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

We reported previously that the herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) thymidine kinase reporter gene (tk) was expressed in the testes of transgenic mice when coupled to the promoter of a liver-specific mouse major urinary protein (MUP) gene. Here we show that HSV-1 tk is also expressed in the testis when coupled to a MUP pseudogene promoter, to a truncated MUP promoter that is not active in the liver, and to the promoter of the bovine thyroglobulin gene. Furthermore, HSV-1 tk itself was expressed in the testis, although its normal expression had been disabled by removing an upstream regulator of transcription. In every case, the same multiple transcripts were observed, with their 5' ends located downstream of the normal HSV-1 tk translation initiation codon. We conclude that the transcription of HSV-1 tk in the testis is directed by a cryptic TATA box-independent promoter located in the coding region of the gene. The longest HSV-1 thymidine kinase (TK) polypeptides synthesized in the testis were shorter than full-length TK and probably result from translational initiation at Met46 and Met60, the second and third ATG codons of the tk reading frame. Male mice of most transgenic lines were sterile, and the severity of the lesion in spermatogenesis was directly related to the level of TK expression. In the most highly expressing lines, sperm counts were low and morphologically defective sperm were common. In other sterile lines, TK was expressed at a lower level and sperm counts were normal but sperm motility was greatly reduced. Lines with the lowest levels of HSV-1 TK expression were fertile. HSV-1 TK was expressed in germ line cells, mainly in the haploid spermatids. However, low-level HSV-1 TK activity was found in the testis before the first germ cells entered meiosis, showing that if expression is confined to the germ cells, it also occurs in spermatogonia.
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PMID:The herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase is expressed in the testes of transgenic mice under the control of a cryptic promoter. 171 6

We describe the construction and properties of a retroviral expression vector, designated pMV-7, designed to transfer unselected cDNAs and produce their encoded proteins in recipient cells. The vector is flanked by the long terminal repeats (LTRs) of the Moloney murine sarcoma virus (MSV) and contains the selectable drug resistance gene neo under the regulation of the herpes simplex virus (HSV) thymidine kinase (tk) promoter. Unique Eco RI and Hind III sites facilitate the introduction of sequences whose transcription is regulated by the 5' LTR. We have inserted cDNAs encoding: (i) the human lymphocyte antigen T4, (ii) the human lymphocyte antigen T8, and (iii) the murine hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (HPRT), into the pMV-7 vector. These constructions were used to transduce recipient cells to the neo+ phenotype. In each case, functional assays demonstrated that 65-92% of the neo+ clones produced the appropriate protein encoded by its corresponding cDNA. These clones were characterized further by analyzing the expression of vector-regulated transcripts. The neo+T4+ clones expressed a single full-length LTR-to-LTR transcript as detected by a T4 probe. The neo+T8+ clones, however, expressed both a full-length LTR-to-LTR transcript and an additional smaller transcript as detected by a T8 probe. This smaller transcript probably resulted from the utilization of cryptic signals which control 3' RNA processing. Furthermore, all of the neo+ clones expressed a transcript that initiated from the tk promoter, contained the neo gene, and used polyadenylation signals provided by the 3' LTR. Thus, the pMV-7 vector is capable of high-efficiency transfer and high-frequency expression of the cDNA-encoded protein.
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PMID:Construction and characterization of a retroviral vector demonstrating efficient expression of cloned cDNA sequences. 283 47

