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Query: EC:2.4.2.8 (
hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase
)
2,527
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have transferred the human gene for
hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
HPRT
,
EC 2.4.2.8
; IMP:pyrophosphate phosphoribosyltransferease) via isolated metaphase chromosomes from human HeLa S3 cells into murine A9 cells which lack functional murine
HPRT
activity, using the technique of McBride and Ozer (Proc, Nat. Acad. Sci. USA 70, 1258-1262, 1973). Three transformed clones were isolated which contained human
HPRT
activity as determined by electrophoretic and immunochemical assays. Twenty human isozymes other than
HPRT
whose genes have been assigned to 14 human chromosomes were found to be absent in our transformed clones. Moreover, the human isozymes of hlucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.49; D-glucose 6-phosphate:NADP 1-oxidoreductase) and phosphoglycerate kinase (EC 2.7.2.3;ATP:3-phospho-D-glycerate 1-phosphotransferase), whose genes have been linked with the
HPRT
gene to the long are of the human X chromosome, were also absent. On the basis of the known linkage relationships of the three markers, we thereby suggest that the transferred piece of human genetic material is smaller than 20% of the human X chromosome or less than 1% of the human genome. This estimate assumes a normal syntenic relationship for the long arm of the X chromosome in HeLa S3 cells. In agreement with this conclusion, no human chromosomes could be detected in our transformed clones. When grown under nonselective conditions about 3% of the gene transfer cells lost the human
HPRT
marker per cell generation. Transformants that had lost human
HPRT
activity were subjected to hypoxanthine-aminopterin-thymidine selection. The frequency of revertants to the
HPRT
(+) phenotype was less than 1 x 10(-6), and two revertants that were obtained possessed the mouse electrophoretic phenotype. These results argue against a stable integration of the human donor genetic material into the mouse recipient genome.
...
PMID:Transfer of the human gene for hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase via isolated human metaphase chromosomes into mouse L-cells. 105 70
Fibroblasts from a carrier of an X/1 translocation, 46,XY,t(X;1)(q28;q31), were fused with Chinese hamster cells. The resulting hybrids were analyzed for human No. 1 and X-chromosome markers. The data indicate that the loci for PGM1, PGD, PPH, and GuK1 are situated either in the long arm proximal to a break point in band 1q31 or in the short arm. The loci for Pep-C, FH, and GuK1 are located distal to the break point.
HPRT
and G6PD are probably situated distal to a break point in band q28 of the X chromosome; alpha-Gal A is situated proximal to the break point, either on the long or short arm of the chromosome.
...
PMID:Regional mapping of the human No. 1 and X chromosome in interspecific cell hybrids using an X/1 translocation. 123 34
In a population at equilibrium for a sex-linked lethal, one-third of the genes for that lethal must arise anew each generation. Therefore, one-third of all cases of Lesch-Nyhan disease, a severe X-linked recessive lethal disorder, should be new mutants. To test this hypothesis, we have collected 47 families, 20 with a single proband and 27 with multiple affected males in which the patients' mothers and other female relatives had been studied for heterozygosity. Available carrier detection tests identify heterozygous for
HPRT
deficiency in hair roots and skin fibroblasts. Only four mothers were found not to be carriers. This result deviates significantly from expected (P less than .001). Statistical tests for ascertainment effects indicated absence of bias for multiple proband families but strong bias in favor of families with many heterozygous females. When the analysis was limited to single proband families, the deviation from expected was still significant (P less than .01). The incidence of new mutants among the heterozygous mothers, as determined by the ratio of +/+ to +/- maternal grandmothers, should be one-half (see Appendix). Of all 20 maternal grandmothers studied, five were +/+ and 15 were +/- (P less than .05). Considering only the single proband families, the ratio of 5 +/+ to 8 +/- was not significantly different from expected. In four of the five cases in which the heterozygous mother of an affected individual was a new mutation, the age of her parents was considerably higher than the mean parental age in the population. This raises the possibility of a paternal age effect on X-linked mutations. There appears to be a true deficiency of new mutatnts among males but not among females. Data on additional Lesch-Nyhan families are needed before conclusions regarding a possible higher mutation rate in males can be drawn.
...
