Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.7.1.21 (thymidine kinase)
7,561 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To test the feasibility of using the human epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) as a model for growth factor receptor action in human hematopoietic cells, we infected Burkitt lymphoma cells (Namalwa) with a recombinant amphotrophic retrovirus containing a thymidine kinase promoter-driven human EGFR complementary DNA and the neomycin resistance gene. Neomycin-resistant cells expressing surface EGFR were selected by cell sorting using anti-EGFR monoclonal antibody 225. The selected cells expressed a Mr 170,000 protein immunoprecipitated by monoclonal antibody 225 and apparently identical to EGFR from A431 carcinoma cells. Infected Namalwa cells expressed 42,000 epidermal growth factor (EGF) binding sites/cell, and Scatchard analysis showed two affinities (Kd approximately 5 nM and approximately 0.5 nM). EGFR autophosphorylation was detected using antiphosphotyrosine antibodies after 5 min exposure to EGF. EGF binding induced rapid EGFR internalization (t1/2 = 9 min) and mobilization of transferrin receptors to the cell surface within 1 min. In fetal bovine serum-containing and serum-free cultures, EGF did not stimulate Namalwa cell proliferation. However, in the presence of 1.25% dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), EGF caused a dose-dependent increase in DNA synthesis. DMSO induced a cell cycle block in G1, which was partially reversed by EGF. DMSO induced changes in some B-cell markers suggesting cellular differentiation and increased surface EGF receptor number. Cells grown in DMSO and EGF were established as an EGF-dependent cell line for greater than 12 weeks, whereas cells grown in DMSO without EGF died within 1-2 weeks. Namalwa cells expressing EGFR demonstrated more rapid tumor growth in athymic mice. These studies demonstrate expression of functional EGFR mediating early biochemical and growth responses in a human hematopoietic cell, and indicate that EGFR can be used as an effective model in human hematopoietic cells. Results using DMSO are consistent with studies in other human leukemia cells indicating that agents inducing differentiation can restore growth factor dependence in previously factor-independent leukemia cells.
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PMID:Expression of functional epidermal growth factor receptors in a human hematopoietic cell line. 170 31

Serum-free mouse embryo (SFME) cells, derived in medium supplemented with insulin, transferrin, high density lipoprotein, epidermal growth factor, and fibronectin, do not undergo crisis, maintain a predominantly diploid karyotype with no detectable chromosomal abnormalities for well over 100 population doublings in vitro, and are growth inhibited by concentrations of serum that are growth-stimulatory for most cell lines in culture. Serum inhibition of SFME cell proliferation was reversible and was not prevented by addition of the supplements of the serum-free medium, even when added repeatedly during the culture period. The serum effect on SFME cell proliferation could be detected after incubation in serum-containing medium for as little as 8 h. SFME cells in serum-containing medium were arrested in the G1 phase of the cell cycle with a greatly reduced rate of incorporation of precursors into DNA and thymidine kinase activity, while a reduction in rate of incorporation of amino acids into protein was not observed. SFME cultures maintained for extended periods in serum-containing medium underwent a crisis-like period followed by the appearance of variant cells capable of growing in serum-supplemented medium. These cells exhibited abnormal karyotype and were resistant to several inhibitors of proliferation active on the parent SFME cell type.
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PMID:Serum inhibition of proliferation of serum-free mouse embryo cells. 189 91

Somatic cell hybrids were obtained with electric pulse by fusion of human epithelial HeLa cells derived from a carcinoma of the uterine cervix and mouse fibroblasts 3T3.4E, deficient in thymidine kinase. Hybrids were selected and propagated in HAT media; some experiments were carried out in medium with delipidized serum. The hybrid cells were characterized by indirect immunofluorescence with a biotin-streptavidin system using a panel of nine monoclonal antibodies specific for membrane and cytoplasmic antigens of parental cells: intermediate filaments (keratins and vimentin), HLA class 1 (beta 2-microglobulin), cell activation (EGF and transferrin receptors) and cellular adhesion (fibronectin and laminin). All of these antigens were expressed in HeLa cells cultured in conventional medium or with delipidized serum. Conversely mouse fibroblasts contained only vimentin, fibronectin and laminin. All the parental antigens were present in first passage hybrid cells cultured in conventional medium. Vimentin, fibronectin and laminin were maintained in fourth passage hybrids whereas keratins, beta 2-microglobulin, EGF and transferrin receptors were no longer detected. When propagated in medium with delipidized serum, hybrid cells re-expressed these antigens after 5 days of culture. These findings suggest that the reexpression of HeLa cell antigens in hybrid cells was related to deficiency in vitamin A.
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PMID:Antigenic immunostaining patterns in somatic hybrids of human HeLa cells and mouse fibroblasts 3T3.4E propagated in conventional medium and delipidized serum. 248

