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)

Mutation of the p53 tumor suppressor gene is a recurring event in a variety of human cancers. Wild-type p53 may regulate cell proliferation and has recently been shown to repress transcription from several cellular promoters. We studied the effects of wild-type and mutant human p53 on the human proliferating-cell nuclear antigen promoter and on several viral promoters including the simian virus 40 early promoter-enhancer, the herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase and UL9 promoters, the human cytomegalovirus major immediate-early promoter-enhancer, and the long terminal repeat promoters of Rous sarcoma virus, human immunodeficiency virus type 1, and human T-cell lymphotropic virus type I. HeLa cells were cotransfected with a wild-type or mutant p53 expression vector and plasmids containing a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter gene under viral (or cellular) promoter control. Expression of wild-type p53 correlated with a consistent and significant (6- to 76-fold) reduction of reporter enzyme activity. A mutation at amino acid 143 of p53 releases this inhibition significantly with all the promoters studied. Expression of a p53 mutated at any one of the five amino acid positions 143, 175, 248, 273, and 281 also correlated with a much smaller (one- to sixfold) reduction of reporter enzyme activity from the herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase promoter. These mutant forms of p53 are found in various cancer cells. Thus, failure of tumor suppression correlates with loss of the promoter inhibitory effect of p53.
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PMID:Inhibition of viral and cellular promoters by human wild-type p53. 135 31

In addition to being regulated by a complex array of cis- and trans-acting factors, c-myc protooncogene expression may be modulated by antisense RNA transcripts. Our previous studies have determined that depletion of intracellular polyamines by alpha-difluoromethylornithine results in a marked decrease in the transcription of the human c-myc gene. Because of reports that antisense transcription occurs in the 5' and 3' regions of this gene, we used a genomic clone of the human c-myc gene to ascertain whether polyamine depletion might induce an antisense RNA transcript. These studies demonstrate that polyamine depletion of the human colon cancer cell line COLO 320 results in induction of an endogenous RNA transcript with high homology to the antisense strand of the second intervening sequence (PvuII-RsaI) of the c-myc gene. Furthermore, during such depletion, steady state levels of this transcript vary inversely to the sense direction c-myc RNA. RNase protection studies suggest that the antisense transcript may arise from a different gene locus than the c-myc gene. To further identify the origins of this RNA, a cDNA library was generated from size-selected RNA and screened with c-myc sequences. A 438-base pair cDNA was isolated with approximately 85% homology, to a 285-base region in the second intron of the c-myc gene. Computer homology analysis further reveals that a 120-base region within this cDNA also has approximately 85% homology to the antisense strands of a number of genes, including the growth-related genes, N-myc, p53, and thymidine kinase. These studies provide the initial characterization of an endogenous antisense RNA transcript which could influence cell growth by modulating the expression of c-myc and other genes.
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PMID:Characterization of an endogenous RNA transcript with homology to the antisense strand of the human c-myc gene. 137 45

The MDA-468 human breast cancer cell line displays the unusual phenomenon of growth inhibition in response to pharmacological concentrations of EGF. This study was initiated with the objective of elucidating the cellular mechanisms involved in EGF-induced growth inhibition. Following EGF treatment the percentage of MDA-468 cells in G1 phase increased, together with a concomitant depletion in S and G2/M phase populations, as revealed by flow cytometry of DNA content. The apparent G1 block in the cell cycle was confirmed by treating the cells with vinblastine. DNA synthesis was reduced to about 35% of that measured in control, untreated cells after 48 h of EGF treatment, as measured by the incorporation of [3H]thymidine. DNA synthesis returned to normal following the removal of EGF from the growth-arrested cells. In order to locate the EGF-induced event responsible for the G1 arrest more precisely, we examined the expression of certain cell cycle-dependent genes by Northern blot analysis. EGF treatment did not alter either the induction of the early G1 marker, c-myc, or the expression of the late G1 markers, proliferating cell nuclear antigen, and thymidine kinase. However, EGF-treated cells revealed down regulation of p53 and histone 3.2 expression, which are expressed at the G1/S boundary and in S phase, respectively. These results indicate that EGF-induced growth inhibition in MDA-468 human breast cancer cells is characterized by a reversible cell cycle block at the G1/S boundary.
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PMID:EGF-dependent growth inhibition in MDA-468 human breast cancer cells is characterized by late G1 arrest and altered gene expression. 167 99

