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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)
HPRT
mutant clones of V79 Chinese hamster cells, isolated after 6-thioguanine (6TG) selection, normally exhibit sensitivity to growth in medium containing the folic acid inhibitor aminopterin or the glutamine analogue L-azaserine (e.g., HAT or HAsT medium). However, it has been shown that some
HPRT
- clones are resistant to both HAT and HAsT medium. The present study was undertaken to investigate whether any common structural gene alteration exists for such 6TGr-HATr-HAsTr clones. Four clones were studied, 1 of spontaneous origin, 2 induced by a low dose of MNU and 1 EMS-induced. In contrast to wild-type cells and a mutant clone carrying a complete deletion of the
HPRT
gene, these 4 investigated 6TGr-HATr-HAsTr clones all showed an enhanced incorporation of exogenous 3H-hypoxanthine in the presence of aminopterin and L-azaserine suggesting that these clones carry mutations in the structural part of the
HPRT
gene. Sequence analysis of PCR-amplified
HPRT
cDNA from these mutants showed that the spontaneous and the 2 MNU-induced mutant clones lacked exon 4, while the EMS-induced mutant had a GC to AT transition in exon 6. Southern blot analysis of genomic
DNA
after digestion with BglII, EcoRI and PstI showed no changes in fragment patterns as compared to the wild type. Further sequence analysis of PCR-amplified genomic
DNA
using exon 4-specific primers showed that all these 3 mutants had an AT to GC or GC to AT transition in exon 4, but had no alterations in the splice sites of exon 4. Based on their characteristics of hypoxanthine incorporation, the present mutant clones fit the model for the proposed functional domains of the
HPRT
protein.
...
PMID:Characterization of HAT- and HAsT-resistant HPRT mutant clones of V79 Chinese hamster cells. 171 25
The enzyme
hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
HPRT
) catalyzes the metabolic salvage of the purine bases hypoxanthine and guanine. We previously characterized the genomic structure of the human
HPRT
gene and described its promoter sequence. In this report, we identify cis-acting transcriptional control regions of the human
HPRT
gene by linking various 5'-flanking sequences to the bacterial chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene. The sequence from positions -219 to -122 relative to the translation initiation site is required for maximal expression of this gene, and it functions equally in both normal and reverse orientations. In addition, a cis-acting negative element is present in the region spanning from positions -570 to -388. This negative element can also repress promoters of heterologous genes, such as those of adenosine deaminase and dihydrofolate reductase, which are structurally and functionally similar to the human
HPRT
promoter. Furthermore, this repressor element functions independently of its orientation but appears to be distance dependent. In vivo competition assays demonstrated that the trans-acting factor(s) that binds to this negative element specifically inhibits human
HPRT
promoter activity. Taken together, these data localize cis-acting sequences important in the regulation of human
HPRT
gene expression and should allow the study of protein-
DNA
interactions which modulate the transcription of this gene.
...
PMID:Functional characterization of the human hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase gene promoter: evidence for a negative regulatory element. 171 4
Alkylating agent damage was quantified in human T-lymphocytes by calculating gene-specific lesion frequencies and repair rates. At 3 time points after exposure to methyl methanesulfonate (0, 6, and 24 h), T-lymphocyte
DNA
was extracted, digested with HindIII, and divided into 2 aliquots. Apurinic sites were formed in the
DNA
fragments of both aliquots by heat-induced liberation of the N-methylpurines. The methoxyamine-treated aliquot provided gene fragments which were refractory to alkaline hydrolysis (full-length fragments), while the fragments in the untreated aliquot were cleaved at apurinic sites by hydroxide. After Southern blotting, lesion frequencies were calculated by comparing the band intensity of the full-length fragment to its unprotected counterpart. The restriction fragments analyzed were from the constitutively active dihydrofolate reductase (dhfr) plus
hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
hprt
) genes and from the transcriptionally inactive Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene (dmd). In decreasing order, the fragments containing the most lesions per kb of
DNA
were:
hprt
greater than dhfr greater than dmd. T-Lymphocytes from 2 females had 30% more heat-labile N-methylpurines in the active X-linked
hprt
gene than in the inactive X-linked dmd gene. The lesion frequency found in the male's lone
hprt
allele was the highest observed. These lesion frequency differences are discussed in terms of chromatin structure. After 6 and 24 h, no significant repair rate differences were observed among the 3 genes.
...
