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)

Studies from our laboratory concerning regulation of calbindin include regulation by 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol [1,25(OH)2D3], receptor regulation as a possible mechanism for modulating calbindin's response to hormone, tissue specific regulation and regulation by factors other than 1,25(OH)2D3. With regard to receptor regulation, we found that the induction of calbindin mRNA in intestine and kidney by 1,25(OH)2D3 is not accompanied by a corresponding alteration in vitamin D receptor (VDR) mRNA in the vitamin D-deficient, low calcium rat. However, in the vitamin D-replete rat, administration of 1,25(OH)2D3 results in an induction of both calbindin and VDR mRNA in these tissues. These results suggest the presence of an inhibitor of 1,25(OH)2D3-mediated receptor up-regulation in the vitamin D-deficient, low calcium animal. Glucocorticoids can also regulate calbindin gene expression. Dexamethasone treatment (50 micrograms.100 g body weight-1.d-1 for 4 d) results in a 75% decrease in rat intestinal calbindin-D9k mRNA. This decrease may be related to the inhibition of intestinal calcium absorption previously observed after glucocorticoid administration. Kidney calbindin-D28k mRNA is unaffected by glucocorticoid treatment, indicating tissue specificity of the glucocorticoid response. To evaluate more precisely the means whereby 1,25(OH)2D3 and other modulators can influence calbindin gene expression, we isolated the chromosomal gene for calbindin-D28k by screening a mouse genomic library in cosmid. Ros 17/2.8 cells were transfected with recombinant plasmids in which the mouse calbindin promoter is fused to the reporter gene encoding chloramphenicol acetyltransferase. Deletion studies have enabled us to identify sequence elements in the mouse calbindin-D28k gene that confer basal activation and a hormone inducible response.
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PMID:Molecular aspects of the calbindins. 154 30

The conditions and efficacy of transfection of vascular cells in primary culture using DEAE-dextran, calcium phosphate and lipofectin have been investigated using chloramphenicol acetyltransferase and luciferase as reporter genes. Subsequently factor VIII was expressed in endothelial and smooth muscle cells. Both reporter genes could be expressed after transfection of umbilical vein endothelial cells, umbilical artery smooth muscle cells and fibroblasts. The expression of both reporter genes in endothelial and smooth muscle cells was highest using lipofectin. After transfection of smooth muscle cells with both full-length and mutant factor VIII genes, factor VIII activity and antigen were secreted into the culture medium, the secretion remaining stable to serial cell passage. The secretion of factor VIII from transfected smooth muscle cells was confirmed by the immunoprecipitation of [35S]methionine labelled protein. Endothelial cells also were successfully transfected with the mutant factor VIII gene.
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PMID:The uptake and expression of the factor VIII and reporter genes by vascular cells. 160 16

High efficiency gene transfer (greater than 90%) in chicken dorsal root ganglion neurons has been obtained by DNA calcium phosphate co-precipitation, hence providing an important tool to study control of gene expression in primary neurons. Transfection with c-fos promoter sequences linked to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter gene showed that the serum responsive element functions as a strong transcriptional enhancer. Transcription from this element is developmentally regulated, and mediates the genetic response to nerve growth factor (NGF) in developing avian sensory neurons. Furthermore, NGF exerts a negative effect on transcription from the cyclic AMP responsive element, thereby supporting the involvement of tyrosine kinase activation by NGF in primary sensory neurons.
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PMID:Nerve growth factor transcriptional control of c-fos promoter transfected in cultured spinal sensory neurons. 161

A fast, simple and inexpensive minitransfection technique, using either a lipofection or a calcium phosphate coprecipitation method to introduce foreign DNA into living cells is presented. This technique is based on the use of 24-well or 96-well tissue culture plates and can be used for both transient and stable transfections. Because it is a microtechnique, only small amounts of DNA, cells and transfection reagents are necessary, and it is easy to handle multiple DNA transfections or cotransfections in different cell lines and in duplicates or triplicates. The technique can be used to study viral gene expression, virus replication and chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) assay in different cell lines, for example, in the large scale screening and testing of antiviral agents.
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PMID:Minitransfection: a simple, fast technique for transfections. 164 74

