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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)
Familial glucocorticoid resistance is a hypertensive, hyperandrogenic disorder characterized by increased serum cortisol concentrations in the absence of stigmata of Cushing's syndrome. Our previous studies of the first reported kindred showed a two- to threefold reduction in
glucocorticoid receptor
-ligand binding affinity in the propositus, and a lesser reduction in affinity in his mildly affected son and nephew. Glucocorticoid receptor cDNA from these three patients was amplified by polymerase chain reaction and sequenced. The cDNA nucleotide sequence was normal, except for nucleotide 2054, which substituted valine for aspartic acid at amino acid residue 641. The propositus was homozygous while the other relatives were heterozygous for the mutation. COS-7 monkey kidney cells were cotransfected with expression vectors for either wild type or Val 641-mutant receptors, together with the reporter plasmid pMMTV-CAT. Dexamethasone increased
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
activity in cells expressing wild type receptor, but had no effect in cells expressing Val 641-mutant receptors, despite similar receptor concentrations, as indicated by Western blotting. The binding affinity for dexamethasone of the Val 641-mutant receptor was threefold lower than that of the wild type receptor. These results suggest that glucocorticoid resistance in this family is due to a point mutation in the steroid-binding domain of the
glucocorticoid receptor
.
...
PMID:Point mutation causing a single amino acid substitution in the hormone binding domain of the glucocorticoid receptor in familial glucocorticoid resistance. 170 18
Expression of prostate-specific antigen (PA) mRNA was tested at various time periods after incubation of the human prostate tumor cell line LNCaP with the synthetic androgen R1881. Androgen-stimulated expression was observed within 6 h after addition of R1881 to the cells. Run-on experiments with nuclei isolated from LNCaP cells showed that expression of the PA gene could be regulated by R1881 on the level of transcription. DNase I footprints of the promoter region of the PA gene (-320 to +12) with nuclear protein extracts from LNCaP cells showed at least four protected regions. The protected areas include the TATA-box, a GC-box sequence, and a sequence AGAACAgcaAGTGCT at position -170 to -156, which closely resembles the reverse complement of the consensus sequence GGTACAnnnTGTTCT for binding of the
glucocorticoid receptor
and the progesterone receptor. Fragments of the PA promoter region were cloned in front of the
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
(
CAT
) reporter gene and cotransfected with an androgen receptor expression plasmid into COS cells in a transient expression assay.
CAT
activity of COS cells grown in the presence of 1 nM R1881 was compared to untreated controls. A 110-fold induction of
CAT
activity was found if a -1600 to +12 PA promoter fragment was used in the construct. By further deletion mapping of the PA promoter a minimal region (-320 to -155) was identified as being essential for androgen-regulated gene expression. Mutation of the sequence AGAACAgcaAGTGCT (at -170 to -156) to AAAAAAgcaAGTGCT almost completely abolished androgen inducibility of the reporter gene constructs. One or more copies of the sequence AGAACAgcaAGTGCT cloned in front of a thymidine kinase promoter-
CAT
reporter gene confers androgen regulation to the reporter gene. These findings provide strong evidence for transcription regulation of the PA gene by androgens via the sequence AGAACAgcaAGTGCT. Interestingly, in addition to the AGAACAgcaAGTGCT element, an upstream region (-539 to -320) is needed for optimal androgen inducibility of the PA promoter.
...
