the cAMP-response element in the c-fos gene enhancer, and that the signal pathway from the c-Ha-rasval12 protein to the c-fos serum-response element is independent of protein kinase C and cAMP-dependent protein kinase.
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PMID:Activation of the c-fos serum-response element by the activated c-Ha-ras protein in a manner independent of protein kinase C and cAMP-dependent protein kinase. 240 11

We have analyzed the regulation of the alpha gonadotropin gene in eutopic placental cells and ectopic tumor cells by constructing a series of plasmid vectors containing alpha genomic 5' flanking DNA placed upstream of the gene encoding the bacterial enzyme chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT). These plasmid DNAs were transfected into a eutopic (JAr) and an ectopic (HeLa) cell line. Both cell types expressed the CAT gene from plasmid constructs containing as much as 1,500 base pairs (bp) and as little as 140 bp of alpha 5' flanking DNA; JAr cells were considerably more efficient than HeLa cells. Ectopic and eutopic cells differed qualitatively in their expression from these alpha-CAT constructs when cells were treated with cAMP or butyrate. Butyrate induced alpha expression in HeLa cells but not in JAr cells, while cAMP induced expression in JAr cells. These results are consistent with and extend previous observations suggesting that there are cell-specific differences in the regulation of alpha gene expression in ectopic and eutopic cells. However, by using deletion constructs of the alpha-CAT gene, we found that the basal expression and cell-specific induction of the alpha gene in ectopic and eutopic cells were dependent on the same 140 bp of alpha 5' flanking DNA. These 140 bp were sequenced and found to contain a 9-bp stretch of DNA homologous with the consensus viral enhancer sequence. Such features of alpha expression common to both ectopic and eutopic cells may be involved in the coordinate expression of the alpha gene and the tumorigenic phenotype observed in each cell type.
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PMID:Differential expression of the human gonadotropin alpha gene in ectopic and eutopic cells. 242 26

cAMP regulates transcription of the gene encoding the alpha-subunit of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) in choriocarcinoma cells (BeWo). To define the sequences required for regulation by cAMP, we inserted fragments from the 5' flanking region of the alpha-subunit gene into a test vector containing the simian virus 40 early promoter (devoid of its enhancer) linked to the bacterial chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene. Results from transient expression assays in BeWo cells indicated that a 1500-base-pair (bp) fragment conferred cAMP responsiveness on the CAT gene regardless of position or orientation of the insert relative to the viral promoter. A subfragment extending from position -169 to position -100 had the same effect on cAMP-induced expression. Furthermore, the entire stimulatory effect could be achieved with an 18-bp synthetic oligodeoxynucleotide corresponding to a direct repeat between positions -146 and -111. In the absence of cAMP, the alpha-subunit 5' flanking sequence also enhanced transcription from the simian virus 40 early promoter. We localized this enhancer activity to the same -169/-100 fragment containing the cAMP response element. The 18-bp element alone, however, had no effect on basal expression. Thus, this short DNA sequence serves as a cAMP response element and also functions independently of other promoter-regulatory elements located in the 5' flanking sequence of the alpha-subunit gene.
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PMID:Cyclic AMP regulation of the human glycoprotein hormone alpha-subunit gene is mediated by an 18-base-pair element. 243 26


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