The murine B-cell hybridoma B9 requires interleukin-6 (IL-6) for its survival and proliferation in vitro. We show here that withdrawal of IL-6 from B9 cultures results in programmed death, concomitant with arrest of the cells in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. Unlike several other systems that undergo programmed cell death, no induction of transcripts corresponding to the testosterone-repressed message-2 or transglutaminase genes is observed during this process. Upon readdition of IL-6 to G1-arrested B9 cells, viability is maintained and entry into S phase occurs after a lag period of 10 to 12 hr. Northern blot analysis showed that the immediate-early mRNAs normally induced shortly after growth factor stimulation in quiescent fibroblasts (c-fos, c-jun, Egr-1, c-myc, JE, and KC), and other growth-related genes (2F1, c-Ha-ras, and p53), are either not induced or remain unchanged during G1 to S phase progression. A correlation was found, however, between the temporal pattern of expression of several G1/S phase genes (dihydrofolate reductase, thymidine kinase, transferrin receptor, and histone H3) and DNA synthesis. These results demonstrate that IL-6-induced viability and growth of hybridoma (and, presumably, plasmacytoma) cells is mediated via novel signal transduction pathways.
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PMID:Suppression of programmed death and G1 arrest in B-cell hybridomas by interleukin-6 is not accompanied by altered expression of immediate early response genes. 170 72

The hemopoietic growth factor interleukin 3 (IL-3) supports the survival and proliferation of multipotent and committed progenitor cells in vitro. To elucidate the molecular mechanisms triggered by IL-3 we studied the expression of cell cycle-related genes in a recently established human IL-3-dependent clone (M-07e). No changes in the level of expression of early (c-myc), mid (ornithine decarboxylase), or mid-late G1 (p53, c-myb) cell cycle genes were detected after restoration of IL-3 in deprived cells. The fact that only late G1-S-phase genes [proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) thymidine kinase (TK), histone H3] are modulated by IL-3 suggests that this factor may control human cell proliferation by acting at the G1-S boundary.
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PMID:Interleukin 3-dependent proliferation of the human Mo-7e cell line is supported by discrete activation of late G1 genes. 199 64

A sensitive and versatile assay is described for the nuclear transport of 35S-labeled proteins obtained by the in vitro translation of SP6 plasmid-generated mRNAs. A specific nuclear accumulation of greater than 20-fold is observed for the transformation-related nuclear proteins, p53 and E1b, and the nuclear enzyme, thymidine kinase, whereas transport of the nonnuclear proteins, dihydrofolate reductase and simian virus 40 small t antigen, is negligible within 30 min.
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PMID:Nuclear transport of proteins translated in vitro from SP6 plasmid-generated mRNAs. 213 54

We have studied a panel of 10 genes and cDNA sequences that are expressed in a cell cycle-dependent manner in different types of cells from different species and that are inducible by different mitogens. These include five sequences (c-myc, 4F1, 2F1, 2A9, and KC-1) that are preferentially expressed in the early part of the G1 phase, three genes (ornithine decarboxylase, p53, and c-rasHa) preferentially expressed in middle or late G1, and two genes (thymidine kinase and histone H3) preferentially expressed in the S phase of the cell cycle. We have studied the expression of these genes in nonpermissive (tsAF8) and semipermissive (Swiss 3T3) cells infected with adenovirus type 2. Under the conditions of these experiments, adenovirus type 2 infection stimulates cellular DNA synthesis in both tsAF8 and 3T3 cells. However, four of the five early G1 genes (c-myc, 4F1, KC-1, and 2A9) and one of the late G1 genes (c-ras) are not induced by adenovirus infection, although they are strongly induced by serum. The other sequences (2F1, ornithine decarboxylase, p53, thymidine kinase, and histone H3) are activated by both adenovirus and serum. We conclude that the cell cycle-dependent genes activated by adenovirus 2 are a subset of the cell cycle-dependent genes activated by serum. The data suggest that the mechanisms by which serum and adenovirus induce cellular DNA synthesis are not identical.
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PMID:Adenovirus type 2 activates cell cycle-dependent genes that are a subset of those activated by serum. 242 24