PMID:The promoter of the prostate-specific antigen gene contains a functional androgen responsive element. 172 87
The immunosuppressant hormone dexamethasone (Dex) interferes with T cell-specific signals activating the enhancer sequences directing interleukin 2 (IL-2) transcription. We report that the Dex-dependent downregulation of 12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate (TPA) and calcium ionophore-induced activity of the IL-2 enhancer are mediated by
glucocorticoid receptor
(GR) via a process that requires intact NH2- and COOH-terminal and DNA-binding domains. Functional analysis of
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
(
CAT
) vectors containing internal deletions of the -317 to +47 bp IL-2 enhancer showed that the GR-responsive elements mapped to regions containing nuclear factor of activated T cells protein (NFAT) (-279 to -263 bp) and AP-1 (-160 to -150 bp) motifs. The AP-1 motif binds TPA and calcium ionophore-induced nuclear factor(s) containing fos protein. TPA and calcium ionophore-induced transcriptional activation of homo-oligomers of the NFAT element were not inhibited by Dex, while AP-1 motif concatemers were not stimulated by TPA and calcium ionophore. When combined, NFAT and AP-1 motifs significantly synergized in directing
CAT
transcription. Such a synergism was impaired by specific mutations affecting the trans-acting factor binding to either NFAT or AP-1 motifs. In spite of the lack of hormone regulation of isolated cis elements, TPA/calcium ionophore-mediated activation of
CAT
vectors containing a combination of the NFAT and the AP-1 motifs became suppressible by Dex. Our results show that the IL-2-AP-1 motif confers GR sensitivity to a flanking region containing a NFAT element and suggest that synergistic cooperativity between the NFAT and AP-1 sites allows GR to mediate the Dex inhibition of IL-2 gene transcription. Therefore, a Dex-modulated second level of IL-2 enhancer regulation, based on a combinatorial modular interplay, appears to be present.
...
PMID:Glucocorticoid receptor-mediated suppression of the interleukin 2 gene expression through impairment of the cooperativity between nuclear factor of activated T cells and AP-1 enhancer elements. 174 Jun 58
We have demonstrated that synthetic oligonucleotide representing glucocorticoid responsive element (GRE I) of MMTV inserted into the enhancerless early promoter of SV40 in p delta SVE-CAT expression vector, enhances transient expression of
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
gene in HeLa and hepatoma cells cultivated in the presence of dexamethasone. The following changes in the structure of the core sequences (GTTACAAACTGTTCT) of the synthesized GRE eliminated its enhancing ability: i, changes in the left end of the core sequences from GTTACAAAATGTTCT to TCTTCAAACTGTTCT or to TACTCAAACTGTTCT; ii, the increase of gap between TGTTCT and the inverted repeat of this sequence. The above changes did not eliminate specific binding of
glucocorticoid receptor
to the synthetic oligonucleotides studied.
...
PMID:Introduction of the glucocorticoid binding sequences into the expression vector p delta SVE-CAT and its effect on the CAT gene expression in mammalian cells. 179 99
Transfection of HeLa cells with cDNA vectors expressing the wild-type human
glucocorticoid receptor
(GR) enabled dexamethasone to strongly repress cytokine- and second messenger-induced expression of cotransfected chimeric reporter genes containing transcription regulatory DNA elements from the human interleukin 6 (IL-6) promoter. Deletion of the DNA-binding domain or of the second Zn finger or a point mutation in the Zn catenation site in the second finger blocked the ability of GR to mediate repression of the IL-6 promoter. Unexpectedly, deletion of the first Zn finger, a point mutation in the Zn-catenation site in the first finger, or one in the steroid-specificity domain at the base of the first finger converted GR into a dexamethasone-responsive activator that enhanced basal and interleukin 1-induced IL-6 promoter function. These first-finger mutants of GR also mediated dexamethasone-responsive enhancement of expression of the herpesvirus thymidine kinase-
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
(TK-105-CAT and TK-80-CAT) reporter genes but not of the murine mammary tumor virus long terminal repeat-CAT or the c-fos-CAT (pFC700) reporter genes. Wild-type GR was able to specifically bind to DNA fragments containing glucocorticoid response element sequences in both the murine mammary tumor virus and IL-6 promoters, albeit weakly to the latter, in a sequential DNA-binding immunoprecipitation assay. The first-finger mutants of GR, however, were inactive in this assay. Thus, mutations in the first Zn finger unmask unusual promoter-specific activation properties of GR that may not require direct high-affinity binding of the mutant GR to target DNA.