Retinoic acid (RA) is known to influence the proliferation and differentiation of a wide variety of transformed and developing cells. We found that RA and the specific RA receptor (RAR) ligand Ch55 inhibited the phorbol ester and calcium ionophore-induced expression of the T-cell growth factor interleukin-2 (IL-2) gene. Expression of transiently transfected chloramphenicol acetyltransferase vectors containing the 5'-flanking region of the IL-2 gene was also inhibited by RA. RA-induced down-regulation of the IL-2 enhancer is mediated by RAR, since overexpression of transfected RARs increased RA sensitivity of the IL-2 promoter. Functional analysis of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase vectors containing either internal deletion mutants of the region from -317 to +47 bp of the IL-2 enhancer or multimerized cis-regulatory elements showed that the RA-responsive element in the IL-2 promoter mapped to sequences containing an octamer motif. RAR also inhibited the transcriptional activity of the octamer motif of the immunoglobulin heavy chain enhancer. In spite of the transcriptional inhibition of the IL-2 octamer motif, RA did not decrease the in vitro DNA-binding capability of octamer-1 protein. These results identify a regulatory pathway within the IL-2 promoter which involves the octamer motif and RAR.
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PMID:Retinoic acid-induced down-regulation of the interleukin-2 promoter via cis-regulatory sequences containing an octamer motif. 165 63

We have used an interleukin-2 (IL-2) promoter-CAT fusion gene to study activation of IL-2 gene expression by IL-1, phytohemagglutinin (PHA), phorbol myristate acetate (PMA), and calcium ionophore in the murine thymoma line EL4 and the human lymphoma line Jurkat. The two cell lines respond differently to combinations of these stimuli. IL-1 in combination with suboptimal concentration of PMA induced chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) activity in EL4. In Jurkat cells, IL-1 failed to synergize with PMA or PHA. Cotransfection with the IL-2/CAT gene and a construct capable of expressing murine T-cell type IL-1 receptors converted Jurkat cells to IL-1 responsiveness. IL-1 in combination with PHA but not with PMA resulted in induction of CAT activity in these cells. Induction of IL-2/CAT activity by all stimuli in both cell lines was blocked by the presence of EGTA in the culture medium. EGTA did not inhibit IL-1/PMA activation of an SV40 early promoter-CAT fusion gene in either EL4 or Jurkat cells; therefore, calcium was not required for IL-1 or PMA signal transduction. Jurkat cells were shown to differ from EL4 in their requirement for calcium mobilization. Two different calcium-dependent pathways of gene activation were distinguished, both of which were blocked by the immunosuppressive drug cyclosporin A.
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PMID:Cyclosporin A blocks calcium-dependent pathways of gene activation. 165 71

In this study we determined the activity of the rat luteinising hormone-beta gene promoter in a heterologous rat pituitary cell line (GH3 cells). 1.7 kb of LH-beta 5' flanking sequence and the first 5 bp of the 5' untranslated region were ligated to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) receptor gene (LH-beta-CAT) and transiently transfected by calcium phosphate precipitation into subconfluent cultures of GH3 cells. Basal low-level CAT activity was only detected in GH3 cells, being absent in two non-pituitary cell lines (BeWo and HeLa) RNase analysis revealed that mRNA from transfected GH3 cells protected a fragment of labelled antisense probe of correct size for transcription initiation from the LH-beta CAP site, confirming that promoter activity reflected correctly initiated LH-beta-CAT fusion gene transcripts. CAT activity was consistently induced by an average of 3-5-fold from the full-length 1.7 kb promoter, in a dose- and time-dependent manner, by forskolin, dibutyryl cAMP, and 8-bromo cAMP implying presence of a cAMP-responsive cis-acting domain in the LH-beta promoter region. Transfection of deletion mutants delta-615-CAT, delta-385-CAT and delta-250-CAT each reduced forskolin inducibility to 1.7-fold but did not abolish induction completely suggesting a domain between -1.7 and -0.6 kb contained a cAMP-responsive element(s) (CRE). Further deletion of LH-beta 5' flanking sequences to delta-85-CAT restored forskolin induction to wild-type levels (3-5-fold), suggesting the presence of a weak inhibitory element between -600 and -85 kb, and a cAMP-responsive domain in the proximal promoter region. The LH-beta promoter does not contain perfect tandem repeat palindromic CRE DNA sequences, though there are several octanucleotide sequences differing by only 1 bp from AP-2 binding sites, the consensus CRE, and the vasointestinal peptide gene CRE. Although these data suggest that the LH-beta gene is cAMP responsive this is likely mediated by several and complex protein interactions with multiple DNA sequences in the proximal and distal LH-beta promoter enhancer.
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PMID:Expression of luteinising hormone-beta subunit chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (LH-beta-CAT) fusion gene in rat pituitary cells: induction by cyclic 3'-adenosine monophosphate (cAMP). 165 45