The length of the prereplicative period after stimulation of quiescent WI-38 cells is prolonged in proportion to the length of time the cells are incubated prior to serum addition. Previous results from this laboratory have shown that this prolongation does not result from a delay in the induction of events which occur during the G0/G1 transition (i.e. c-fos or c-myc expression) (Owen, T., Cosenza, S., Soprano, D. R., and Soprano, K. J. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262 15111-15117). It was the goal of the present studies to examine the expression of other growth-associated genes known to be induced and maximally accumulate later in G1 to identify genes whose expression is coupled to entry into S rather than mitogenic stimulation. In order to do this, the temporal pattern of expression of a variety of growth-associated genes (thymidine kinase, p53, 2A9/calcyclin, ornithine decarboxylase, 4F1/vimentin, and c-Ha-ras) was studied in WI-38 cells stimulated either 12 days or 26 days after plating. We report that the time of induction and maximum accumulation of each of these transcripts, with the exception of c-Ha-ras, was delayed in the 26-day cell group for 10 h, a period of time approximately equal to the length of delay in entry of these cells into S. Thus the expression of these particular genes would appear to be closely coupled in time and sequence to the entry of cells into S. These results suggest that the prolongation of the prereplicative period in WI-38 cells is located in early G1, following the events leading to c-fos and c-myc induction but prior to the induction and maximum accumulation later in G1 of other growth-associated genes such as ornithine decarboxylase and 4F1/vimentin. In addition, these results provide molecular evidence for a definitive programmed order of gene expression during the progression of cells out of G0 through G1 to S.
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PMID:Evidence that the time of entry into S is determined by events occurring in early G1. 313 30

Sodium butyrate has been shown to exert dramatic effects on the growth of cells in culture. It inhibits DNA synthesis, arrests actively proliferating cells in G1 and induces differentiation. The mechanism responsible for these various anti-proliferative effects is presently unknown. We wished to study the effects of sodium butyrate on cell growth at the molecular level, by analyzing the pattern of expression exhibited by several growth-associated genes (e.g., c-fos, c-myc, p53 and thymidine kinase) in Swiss 3T3 cells following treatment with sodium butyrate. Our results suggest that sodium butyrate-induced growth arrest of Swiss 3T3 cells (1) can be distinguished at a molecular level from the arrest brought about by other means of growth arrest; (2) does not result from a generalized mechanism which non-specifically shuts down the expression of growth-associated genes but rather occurs via a more specific mechanism which leads to the reduction in the expression of certain genes (e.g., c-myc, p53, thymidine kinase) while inducing the expression of others (e.g., c-fos, aP2); and (3) may involve one or more of the molecular events leading to adipocyte differentiation.
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PMID:Molecular analysis of sodium butyrate-induced growth arrest. 314 95

Asynchronous populations of Ehrlich ascites tumor cells grown in vivo were separated by centrifugal elutriation into fractions of G1-, S-, and G2/M-phase cells with less than 10% cross-contamination. Cytoplasmic mRNA from phase-synchronous cells was used to prepare cDNA which was ligated with bacteriophage lambda gt10 arms and amplified in Escherichia coli C600 hfl-. EcoRI digests of DNA isolated from the sublibraries (G1, S, G2/M) were submitted to Southern hybridizations with radiolabeled probes either (a) for genes whose phase-specific expression is clearly documented, thymidine kinase, dihydrofolate reductase, and thymidylate synthase, or (b) for genes whose change of expression during the cell cycle is likely, lamin C, beta-actin, alpha- and beta-tubulin, c-myc, c-fos, p53. The cDNA sequences for genes of group (a) were found to be significantly enriched in DNA of the S-phase library indicating that the cell cycle phase-specific patterns of the respective mRNA levels are conserved in the sublibraries. Sequences belonging to group (b) were also found to be enriched in DNA isolated from the sublibraries: c-fos in G1 phase, lamin C, beta-actin, tubulins, c-myc in S phase, and p53 in G1/S phase. The unexpected prevalence of c-myc and alpha-tubulin in the S-phase library is supported by Northern analysis of RNA from phase-synchronous cells. Non-phase-specific, randomly chosen sequences hybridized equally strong with DNA isolated from the different sublibraries. No significant changes of the patterns of hybridization signals were observed with DNA from different amplifications of the sublibraries when analyzed with the same DNA probe indicating that the cDNA complexities are well conserved during amplifications. Consequently, the sublibraries are useful to obtain information about the cell cycle phase-specific expression of mRNAs for other genes of interest. Since the sublibraries reflect mRNA levels of the cells growing in vivo they supply data on the physiological in vivo pattern of gene expression undisturbed by potentially unphysiological in vitro conditions.
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PMID:Cell cycle phase-specific cDNA libraries reflecting phase-specific gene expression of Ehrlich ascites cells growing in vivo. 333 23


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