Most eucaryotic mRNAs are polyadenylated. In higher eucaryotes, the sequence AATAAA is located 7 to 30 base pairs (bp) upstream from the site of processing and polyadenylation and is a critical part of the signal for processing and polyadenylation. Efficient cleavage and polyadenylation also require sequences downstream of polyadenylation sites. The herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase (tk) gene contains two copies of the AATAAA hexanucleotide and a GT box (18 of 19 consecutive residues are G or T) previously shown to be required for efficient processing and polyadenylation of tk mRNA (C. N. Cole and T. P. Stacy, Mol. Cell. Biol., 5:2104-2113). To define further the sequence requirements for efficient polyadenylation, we prepared linker scanning, internal deletion, and small insertion mutations in the polyadenylation region of the tk gene. These mutations were analyzed by S1 nuclease protection analysis of cytoplasmic RNA isolated from transfected Cos-1 monkey kidney cells. When the proximal AATAAA was deleted, no tk mRNA polyadenylated in the normal region was detected, whereas replacement of the second AATAAA with an XbaI linker had no effect on polyadenylation. When various portions of the GT box were replaced with linker, the amount of tk mRNA produced was reduced to 23 to 82% of the normal amount, but polyadenylation in the normal region was never abolished. Thus, no single portion of the GT box was absolutely required. In some cases, extended transcripts, polyadenylated at a cryptic site within pBR322, were detected. A spacing of 6 bp between AATAAA and the GT box was too short for efficient processing and polyadenylation. A spacing of 30 bp appeared to work almost as efficiently as did the wild-type spacing of 18 bp. Taken together, these results indicate that efficient polyadenylation requires both AATAAA and downstream GT-rich sequences. In addition, processing and polyadenylation are affected both qualitatively and quantitatively by sequences at polyadenylation sites and at more distant locations.
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PMID:Fine-structure analysis of the processing and polyadenylation region of the herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase gene by using linker scanning, internal deletion, and insertion mutations. 287 21

Introduction of the mouse histone H3.1 gene into tk- mouse L cells by cotransfection with the herpesvirus thymidine kinase gene resulted in the production of two mRNAs from the transfected gene, one with a normal 3' end and the other one with a longer 3'-untranslated region, ending at site X, which was poly(A)+. In contrast, the endogenous histone H3.1 gene only produced a single mRNA. The cryptic poly(A)+ site was only used when the histone H3.1 gene was transfected. To localize possible downstream cryptic processing sites, the hairpin loop at the end of the histone gene was deleted and the resulting deletions were introduced into L cells. Two major mRNAs were produced from this gene, one ending at site X and the major one ending at site Y, which was located 150 nucleotides before site X. Transcription extended downstream of site X efficiently in the endogenous gene, as judged by the extent of transcription of downstream sequences in isolated nuclei. Transcription extended downstream of site X in the transfected gene because the placement of a normal histone 3' end downstream of site X resulted in transcripts that ended at site X and longer transcripts that ended with the new histone 3' end. These results indicate that transcription may normally proceed a substantial distance past the hairpin loop (greater than 500 bases). The formation of the different 3' ends in these transfected genes was due to competition between different processing mechanisms.
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PMID:Expression of mouse histone genes: transcription into 3' intergenic DNA and cryptic processing sites downstream from the 3' end of the H3 gene. 288 14

A series of plasmids containing new fusion genes in which the trout protamine gene is placed under the control of the complete herpes virus (HSV-1) tk promoter Pvu II-Bgl II fragment (pM8), or a shortened thymidine kinase (tk) promoter in which the region between the TATA box and the cap site is altered by using the Pvu II-Mlu I fragment (pM7), have been constructed. An additional recombinant plasmid was constructed in which the Bgl II-Ava II fragment of the protamine gene containing the entire protamine promoter but missing the protamine coding region was cloned into pBR322 between the Xho II 1666 and Hind III sites (pP5). For in vitro transcription, a HeLa cell lysate system was prepared and the RNA transcription products, after glyoxalation, were electrophoretically analyzed on 5% polyacrylamide gels. In constructing pM8 the DNA sequence between the tk promoter and the cap site was present while in pM7 it was deleted. Similar multiple transcripts were seen in both cases, indicating that the region between the promoter and the cap site has no effect upon transcription in vitro. The multiple transcripts appear to be due to the presence of a cryptic promoter in the complementary strand of the protamine gene. The activity of this cryptic promoter has been confirmed by comparison of the transcription of plasmid pP5, in which the protamine mRNA coding region has been deleted, with a previously described plasmid, pJBRP (Jankowski JM and Dixon GH (1984) Can. J. Biochem. Cell. Biol. 62, 291-300), containing the intact protamine gene.
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PMID:The in vitro transcription of a rainbow trout (Salmo gairdnerii) protamine gene. II. Controlled mutation of the cap site region. 298 42