An enzymatic assay for herpes virus simplex type 1 thymidine kinase (HSV-TK) that was sensitive enough to quantitate intracellular levels of enzyme transiently expressed after transfection of HSV-TK vectors into TK-deficient cells using the DNA-calcium phosphate coprecipitation technique is described. TK activity in extracts of transfected cells was determined by binding of [methyl-3H]thymidylate product to thin layers of polyethyleneimine (PEI)-impregnated cellulose. The assay used high-specific-activity [methyl-3H]thymidine as substrate, which required removal of anionic material on a column of PEI-cellulose to enhance the signal-to-noise ratio. The assay was linear over a wide range with respect to the amount of HSV-TK plasmid transfected or content of HSV-TK enzyme in cell extracts. To validate the assay in transient expression experiments, HSV-TK and chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) plasmids were cotransfected into NIH/3T3 tk- fibroblasts. Transient TK and CAT levels were concordant in cell extracts prepared from replicate plates of transfected cells. Normalizing the transient TK activity for CAT activity from the cotransfected "internal standard" CAT plasmid improved precision significantly, reducing the sample-to-sample coefficient of variation from 41 to 19%. CAT normalization reduced experimental variability mostly by correcting outlying results in transfection efficiency. The HSV-TK reporter gene system based on TK enzymatic assay was thus subject to experimental variation similar to that of the well-established CAT reporter function, demonstrating its utility in transient gene expression analysis.
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PMID:Herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase enzymatic assay in transient transfection experiments using thymidine kinase-deficient cells. 166 55

Interleukin-1 (IL-1) is known to synergize with phorbol esters in the induction of interleukin-2 (IL-2) expression in T-lymphoid leukemia cells and proliferation of mouse thymocytes. We used a plasmid construct containing the bacterial gene for chloramphenicol acetyltransferase under the control of the human IL-2 promoter to study the nature of this synergism in the murine thymoma cell line EL4. Although IL-1 induction of the IL-2 promoter in these cells required costimulus with phorbol myristate acetate, the signal induced by IL-1 was qualitatively different. We provide evidence to support the hypothesis that the phorbol ester signal is mediated by protein kinase C, and we show that the IL-1 signal is not. That IL-1 and phorbol myristate acetate represent different stimuli was shown by their response to protein kinase C inhibitors, capacity to synergize with increased intracellular free calcium, and requirement for protein synthesis. In addition we show that pretreatment with IL-1 can prime EL4 cells to subsequent activation by concentrations of phorbol esters not normally sufficient to induce IL-2 expression. Pretreated cells remained primed for at least 40 h after removal of the IL-1. Neither phorbol myristate acetate nor a calcium ionophore was capable of preactivating EL4 cells.
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PMID:A role for protein kinase C activity in interleukin-1 (IL-1) induction of IL-2 gene expression but not in IL-1 signal transduction. 169 59

Long-term regulation of mammalian steroid hormone synthesis occurs principally by transcriptional regulation of the gene for the rate-limiting cholesterol side-chain cleavage enzyme P450scc. Adrenal steroidogenesis is regulated primarily by two hormones: adrenocorticotropin, which works via cyclic AMP (cAMP) and protein kinase A, and angiotensin II, which works via Ca2+ and protein kinase C. Forskolin and 8-bromo-cAMP stimulated, while prolonged treatment with a phorbol ester (12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate [TPA]) and a calcium ionophore (A23187) additively suppressed accumulation of endogenous P450scc mRNA in transformed murine adrenal Y1 cells. In Y1 cells transfected with 2,327 base pairs of the human P450scc promoter fused to the bacterial gene for chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT), forskolin increased CAT activity 900% while combined TPA plus A23187 reduced CAT activity to 15% of the control level. Forskolin induced the P450scc promoter as rapidly as a promoter containing two cAMP-responsive elements fused to a simian virus 40 promoter, a system known to respond directly to cAMP. Basal expression was increased by sequences between -89 and -152 and was increased further by sequences between -605 and -2327. This upstream region also conferred inducibility by cAMP. TPA plus A23187 transiently increased CAT activity before repressing it, reflecting the complex actions of angiotensin II in vivo. Repression by prolonged treatment with TPA plus A23187 was mediated by multiple elements between -89 and -343. Induction of CAT activity by forskolin was not diminished by treatment with TPA plus A23187, nor were the regions of the promoter responsible for regulation by the two pathways coisolated. Thus, the human gene for P450scc is repressed by TPA plus A23187 by mechanisms and sequences independent of those that mediate induction by cAMP.
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PMID:Human P450scc gene transcription is induced by cyclic AMP and repressed by 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate and A23187 through independent cis elements. 170 Feb 77


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