PMID:The occurrence of new mutants in the X-linked recessive Lesch-Nyhan disease. 126 47
The human androgen-receptor gene (HUMARA; GenBank) contains a highly polymorphic trinucleotide repeat in the first exon. We have found that the methylation of HpaII and HhaI sites less than 100 bp away from this polymorphic short tandem repeat (STR) correlates with X inactivation. The close proximity of the restriction-enzyme sites to the STR allows the development of a PCR assay that distinguishes between the maternal and paternal alleles and identifies their methylation status. The accuracy of this assay was tested on (a) DNA from hamster/human hybrid cell lines containing either an active or inactive human X chromosome; (b) DNA from normal males and females; and (c) DNA from females showing nonrandom patterns of X inactivation. Data obtained using this assay correlated substantially with those obtained using the PGK,
HPRT
, and M27 beta probes, which detect X inactivation patterns by Southern blot analysis. In order to demonstrate one application of this assay, we examined X inactivation patterns in the B lymphocytes of potential and obligate carriers of X-linked agammaglobulinemia.
...
PMID:Methylation of HpaII and HhaI sites near the polymorphic CAG repeat in the human androgen-receptor gene correlates with X chromosome inactivation. 128 84
To understand molecular mechanisms of the mutation fixation process induced by a mutagen and carcinogen, a multi-system approach is suggested to reduce the probability that the results are biased by the assay used. In this light we described our different approaches to answer basic questions on the mutagenesis induced by the chemical carcinogen 4-Nitroquinoline-1-oxide. We determined mutations at the molecular level in three experimental systems: a) in prokaryotes (ss M13mp19 lacZ'/E. coli F'lacZ delta M15); b) in eukaryotes (i) ss and ds pZ189 supF/CV1-P/E.coli lacZam and (ii)
HPRT
in CHO cells with different repair capacity. We think this type of approach can be used to study the genetic effects of new cancer drugs for which the molecular mechanisms of action at the molecular level are still not well understood. We think to apply the know-how to study mutational spectra in tumor derived tumor suppressor genes.
...
PMID:Multi-system approach to study mutagenesis induced by chemical carcinogens. 129 65
Expression plasmids containing the human alpha 1-antitrypsin (alpha 1 AT) promoter fused to either adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (aprt) or xanthine-
guanine phosphoribosyltransferase
(gpt) coding sequences were sequentially introduced into APRT-
HPRT
- rat hepatoma cells. Stable transfectants expressing both transgenes were isolated and characterized. Nonexpressing variants were subsequently obtained by selecting against expression of one or both transgenes. Variants isolated by selecting against expression of either transgene alone generally displayed deficiency phenotypes in cis, as only three of 20 clones tested were affected for expression of alpha 1AT mRNA. In contrast, double selection yielded predominantly trans effects: 12 of 14 lines tested showed impaired ability to express their chromosomal alpha 1AT genes. Furthermore, expression of several other liver genes, including the gene encoding the HNF-1 trans-activator, was repressed in many of the variant lines. Thus, double selection using chimeric transgenes is a useful approach for generating variant cell lines deficient in expression of specific mammalian genes.
...
PMID:Direct selection of hepatoma cell variants deficient in alpha 1-antitrypsin gene expression. 133 97
Whole-blood cells of obligate carriers of the X-linked Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS) exhibit nonrandom inactivation of the X-chromosomes. However, because of the limited polymorphism of the probes available, the X-methylation pattern can only be determined in a restricted proportion of females. We thus analysed a large set of normal females and members of WAS families, using the recently described marker M27 beta, which detects the hyperpolymorphic locus DXS255. The probe was used to detect differences in methylation between the active and inactive X-chromosome, and the findings were compared with the pattern obtained using the well-documented probes from the 5' end of the PGK and
HPRT
genes. All the normal females were found to use either X-chromosome randomly, and there was complete correlation between the three probes in the populations studied. Segregation analysis performed with M27 beta and other related markers in the WAS families was fully in accordance with the X-inactivation data. The use of M27 beta, for both X-inactivation and segregation analysis of WAS kindreds, provides a basis for genetic counselling in the majority of families, including those with no surviving males.
...