The herpes simplex virus (HSV) type 1 thymidine kinase gene (tk) was resected from its 3' end with BAL 31 exonuclease. Two sets of plasmids were isolated that lacked information distal to the two copies of the hexanucleotide 5'-AATAAA-3' located at the 3' end of the HSV tk gene. The presence of a simian virus 40 origin of DNA replication in each plasmid facilitated analysis of patterns of transcription in transfected Cos-1 monkey cells. Transcription analyses were performed with an S1 nuclease protection assay. Efficient processing and polyadenylation at the normal site still occurred when all sequences more than 44 or 46 base pairs (bp) downstream from the first AATAAA were removed (pTK311R/SV010 and pTK209R/SV010). Removal of an additional 7 bp (pTK312R/SV010) decreased the amount of tk mRNA processed at that normal site, and tk mRNA polyadenylated at a cryptic site within pBR322 sequences began to appear. The normal processing and polyadenylation site was not used at all when an additional 12 bp was removed (pTK314R/SV010); the small amount of tk mRNA produced was processed and polyadenylated at the cryptic pBR322 site. The region of the tk gene critical for efficient processing and polyadenylation of tk mRNA is located 20 to 38 bp downstream from the first AATAAA, distal to the polyadenylation site, and as RNA can form a stem-loop structure containing AAUAAA. Similar G + T-rich elements were located in DNA fragments which substitute efficiently for the HSV tk processing and polyadenylation signal and were not found in AATAAA-containing DNA fragments which substitute inefficiently for the HSV tk signal.
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PMID:Identification of sequences in the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene required for efficient processing and polyadenylation. 301 51

This report demonstrates that the plasmids, pBLCAT2 and pBLCAT3, which are used widely for the preparation of promoter reporter gene constructs, exhibit cryptic promoter activity when expressed in embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells and their differentiated cells. The promoterless plasmid pBLCAT3 is used widely because it has two multiple cloning sites. We demonstrate that the activity of the cryptic promoter present in pBLCAT3 is increased dramatically by an enhancerlike region of the murine k-FGF gene. However, the basal cryptic promoter activity and the enhanced cryptic promoter activity can be silenced effectively by the insertion of three tandemly arranged polyadenylation sequences. To characterize the influence of the cryptic promoter in pBLCAT3, we tested its effects on two promoters. Our findings suggest that the cryptic promoter increases by several fold the expression of the reporter gene in pBLCAT2, which contains the thymidine kinase promoter. In contrast, the cryptic promoter present in pBLCAT3 does not seem to influence the expression of the k-FGF promoter. Last, we observed cryptic promoter activity when pBLCAT3 was expressed transiently in EC-differentiated cells. Together, our findings argue that transcription silencing sequences should be used when examining weak promoters in these plasmids, especially in combination with enhancers.
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PMID:Cryptic promoter activity within the backbone of a plasmid commonly used to prepare promoter/reporter gene constructs. 795 17

The Dax-1 gene encodes a protein that is structurally related to members of the orphan nuclear receptor superfamily. Dax-1 is coexpressed with another orphan nuclear receptor, steroidogenic factor-1 (SF-1), in the adrenal, gonads, hypothalamus, and pituitary gland. Mutations in Dax-1 cause adrenal hypoplasia congenita, a disorder that is characterized by adrenal insufficiency and hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. These developmental and endocrine abnormalities are similar to those caused by disruption of the murine Ftz-F1 gene (which encodes SF-1), suggesting that these nuclear receptors act along the same developmental cascade. Cloning of the murine Dax-1 gene revealed a candidate SF-1-binding site in the Dax-1 promoter. In transient expression assays in SF-1-deficient JEG-3 cells, SF-1 stimulated expression of the Dax-1 promoter. However, deletion or mutation of the consensus SF-1-binding site did not eliminate SF-1 stimulation. Further analyses revealed the presence of a cryptic SF-1 site that creates an imperfect direct repeat of the SF-1 element. When linked to the minimal thymidine kinase promoter, each of the isolated SF-1 sites was sufficient to mediate transcriptional regulation by SF-1. Mutation of both SF-1 sites eliminated SF-1 binding and stimulation of the Dax-1 promoter. Unexpectedly, mutation of either half of the composite SF-1 sites increased basal activity in JEG-3 cells, suggesting interaction of a repressor protein. Gel shift analyses of the composite response element revealed an additional complex that was not supershifted by SF-1 antibodies. This complex was eliminated by mutation of either half-site, and it was supershifted by antibodies against chicken ovalbumin upstream promoter-transcription factor (COUP-TF). We propose that Dax-1 is stimulated by SF-1, and that SF-1 and COUP-TF provide antagonistic pathways that converge upon a common regulatory site.
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PMID:The murine Dax-1 promoter is stimulated by SF-1 (steroidogenic factor-1) and inhibited by COUP-TF (chicken ovalbumin upstream promoter-transcription factor) via a composite nuclear receptor-regulatory element. 965 5