Blockade of the transferrin receptors whose expression is induced in lymphocytes incubated with the mitogenic lectin phytohaemagglutinin (PHA) does not affect the initial stimulation of protein synthesis but does strongly and progressively inhibit the subsequent induction of DNA synthesis. When the effects of transferrin receptor blockade on the induction of the enzymes uridine kinase (whose induction begins early in G1 phase of the cell cycle) and thymidine kinase (whose induction is closely associated with DNA synthesis) were examined, both enzymes were found to be induced normally. This indicates that the function of the transferrin receptor is directly to provide a component essential for DNA synthesis itself (probably iron) rather than to act as the receptor for a general signal required to initiate entry into S-phase.
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PMID:The role of the transferrin receptor in lymphocyte activation. 300 39

The ubiquitous trace metal zinc has been discovered since a long time as an intrinsic element in all biological systems. However, its role other than structural or catalytic in enzymes is poorly defined. Zinc plays a determinative role both in primary and secondary T lymphocyte production. Experimental data support the notion that during intrathymic maturation, non-autoreactive, immunocompetent T cell clones are selected from the excess of immature thymocytes as a result of expansion of bone marrow derived prothymocytes in response to pleiotropically acting alarmon (s) and a subsequent escape via the thymic stroma cells from nucleotide-mediated "biochemical suicide". The activity of alarmon (Ap4A), nucleotide metabolizing enzymes (TdT, DNA polymerase, thymidine kinase, 5'-nucleotidase) and some of the soluble stromal cell products (FTS) require constitutive zinc. In the peripheral lymphoid organs the magnitude and duration of antigen induced, T cell mediated immunoreactions are regulated by T-cell growth factor (IL-2). Using receptor specific monoclonal antibody probes, it has been established recently that the intracellular role of IL-2 is probably to induce the phenotypic expression of high affinity transferrin receptors, known to be the main zinc transporter system in T-lymphocytes. The coordinative role of zinc in T lymphocyte development via the inducible metallothionein system is emphasized. Some clinical aspects of zinc metabolism are discussed.
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PMID:Zinc and immunity. 623 34

Expression of 18 genes was examined at 8 different time points between 1 h and 28 days following cryogenic rat brain injury. The genes include thymidine kinase (TK), p53 tumor suppressor, c-fos, renin, myelin basic protein (MBP), proteolipid protein (PLP), transferrin, transferrin receptor, platelet-derived growth factor A (PDGF A), platelet-derived growth factor B (PDGF B), platelet-derived growth factor receptor alpha (PDGF alpha receptor), platelet-derived growth factor receptor beta (PDGF beta receptor), glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-beta 1), basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), fibroblast growth factor receptor-1 (FGF-R1), insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1), and somatostatin. Time courses of gene expression were determined for RNAs derived from hippocampus and cortex. Genes were divided into categories based upon those in which statistically significant changes in expression were first observed at or before 24 h (early genes) and those in which changes were first observed at or after 72 h (late genes). In the present model, many genes demonstrate elevated RNA levels in the cortex prior to hippocampus, following injury. RNAs transcribed from late genes tend to be elevated concurrently in cortex and hippocampus.
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PMID:Temporal changes in gene expression following cryogenic rat brain injury. 964 55

To target disseminated tumors in vivo, transgenes [beta-galactosidase gene, green fluorescence protein (GFP) gene, herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (HSV-TK)] were conjugated to transferrin (Tf) by a biotin-streptavidin bridging, which is stoichiometrically controllable, and Tf receptor (Tf-R) affinity chromatography, which selects Tf conjugates with intact receptor bindings sites from reacting with the linker. Tf-beta-galactosidase plasmid conjugate thus constructed was specifically transfected to human erythroleukemia cells (K562) via Tf-R without the aid of any lysosomotropic agents. The transfection efficiency of the conjugate was superior to those of lipofection (1% staining) and retroviral vector (5%) and slightly lower than that of adenovirus (70%). The high level of expression with our conjugate was confirmed using other tumor cells (M7609, TMK-1) whereas in normal diploid cells (HEL), which express low levels of Tf-R, expression was negligible. When GFP gene conjugates were systemically administered through the tail vein to nude mice subcutaneously inoculated with tumor, expression of GFP mRNA was found almost exclusively in tumors and to a much lesser extent in muscles, whereas GFP revealed by fluorescence microscopy was detected only in the former. To exploit a therapeutic applicability of this method, suicide gene therapy using Tf-HSV-TK gene conjugate for massively metastasized k562 tumors in severe combined immune-deficient mice was conducted, and a marked prolongation of survival and significant reduction of tumor burden were confirmed. Thus, this method could also be used for gene therapy to disseminated tumors.
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PMID:In vivo gene delivery to tumor cells by transferrin-streptavidin-DNA conjugate. 1102 95

