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 express high levels of proteins encoded by transfected DNA constructs in a variety of cultured cells, including neuronal cells, the activities of nine different promoters were evaluated using Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase (beta-gal) (LacZ) as a reporter gene. These nine promoters were categorized into three distinct groups (high, intermediate, and low expresser), in terms of the levels of beta-gal expression. An expression vector containing the cytomegalovirus enhancer and the chick beta-actin promoter (high expresser) showed the highest levels of expression, followed by vectors containing the cytomegalovirus promoter/enhancer and the SV40 promoter/enhancer (intermediate expresser). The rest of the promoters (thymidine kinase, adenovirus, murine proliferative sarcoma virus, nerve growth factor receptor, Rous sarcoma and mouse mammary tumor virus, and beta-amyloid precursor protein) expressed low levels of beta-gal. These results were consistent for eight different cell types. A particularly attractive model is the stem cell, P19; cultures differentiating into progeny consisting predominantly of cholinergic neurons could be readily transfected with expression vectors using liposomes and expressed beta-gal without significant morphologic changes of the differentiated neurons. The systems should be useful for the study of promoters and various expressed proteins, including those involved in axonal transport.
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PMID:Activity assays of nine heterogeneous promoters in neural and other cultured cells. 806 55

Nerve growth factor differentiates precursor cells into sympathetic neurons. Does acquisition of a "neuronal" phenotype after nerve growth factor involve biosynthesis of chromogranin A, the major soluble protein in chromaffin granule cores? Nerve growth factor activated chromogranin A gene expression 7.6-fold in PC12 pheochromocytoma cells, and similarly activated PC12-transfected mouse, rat or human chromogranin A promoter/reporter constructs. Chromogranin A promoter 5'-deletions narrowed the nerve growth factor response element to a region from - 77 to - 61 bp upstream of the cap site, a region containing the chromogranin A cyclic AMP response element (TGACGTAA). Three different site-directed mutations of the cyclic AMP response element each reduced the nerve growth factor effect by >90%. Transfer of the cyclic AMP response element to a heterologous (thymidine kinase) promoter activated that promoter approximately 5-fold after nerve growth factor, while transfer of a cyclic AMP response element point-gap mutant (TGA-GTAA) to a heterologous promoter abolished the nerve growth factor effect. These findings indicate that the cyclic AMP response element in cis is, at least in part, both necessary and sufficient to activate the chromogranin A gene. Chemical blockade of the nerve growth factor receptor TrkA or the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway component MEK substantially diminished nerve growth factor-induced expression of chromogranin A. By contrast, the response of chromogranin A to nerve growth factor was not impaired after blockade of phospholipase C-gamma or phosphoinositide-3 kinase. Chemical blockade of TrkA, Ras, MEK or mitogen-activated protein kinase similarly inhibited nerve growth factor activation of chromogranin A. Expression of constitutively activated Ras, Raf or MEK mutants increased chromogranin A promoter activity. Expression of dominant negative (inhibitory) mutants of Sos, Ha-Ras, Rafl, mitogen-activated protein kinase, ribosomal protein S6 serine kinase II (CREB kinase) or CREB (KCREB) each inhibited the nerve growth factor-induced increase in chromogranin A promoter activity. Thus, each component of the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway is crucially involved in relaying the nerve growth factor signal in trans to the chromogranin A gene, in the following proposed sequence: nerve growth factor --> TrkA --> Shc/Grb2/Sos --> Ras --> Raf --> MEK --> mitogen-activated protein kinase --> ribosomal protein S6 serine kinase II --> CREB cyclic AMP response element.
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PMID:Neurotrophin activation of catecholamine storage vesicle protein gene expression: signaling to chromogranin a biosynthesis. 1019 63

Activation of T cells is necessary for efficient retroviral-mediated gene transfer. In addition, if the population of infused cells is to be limited to transduced cells, a means of positive selection is required. We describe a clinical scale procedure for activation of donor T cells with anti-CD3/CD28 beads followed by transduction with a retroviral construct expressing the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (HSV-tk) and human nerve growth factor receptor (NGFR). Optimization of transduction parameters was performed, testing the timing of transduction, centrifugation, and the use of serum. In large-scale experiments, 3-5 x 10(8) peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were activated with anti-CD3/CD28 beads and expanded to day 13. Transduction was accomplished using MFG-TKiNG supernatant produced from the PG13 packaging line 48 hr after T-cell activation. The mean transduction frequency was 37.5% based on NGFR expression, and the mean expansion observed was 42.6-fold (mean final cell number 1.85 x 10(10)). A comparison of the ability of the Baxter Isolex 300i and the Miltenyi CliniMACS to perform purification of NGFR+ cells suggests that greater purity can be achieved with the CliniMACS device (67.4% vs. 97.7%), while the yield of transduced cells appears higher with the Isolex 300i (41.3% vs. 23.5%). We conclude that a strategy based on activation of human T cells with anti-CD3/CD28 beads can result in sufficient transduction, expansion, and purification based on NGFR expression for clinical trials.
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PMID:Clinical-scale selection of anti-CD3/CD28-activated T cells after transduction with a retroviral vector expressing herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase and truncated nerve growth factor receptor. 1203 Nov 30

Donor T lymphocytes genetically engineered to express a "suicide gene" to facilitate negative selection represent a promising strategy for the management of graft-versus-host disease occurring after allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT). For this purpose, the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (HSV-tk) gene, although well studied, has limitations. Cytosine deaminase (CD), an alternative gene for negative selection, converts 5-fluorocytosine (5-FC) to the toxic metabolite 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). Sensitivity of cells to 5-FU can be further increased by expression of uracil phosphoribosyltransferase (UPRT), which catalyzes the conversion of 5-FU to 5-fluorouridine monophosphate. By using a chimeric gene (NG/CD) expressing the truncated human nerve growth factor receptor (NGFR) for positive selection fused to the Saccharomyces cerevisiae CD gene, we investigated strategies to achieve optimal T cell eradication by CD and UPRT expression, utilizing a single retroviral vector. Three vector strategies were compared on the basis of NGFR expression by flow cytometry, western analysis, and enzymatic activity. A construct (NG/CDiU) expressing UPRT and NG/CD, using a bicistronic message, provided the greatest UPRT activity and killing, reducing the lethal dose of 5-FC sufficient to eradicate 90% of cells from 38.7 microg/ml (300 microM) (NG/CD expression alone) to 0.13 microg/ml (1 microM). This approach provides an effective alternative to the HSV-tk system for eradication of donor T lymphocytes after allogeneic HCT.
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PMID:Coexpression of the uracil phosphoribosyltransferase gene with a chimeric human nerve growth factor receptor/cytosine deaminase fusion gene, using a single retroviral vector, augments cytotoxicity of transduced human T cells exposed to 5-fluorocytosine. 1671 9