PMID:Two expressed human genes sustain slightly more DNA damage after alkylating agent treatment than an inactive gene. 171 96
The initiation of carcinogenesis by carcinogens such as 7r,8t-dihydroxy-9,10t-oxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo[a]pyrene (BPDE-I) is thought to involve the formation of
DNA
adducts. However, the diastereomeric diol epoxide, 7r,8t-dihydroxy-9,10c-oxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo[a]pyrene (BPDE-II), also forms
DNA
adducts but is inactive in standard carcinogenesis models. We have measured the formation and loss of
DNA
adducts derived from BPDE-II in a
DNA
-repair-proficient line of Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells, AT3-2, and in two derived mutant cell lines, UVL-1 and UVL-10, which are unable to repair bulky
DNA
adducts. BPDE-II adducts were lost from cellular
DNA
in AT3-2 cells with a half-life of 13.8 h; this was about twice the rate found for BPDE-I adducts. BPDE-II adducts were also lost from
DNA
in UVL-1 and UVL-10 cells, but at a much slower rate. When purified
DNA
was modified in vitro with BPDE-II and then held at 37 degrees C,
DNA
adducts were removed at a rate identical to that seen in UVL-1 and UVL-10 cells, suggesting that the loss in these cells was not due to enzymatic
DNA
-repair processes but to chemical lability of the adducts. Mutant frequencies at the APRT and
HPRT
loci were measured at BPDE-II doses that resulted in greater than 20% survival, and were found to increase linearly with dose. In the
DNA
-repair-deficient cells, the
HPRT
locus was moderately hypermutable compared with AT3-2 cells (about 5-fold); the APRT locus was extremely hypermutable, giving about 25-fold higher mutant fractions in UVL-1 and UVL-10 than in AT3-2 cells at equal initial levels of binding. When we compared the mutational efficiency of BPDE-II at both loci in AT3-2 cells (the mutant frequency in mutants/10(6) survivors at a dose that resulted in one adduct per 10(6) base pairs) with our previous studies of BPDE-1, we found that BPDE-II was 4-5 times less efficient as a mutagen than BPDE-I. This difference in mutational efficiency could be explained in part by the increased rate of loss of BPDE-II adducts from the cellular
DNA
, part of which was due to an increased rate of enzymatic removal of these lesions compared with the removal of BPDE-I adducts.
...
PMID:Differences in the rate of DNA adduct removal and the efficiency of mutagenesis for two benzo[a]pyrene diol epoxides in CHO cells. 172 82
Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells were subjected to electroporation in the presence of 5-methyl deoxycytidine-triphosphate. This treatment increases by 10 to 100-fold the frequency of cells lacking thymidine kinase,
hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase
, or adenine phosphoribosyltransferase. The inactivation of the genes coding for these enzymes is thought to occur following the direct incorporation of the methylated nucleotide triphosphate into
DNA
. The enzyme-deficient clones were stable, but almost all were reactivated at high frequency by the demethylating agent 5-azacytidine, to produce derivatives with enzyme activity. The results indicate that there is a direct relationship between
DNA
methylation and gene silencing.
...
PMID:Gene silencing in mammalian cells by uptake of 5-methyl deoxycytidine-5'-triphosphate. 172 91
DNA
methylation is an important process contributing to transcriptional regulation in animal and plant cells. We observed that electroporation of Chinese hamster V-79 cells in the presence of millimolar concentrations of 5-methyl-2'-deoxycytidine 5'-triphosphate (5mdCTP) led to high-level direct incorporation of this nucleotide into
DNA
polymer. Under optimum conditions, approximately 2 x 10(8) molecules of 5 mdCTP were calculated to have been incorporated into each unit genome (6 pg of
DNA
). Since a diploid mammalian genome contains approximately 1.2-1.5 x 10(9) cytosines, this level of 5 mdCTP incorporation corresponds to substitution of up to 16.6% of total cytosines by 5-methylcytosine, or about 100-150 new methylated cytosines per average gene. The pattern of genomic methylation produced under these conditions differed from that produced physiologically in that 5mdCTP was substituted into
DNA
at random cytosines, superimposing a novel methylation pattern upon that derived from the normal enzyme-driven postreplicational process. This novel pattern of methylation showed no preference for CpG dinucleotides, but was nevertheless found capable of silencing
HPRT
gene expression and producing a condition of resistance to 6-thioguanine. The epigenetic nature of this gene silencing event was shown by the very high level of reexpression of
HPRT
mRNA following exposure of
HPRT
cells to the demethylating agent 5-azadeoxycytidine.
...
PMID:Gene silencing in mammalian cells by direct incorporation of electroporated 5-methyl-2'-deoxycytidine 5'-triphosphate. 172 92
We have shown by the filter hybridization technique that bleomycin (BLM) induces different types of mutations at the hprt gene locus of V79 Chinese hamster cells.
DNA
of mutants identified by Southern blots as partial deletions was subjected to further analysis using multiplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to localize the endpoints of the deletions over the hprt gene. The PCR analysis revealed that deletions occur in all parts of the hprt gene but are distributed non-randomly. Deletions occurred most frequently at the 3'-end of the hprt gene suggesting a possible existence of a hot spot for deletions in this region; exons 1, 2 and 3 appeared to be less affected by deletions. As PCR can detect microdeletions which are below the limit of resolution of Southern blot hybridization we analysed 25
HPRT
- mutants with Southern wild-type pattern to distinguish between point mutations and small deletions. Of these
HPRT
- mutants, all except five showed PCR amplification products identical to that of V79 wild-type cells. These results are consistent with previous Southern analyses indicating that a large portion of BLM-induced
HPRT
- mutants are real point mutations. Five mutants, however, showed differences in fragment sizes of single PCR products or did not yield one single exon fragment and thus are probably the result of deletions which were not to be detected by Southern analyses.
...