...
PMID:Repressor to activator switch by mutations in the first Zn finger of the glucocorticoid receptor: is direct DNA binding necessary? 187 Nov 24
Both cellular activation signals and exposure to glucocorticoids such as dexamethasone (Dex) cause programmed cell death in T cell hybridomas. When cells were activated in the presence of Dex, however, the degree of killing that was achieved by either stimulus alone was markedly reduced. Dex-induced programmed cell death of normal T cell clones was also prevented by cellular activation. Cyclosporin A (CsA) completely blocked the activation-induced death of T cell hybridomas, but actually enhanced the killing caused by Dex. The addition of CsA to activated T cell hybridomas in the presence of Dex allowed killing to proceed, consistent with ability of CsA to block activation-induced nuclear gene transcription. A number of independent approaches were used to explore the effect of activation on the glucocorticoid signaling/effector pathway. First, RU-486, which binds the
glucocorticoid receptor
and is a potent competitive antagonist of Dex, did not inhibit activation-induced cell killing. Second, activation of T cell hybridomas did not cause the translocation of the
glucocorticoid receptor
from the cytoplasm to the nucleus, nor did it prevent the receptor translocation induced by treatment with Dex. Finally, T cell hybridomas were transfected with a plasmid containing the
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
(
CAT
) gene under the control of two tandemly arranged glucocorticoid-responsive elements. Activation of these cells did not induce
CAT
activity, and did not inhibit the
CAT
activity induced by Dex. In fact, there was a paradoxical increase in
CAT
activity when cells were treated with both stimuli. We conclude that cellular activation does not directly utilize the
glucocorticoid receptor
nor the glucocorticoid pathway when inducing programmed cell death. Furthermore, the ability of activation to inhibit Dex-mediated killing is not due to interference with the classical glucocorticoid signaling pathway, up to and including the initiation of gene transcription. Alternative mechanisms of antagonism, as well as the possible relevance of this phenomenon to the positive selection of self-recognizing thymocytes, are discussed.
...
PMID:Programmed T lymphocyte death. Cell activation- and steroid-induced pathways are mutually antagonistic. 197 85
The androgen receptor (AR) is a signal-transducing protein required for sexual differentiation, development, and expression of the male phenotype. A series of human AR deletion mutants were created either by site-directed mutagenesis using restriction enzyme digestion, the polymerase chain reaction, or, for a series of unidirectional NH2-terminal deletions, exonuclease III digestion. Receptor mutants were expressed in monkey kidney COS cells as truncated AR proteins between 20 and 107 kDa as revealed on immunoblots, where wild type AR was a doublet of 114 and 108 kDa. Subcellular localization by immunocytochemical staining demonstrated androgen-dependent nuclear uptake of AR from a perinuclear region of the cytoplasm. A nuclear targeting signal similar in sequence and position to the
glucocorticoid receptor
and homologous to the SV40 large T antigen was required for androgen-induced nuclear uptake of wild type AR. AR mutants lacking the NH2-terminal and/or steroid binding domains were constitutively nuclear with reduced transcriptional activity. Transcriptional activation by wild type AR was androgen-dependent in cotransfection studies of CV1 cells using the
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
reporter gene linked to the mouse mammary tumor virus promoter. Deletion mutagenesis revealed within the NH2-terminal region a domain required for full transcriptional activity and within the steroid binding domain, an inhibitory function, deletion of which yielded a constitutively active receptor. Inhibition of wild type AR by coexpression with an inactive NH2-terminal fragment suggested competition for nuclear factors required for transcriptional regulation. These studies demonstrate a concerted interplay among the domains of the AR protein in regulating gene transcription.
...