Mice that carry the wild-type herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV1) thymidine kinase (tk) gene coupled to the bovine thyroglobulin (bTG) promoter (bTG-tk1 mice) express viral TK at a high level in the thyroid gland, and at an equally high level, ectopically, in the testis, which renders the males sterile. When the bTG promoter was coupled either to a variant of HSV1-tk (differing from the wild type in 2 nucleotides) (bTG-tk1alpha mice) or to the herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV2) tk gene (bTG-tk2 mice) viral TK was expressed at high levels in the thyroid gland, and much lower levels in the testis, which causes a reduction in male fecundity rather than sterility. Here, we compare the expression of the three transgenes in the two tissues. Thyroids of all mice exhibited a 1.3 kb RNA initiated at or near the bTG cap site. Testes of all mice exhibited mainly 5'-end-shortened RNAs (bTG-tk1 and bTG-tk1alpha mice, approx. 1.2 kb and 0.9 kb; bTG-tk2 mice, approx. 1.2 kb) initiated from cryptic initiation sites in the HSV1-tk and HSV2-tk coding regions. Also, less abundant RNAs initiated near the bTG cap site were expressed from all three transgenes. Thyroids of bTG-tk1 and bTG-tk1alpha mice contained the full-length HSV-TK protein and a truncated variant previously shown to originate at a non-ATG start codon. Testes of these mice exhibited both proteins but relatively less of the full-length protein. We attribute the high level of viral TK in the testes of bTG-tk1 mice to the expression of a predominant protein of Mr 39000 that originates from ATG-2. Thyroid and testis of bTG-tk2 mice contained only the full-length HSV2-TK protein.
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PMID:Herpesvirus thymidine kinase transgenes that do not cause male sterility are aberrantly transcribed and translated in the testis. 976 91

The herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene type 1 (HSV-Tk) ganciclovir (GCV) system is a novel therapeutic strategy for the modulation of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD), a major complication of allogeneic stem cell transplantation (allo-SCT). Retroviral-mediated gene transfer of the HSV-Tk gene into donor T lymphocytes before allo-SCT may allow their in vivo selective depletion after treatment with GCV. The expression of the HSV-Tk gene was analyzed in vitro in CEM cells, a human lymphoblastoid cell line, transduced with 2 different vectors, each containing the HSV-Tk gene and a selectable marker gene. GCV-resistant clones were identified within the clones expressing the marker gene. Characterization of the molecular events leading to this resistance revealed a 227-bp deletion in the HSV-Tk gene due to the presence of cryptic splice donor and acceptor sites within the HSV-Tk gene sequence. Furthermore, it was confirmed that this deletion was present in human primary T cells transduced with either vector and in 12 patients who received transduced donor T cells, together with a T-cell-depleted allo-SCT. In vivo circulating transduced T cells containing the truncated HSV-Tk gene were identified in all patients immediately after infusion and up to 800 days after transplantation. In patients who received GCV as treatment for GVHD, a progressive increase in the proportion of transduced donor T cells carrying the deleted HSV-Tk gene was observed. These results suggest that the limitations within the HSV-Tk/GCV system can be improved by developing optimized retroviral vectors to ensure maximal killing of HSV-Tk-transduced cells.
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PMID:Molecular mechanism for ganciclovir resistance in human T lymphocytes transduced with retroviral vectors carrying the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene. 1113 51


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