The Herpes Simplex Virus thymidine kinase (HSV-tk) suicide gene/ganciclovir (GCV) approach has been used for the treatment of a variety of cancers. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the cytotoxic effect of ganciclovir in oral squamous cancer cells, previously transfected with HSV-tk gene delivered by transferrin-associated complexes (Tf-lipoplexes), as well as to investigate the mechanisms involved in the bystander effect and in the process of cell death. The delivery of HSV-tk gene to the oral cancer cells, HSC-3 and SCC-7, mediated by Tf-lipoplexes followed by ganciclovir treatment resulted in essentially 100% cytotoxicity, the observed toxic effect being dependent both on GCV dose and incubation time. Cell death was shown to occur mainly by an apoptotic process. Different experimental approaches demonstrated that the observed cytotoxicity was mainly due to diffusion of the toxic agent into neighbouring, non-transfected cells, via gap junctions. Preliminary in vivo studies in a murine model for oral squamous cell carcinoma have shown a significant inhibition of tumor growth upon injection of Tf-lipoplexes carrying HSV-tk followed by intraperitonal injection of GCV, as compared to controls.
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PMID:Transfection of oral cancer cells mediated by transferrin-associated lipoplexes: mechanisms of cell death induced by herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase/ganciclovir therapy. 1704 85

Transferrin modified pro-cationic liposomes were prepared and used to investigate the effect of targeting therapeutic genes to human hepatoma carcinoma cells in vitro. The main lipid CHETA, cholest-5-en-3beta-yl[2-[[4-[(carboxymethyl)dithio]-1-iminobutyl]amino]ethyl] carbamate (C36H61N3O4S2), was synthesized and used to prepare pro-cationic liposomes. The thymidine kinase (TK) gene loaded pro-cationic liposomes were prepared by first mixing the plasmid DNA and protamine together, and then incubating the resulted polyplexes with blank pro-cationic liposomes preformed by the thin film dispersion-sonication method. Transferrin (Tf) was adsorbed on the surface of pro-cationic liposomes via electrostatic interactions to form transferrin modified pro-cationic liposomes. Cellular association was measured by fluorimetry at excitation and emission wavelengths of 490 and 520 nm, respectively. The viability of TK gene infected cells following administration of ganciclovir (GCV) was investigated by MTT assay. The transferrin modified TK gene pro-cationic liposomes had a mean diameter of 240 +/- 12 nm and zeta potential of -24.10 +/- 2.5 mV (n = 3). The transmission electron microscopy image indicated that most of the liposomes were relatively regular and spherical with a condensed core inside. Cell-associated fluorescence of Tf-liposomes and unmodified liposomes (without transferrin) was 7.8 x 10(6), and 3.2 x 10(6) per milligram protein, respectively. Compared to Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen, USA) the pro-cationic liposomes and transferrin modified pro-cationic liposomes had less cytotoxicity to cells. The transduced TK gene HepG2 cells were more sensitive to GCV than the un-transduced TK gene ones and the human normal Chang liver cells were not affected by the TK/GCV system mediated by procationic liposomes.
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PMID:Preparation of a TK/GCV administration system mediated by transferrin modified pro-cationic liposomes. 1771 94

Noninvasive serial monitoring of the fate of transplanted cells would be invaluable to evaluate the potential therapeutic use of human hepatocyte transplantation. Therefore, we assessed the feasibility of bioluminescent imaging using double or triple fusion lentiviral vectors in a NOD-SCID mouse model transplanted with immortalized human fetal hepatocytes. Lentiviral vectors driven by the CMV promoter were constructed carrying reporter genes: firefly luciferase and green fluorescence protein with or without herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase. Human fetal hepatocytes immortalized by telomerase reconstitution (FH-hTERT) were successfully transduced with either of these fusion vectors. Two million stably transduced cells selected by fluorescence-activated cell sorting were injected into the spleens of NOD-SCID mice pretreated with methylcholanthrene and monocrotaline. The transplanted mice were serially imaged with a bioluminescence charged-coupled device camera after D-luciferin injection. Bioluminescence signal intensity was highest on day 3 (6.10 +/- 2.02 x 10(5) p/s/cm2/sr, mean +/- SEM), but decreased to 2.26 +/- 1.54 x 10(5) and 7.47 +/- 3.09 x 10(4) p/s/cm2/sr on day 7 and 10, respectively (p = 0.001). ELISA for human albumin in mice sera showed that levels were similar to those of control mice on day 2 (3.25 +/- 0.92 vs. 2.84 +/- 0.59 ng/ml, mean +/- SEM), peaked at 18.04 +/- 3.11 ng/ml on day 7, and decreased to 8.93 +/- 1.40 and 3.54 +/- 0.87 ng/ml on day 14 and 21, respectively (p = 0.02). Real-time quantitative RT-PCR showed gene expression levels of human albumin, alpha1-antitrypsin, and transferrin in mouse liver were 60.7 +/- 6.5%, 26.0 +/- 1.4%, and 156.8 +/- 62.4% of those of primary human adult hepatocytes, respectively, and immunohistochemistry revealed cells with human albumin and alpha1-antitrypsin expression in the mouse liver. In conclusion, our study demonstrated that bioluminescent imaging appears to be a sensitive, noninvasive modality for serial monitoring of transplanted hepatic stem cells.
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PMID:Use of bioluminescent imaging to assay the transplantation of immortalized human fetal hepatocytes into mice. 1906 33


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