PMID:Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome carrier detection with the hypervariable marker M27 beta. 135 Feb 64
Chorionic Villous Biopsy (CVS) for diagnosis of XLP was undertaken at 10 weeks gestation in an obligate carrier. The fetus was found to be male by cytogenetic analysis. XLP (Xq25-q26) is closely linked to the RFLP markers DXS10, DXS37 and DXS42, but only DXS10 (distal to XLP) was informative for prenatal diagnosis in this family. RFLP analysis using this marker gave a 7% risk that the fetus was affected, based on the known recombination frequency between DXS10 and XLP. Further investigation was then undertaken to obtain a rapid and more accurate diagnosis using the three highly polymorphic PCR based markers. These were the AC repeat markers DXS424 (XL5A) and DXS425 (XL90A3) and the tetramer repeat marker within
HPRT
. DX425 is approximately 10 cM proximal to DXS10 and
HPRT
but is not known with certainty to map proximal or distal to XLP. DXS424 is proximal to DXS10 and
HPRT
and was inferred to be proximal to XLP on the basis of map distance from
HPRT
estimated by linkage analysis of data from CEPH pedigrees. This was confirmed by a recombinant in the XLP family between DXS424 and DXS425, placing DXS424 proximal to XLP. Diagnosis by linkage using DXS424 and DXS425, at least one of which is proximal to XLP, and distal markers DXS10 and
HPRT
, increased the accuracy of diagnosis using flanking marker analysis to greater than 99% that the fetus was unaffected. HLA DR typing of the CVS showed that the fetus was DR identical to a male sibling with XLP. HLA compatibility was confirmed at delivery by full HLA typing and MLC.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:X-linked lymphoproliferative disease: prenatal detection of an unaffected histocompatible male. 135 86
Different CD15 murine monoclonal antibodies were studied. These antibodies appeared to react specifically with the human myeloid-lineage-derived cell types in both peripheral blood and bone marrow. The antigens recognized by these antibodies were immunoprecipitated from lysates of 125I-labelled neutrophilic PMNs of healthy donors and subsequently analysed by electrophoresis on SDS-polyacrylamide gel and autoradiography. All antibodies precipitated the same membrane polypeptides from the membrane-iodinated PMN lysates: 105 and 150-kDa as most prominent, together with 260-, 230-, 67- and 52-kDa polypeptides. Absorption studies were performed with synthesized carbohydrate molecules. Antibody B4.3 appears to be directed against 3-alpha-fucosyl-N-acetyl-lactosamine (FAL). Competition experiments with 125I-labelled B4.3 demonstrated complete inhibition of binding by B4.3 and three other CD15 antibodies (VIM D5, UJ308, MI/N1), and partial inhibition by three additional antibodies (FMC10, FMC12, FMC13), indicating binding to the same antigenic structure. None of the antibodies reacted with monocytes using the immunofluorescence technique, but after neuraminidase digestion of these cells, positive reactions were obtained with all antibodies. Immunoprecipitation with lysates of both native and neuraminidase-digested monocytes showed no polypeptide bands. Monocytic differentiation of the myeloid cell line HL60 by 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) was accompanied by a decrease in reactivity with the antibodies, which could be reversed by neuraminidase digestion. This indicates that 3-alpha-fucosyl-N-acetyl-lactosamine is masked for the detection with antibodies upon monocytic differentiation by sialylation. Human x mouse myeloid cell hybrids were obtained after fusion of human myeloid cells and the
HPRT
-deficient murine myeloid cell line WEHI-TG.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Expression of CD15 (FAL) on myeloid cells and chromosomal localization of the gene. 136 94
MEL cells, undergoing erythroid differentiation and parasynchronized by dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) induction, were irradiated with a 3-s pulse of UV light at sublethal dose. A large number of clones deficient in different gene functions are found in the progeny of the treated cells, if the pulse irradiation is performed 18-24 h from the start of DMSO induction. Kinetics of thymidine incorporation into DNA show that the period of sensitivity corresponds to the S phase. The results show that the activities of the tested genes are differently affected depending on the exact time of cell irradiation. Maximum percent inhibition of cells not expressing glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G-6-PD) (70%) is produced by irradiating at 20 h from the start of DMSO induction; 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (6-PGD) (55%), and hypoxanthine (guanine) phosphoribosyltransferase (
HPRT
) (33%), at 21 h; hemoglobin (50%), at 22 h. The time difference in the sensitivity to UV light is highly reproducible and has been exploited to isolate, with high efficiency, cellular clones deficient in any one of the tested functions. Determinations of enzymatic activities on cell lysates show that the expression of tested genes is actually altered in cells that, on the basis of cytochemical tests, appear unaffected by UV irradiation. While the production of mutant clones is observed only during the S phase of the cell cycle, immediate statistical damage of the cellular DNA is produced at all times of irradiation. This finding excludes that the two types of phenotypic alterations, blocked or altered gene expression, both propagated in the progeny of the cells as clonal properties, may derive from a preferential alteration of those functions during the S phase.
...
PMID:Selective gene mutation in MEL cells. 137 Jul 18
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