PMID:Transcriptional activation and nuclear targeting signals of the human androgen receptor. 198 13
Depression is often characterized by increased cortisol secretion caused by hyperactivity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and by nonsuppression of cortisol secretion following dexamethasone administration. This hyperactivity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis could result from a reduced
glucocorticoid receptor
(GR) activity in neurons involved in its control. To investigate the effect of reduced neuronal GR levels, we have blocked cellular GR mRNA processing and/or translation by introduction of a complementary GR antisense RNA strand. Two cell lines were transfected with a reporter plasmid carrying the
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
(
CAT
) gene under control of the mouse mammary tumor virus long terminal repeat (a glucocorticoid-inducible promoter). This gene construction permitted assay of the sensitivity of the cells to glucocorticoid hormones. Cells were also cotransfected with a plasmid containing 1,815 bp of GR cDNA inserted in the reverse orientation downstream from either a neurofilament gene promoter element or the Rous sarcoma virus promoter element. Northern (RNA) blot analysis demonstrated formation of GR antisense RNA strands. Measurement of the sensitivity of
CAT
activity to exogeneous dexamethasone showed that although dexamethasone increased
CAT
activity by as much as 13-fold in control incubations, expression of GR antisense RNA caused a 2- to 4-fold decrease in the
CAT
response to dexamethasone. Stable transfectants bearing the GR antisense gene fragment construction demonstrated a 50 to 70% decrease of functional GR levels compared with normal cells, as evidenced by a ligand-binding assay with the type II
glucocorticoid receptor
-specific ligand [3H]RU 28362. These results validate the use of antisense RNA to GR to decrease cellular response to glucocorticoids.
...
PMID:Decreased glucocorticoid receptor activity following glucocorticoid receptor antisense RNA gene fragment transfection. 199 14
Plasmids containing the hormone regulatory element of mouse mammary tumor virus linked to the thymidine kinase promoter of herpes simplex virus and the reporter gene
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
of Escherichia coli respond to glucocorticoids and progestins when transfected into appropriate cells. In the human mammary tumor cell line T47D, the response to progestins, but not to glucocorticoids, is highly dependent on the topology of the transfected DNA. Although negatively supercoiled plasmids respond optimally to the synthetic progestin R5020, their linearized counterparts exhibit markedly reduced progestin inducibility. This is not due to changes in the efficiency of DNA transfection, since the amount of DNA incorporated into the cell nucleus is not significantly dependent on the initial topology of the plasmids. In contrast, cotransfection experiments with
glucocorticoid receptor
cDNA in the same cell line show no significant influence of DNA topology on induction by dexamethasone. A similar result was obtained with fibroblasts that contain endogenous glucocorticoid receptors. When the distance between receptor-binding sites or between the binding sites and the promoter was increased, the dependence of progestin induction on DNA topology was more pronounced. In contrast to the original plasmid, these constructs also revealed a similar topological dependence for induction by glucocorticoids. The differential influence of DNA topology is not due to differences in the affinity of the two hormone receptors for DNA of various topologies, but probably reflects an influence of DNA topology on the interaction between different DNA-bound receptor molecules and between receptors and other transcription factors.
...
PMID:Hormonal induction of transfected genes depends on DNA topology. 215 20
Immortalization of B lymphocytes by Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is complex and poorly understood. However, some evidence suggests that glucocorticoids influence this process. We identified a glucocorticoid-responsive element in the BamHI C fragment of EBV which we call ES-1. In glucocorticoid-treated cells, ES-1 enhanced
chloramphenicol acetyltransferase
gene expression from the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase promoter, as well as the EBV Bam-C promoter, from which several latent viral gene products are transcribed. By Northern blot analysis, glucocorticoid treatment enhanced transcription from the Bam-C promoter in Jijoye cells, a Burkitt's lymphoma cell line. In addition, the DNA-binding domain of the
glucocorticoid receptor
bound specifically to the ES-1 region. These glucocorticoid effects on the Bam-C promoter region may provide some insight into the process of EBV immortalization.
...
PMID:Identification of a glucocorticoid-responsive element in Epstein-Barr virus. 215 66
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