PMID:Mutation screening of bleomycin-induced V79 Chinese hamster hprt mutants using multiplex polymerase chain reaction. 172 91
Molecular analysis of
hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
hprt
) cDNA from 6-thioguanine-resistant T-lymphocytes cloned from smoking and non-smoking adult donors showed that 35% of these mutants were defective in splicing of
hprt
mRNA. Among a set of 42
hprt
splice mutants, we observed i) complete loss of one or more exons, ii) partial loss of one exon, or iii) inclusion of part of an intron sequence between adjacent exons. Loss of exon 4 was significantly more frequent than of the other exons, suggesting that the sequences that regulate splicing of this exon are either larger than those of the other exons or especially prone to mutation. In order to identify the molecular nature of
DNA
alterations causing aberrant splicing of
hprt
mRNA, 17 splice mutants were analyzed in more detail by sequencing the genomic regions flanking the mis-spliced exon. Base pair substitutions or small deletions causing defective splicing were either detected in exon sequences or in splice site consensus sequences of introns. Furthermore, genomic deletions encompassing entire exons were found. In some mutants, the alteration responsible for incorrect splicing could not be identified, suggesting that the target sequence for splice mutations is larger than merely the splice junctions. Molecular characterization of
hprt
splice mutations will lead to the identification of specific sequences regulating splicing of
hprt
mRNA and will reveal whether the mutational spectrum in splice mutants is similar to that found in the
hprt
coding region.
...
PMID:Molecular analysis of mutations affecting hprt mRNA splicing in human T-lymphocytes in vivo. 173 5
PCR is widely employed to amplify short segments of genomic
DNA
to determine if a specific change has occurred. But some investigators need to sequence the entire coding region of mammalian genes to determine what specific changes have occurred. In 1989, we [Yang et al: Gene 83:347-354] described a method to copy mRNA of the hypoxanthine (guanine) phosphoribosyl transferase (
HPRT
) gene directly from the lysate of a clone of 6-thioguanine-resistant mutant diploid human fibroblasts without the need for RNA extraction or
DNA
template purification. To avoid detecting random changes introduced by polymerases, 100 to 500 cells from an individual clone, each containing the identical mutation, are lysed and the cDNA is amplified 10(10)-to 10(11)-fold to obtain 5 to 10 micrograms of
DNA
. The consensus sequence of the cDNA is determined by direct nucleotide sequencing. Using this method, we have investigated the kinds of mutations induced by carcinogens in the coding region of the
HPRT
gene and their location in the gene and examined the role of
DNA
repair in this process. Normal repair-proficient human cells and cells deficient in
DNA
repair were exposed to mutagens in exponential growth or synchronized and exposed at the beginning of S phase or in G1 phase several hr prior to
DNA
replication. The kinds and location of mutations in the
HPRT
gene were determined and knowledge of the nature of the
DNA
lesions formed by the various mutagens allowed assignment of the
DNA
strand in which the premutagenic lesion that gave rise to the mutation had been located. Related assays involving PCR have been used to determine the nature of mutations in the coding region of the H-, N-, or K-ras genes of tumor-derived malignant human cells and to determine whether or not such cells express specific growth factor genes.
...
PMID:Use of PCR amplification of cDNA to study mechanisms of human cell mutagenesis and malignant transformation. 174 85
Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) separates
DNA
molecules based on primary sequence. Under the appropriate conditions, all base pair (bp) substitutions, frame-shifts, and deletions less than about 10 bp can be resolved from the wild type sequence using DGGE. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) permits facile amplification of a given region of the genome. We have combined PCR and DGGE to: (i) Localize mutations in the X-linked human androgen receptor gene. PCR/DGGE was used to screen the individual exons in the 2757-bp coding region of the gene in afflicted individuals as well as in potential carriers. Inheritance of a mutant allele has been demonstrated in several cases; (ii) Analyze thousands of thioguanine-resistant mutants simultaneously. The in vitro mutational spectra of MNNG, ICR-191, and cisplatin at the human
HPRT
locus have been examined by this method. The compounds all have mutational hotspots in a GGGGGG sequence in exon 3; however, the particular mutations induced by the agents were different; (iii) Examine the fidelity of several
DNA
polymerases used in PCR. The fidelity of Thermus aquaticus DNA polymerase (Taq) is 1-2 x 10(-4) misincorporations/bp/replication. Problems with Taq polymerase arise in the analysis of complex mutant populations by DGGE because the Taq-induced errors reduce the sensitivity of the system. To circumvent this, it had been necessary to use Sequenase, a modified T7 DNA polymerase with a higher fidelity. However, Sequenase is not thermostable and must be added every PCR cycle. A thermostable DNA polymerase from Thermococcus litoralis (Vent) is now available, and we have examined the fidelity of Vent, Taq, and Sequenase polymerase in PCR using DGGE. The fidelity of Vent, Taq, and Sequenase polymerase was 2.4 x 10(-5), 8.9 x 10(-5), and 4.4 x 10(-5) errors/bp, respectively. Vent polymerase had the highest fidelity of the three enzymes tested.
...
PMID:Analysis of mutations using PCR and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis. 174 86
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