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)

We have studied the interaction of a chimeric construct containing an origin of replication (from bovine papilloma virus) and a hormonally regulated transcription unit (long terminal repeat from the mouse mammary tumor virus, driving the v-Ha-ras gene) with the nuclear scaffold and matrix from mouse fibroblasts. We used two experimental approaches because the nuclear matrix protein composition depends largely on the isolation conditions, making its definition mostly operational. In situ studies and in vitro experiments performed in 1361.5 cells, a cell line in which multiple copies of the construct have been established, indicate that two interesting regions of the construct interact with the nuclear matrix. The first region is located in the v-Ha-ras gene 5'-flanking sequences. These sequences come from the Harvey virus and contain a piece of the virus like 30S (VL30) sequences in which the v-Ha-ras gene is embedded. This DNA fragment was coupled to the thymidine kinase (TK) promoter driving the reporter luciferase gene and assayed in transient transfection experiments. Its insertion, in the sense orientation, upstream of the TK promoter resulted in a moderate enhancement (2-3-fold) of the luciferase activity. The second region is the most interesting from a physiological point of view. It contains the plasmid maintenance sequence 1 (PMS-1) and the core origin of replication of the bovine papilloma virus. Differences in the results from in situ (nuclear scaffold) and in vitro (nuclear matrix) experiments suggest that the components involved in the interaction with PMS-1 and the viral origin of replication are different. This may be of importance in the context of the recently proposed view that PMS-1 could be part of a composite origin of replication and provide information at a distance.
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PMID:Interaction with the nuclear matrix of a chimeric construct containing a replication origin and a transcription unit. 133 95

Osteocalcin (OC), a noncollagenous bone matrix protein, is expressed in high levels by osteoblasts. To determine whether the OC promoter mediates cell-specific gene expression in cells of osteoblast lineage, we constructed a recombinant adenovirus, Ad-OC-TK, which contains the OC promoter that drives the expression of herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (TK). We tested the expression of TK by this virus in osteoblast cell lines as well as in non-osteoblastic cell lines by assessing the enzyme activity of TK in vitro. Whereas the OC promoter failed to drive the expression of the TK gene in several non-osteoblastic cell lines such as WH, a human bladder transitional carcinoma, and NIH 3T3, an embryonic mouse fibroblast cell line, the OC promoter mediated high levels of expression in osteoblast cell lines including murine ROS and human MG-63 cells. The addition of acyclovir (ACV), a pro-drug for the inhibition of cell proliferation, resulted in the induction of osteoblast-specific cell death in vitro. Intratumoral injection of Ad-OC-TK into murine ROS osteosarcoma abolished tumor growth in a host treated with subsequent i.p. ACV injection in vivo. The Ad-OC-TK virus plus ACV treatment appears to be highly selective in blocking the growth of both murine and human osteosarcoma cell lines in vitro and murine osteosarcoma in vivo.
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PMID:Osteocalcin promoter-based toxic gene therapy for the treatment of osteosarcoma in experimental models. 884 Sep 73

Msx2 is a homeodomain transcriptional repressor that exerts tissue-specific actions during craniofacial skeletal and neural development. To identify coregulatory molecules that participate in transcriptional repression by Msx2, we applied a Farwestern expression cloning strategy to identify transcripts encoding proteins that bind Msx2. A lambdagt11 expression library from mouse brain was screened with radiolabeled GST-Msx2 fusion protein encompassing the core suppressor domain of Msx2. A cDNA was isolated that encodes a novel protein fragment that binds radiolabeled Msx2. Homeoprotein binding activity was confirmed by Farwestern analysis of the T7-epitope-tagged recombinant protein fragment, and interactions in vitro require Msx2 residues necessary for transcriptional suppression in vivo. On the basis of biochemical analyses, this novel protein was named MINT, an acronym for Msx2-interacting nuclear target protein. The original clone is part of a 12.6 kb transcript expressed at high levels in testis and at lower levels in calvarial osteoblasts and brain. Multiple clones isolated from a mouse testis library were sequenced to construct a MINT cDNA contig of 11 kb. Starting from an initiator Met in good Kozak context, a large nascent polypeptide of 3576 amino acids is predicted, in contiguous open reading frame with the Msx2 interaction domain residues 2070-2394. Protein sequence analysis reveals that MINT has three N-terminal RNA recognition motifs (RRMs) and four nuclear localization signals. Western blot analysis of fractionated cell extracts reveals that mature approximately 110 kDa (N-terminal) and approximately 250 kDa (C-terminal) MINT protein fragments accumulate in chromatin and nuclear matrix fractions, cosegregating with Msx2 and topoisomerase II. In gel shift assays, the MINT RRM domain selectively binds T- and G-rich DNA sequences; this includes a large G/T-rich inverted repeat element present in the proximal rat osteocalcin (OC) promoter, overlapping three cognates that support OC expression in osteoblasts. MINT and OC mRNAs are reciprocally regulated during differentiation of MC3T3E1 calvarial osteoblasts. Consistent with its proposed role as a nuclear transcriptional factor, transient expression of MINT(1-812) suppresses the FGF/forskolin-activated OC promoter, does not significantly regulate CMV promoter activity, but markedly upregulates the HSV thymidine kinase promoter in MC3T3E1 cells. In toto, these data indicate that the novel nuclear protein MINT binds the homeoprotein Msx2 and coregulates OC during craniofacial development. Msx2 and MINT both target an information-dense, osteoblast-specific regulatory region of the OC proximal promoter, nucleotides -141 to -111. The N-terminal MINT RRM domain represents an authentic dsDNA binding module for this novel vertebrate nuclear matrix protein. Acting as a scaffold protein, MINT potentially exerts both positive and negative regulatory actions by organizing transcriptional complexes in the nuclear matrix.
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PMID:The RRM domain of MINT, a novel Msx2 binding protein, recognizes and regulates the rat osteocalcin promoter. 1045 62

Osteocalcin (OC), a major noncollagenous bone matrix protein, is expressed prevalently in prostate cancer epithelial cells, adjacent fibromuscular stromal cells, and osteoblasts in locally recurrent prostate cancer and prostate cancer bone metastasis [Matsubara, S., Wada, Y., Gardner, T.A., Egawa, M., Park, M.S., Hsieh, C.L., Zhau, H.E., Kao, C., Kamidono, S., Gillenwater, J.Y., and Chung, L.W. (2001). Cancer Res. 61, 6012-6019]. We constructed an adenovirus vector carrying osteocalcin promoter-driven herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (Ad-OC-hsv-TK) to cotarget prostate cancer cells and their surrounding stromal cells. A phase I dose escalation clinical trial of the intralesional administration of Ad-OC-hsv-TK followed by oral valacyclovir was conducted at the University of Virginia (Charlottesville, VA) in 11 men with localized recurrent and metastatic hormone-refractory prostate cancer (2 local recurrent, 5 osseous metastasis, and 4 lymph node metastasis) in order to determine the usefulness of this vector for the palliation of androgen-independent prostate cancer metastasis. This is the first clinical trial in which therapeutic adenoviruses are injected directly into prostate cancer lymph node and bone metastasis. Results show that (1). all patients tolerated this therapy with no serious adverse events; (2). local cell death was observed in treated lesions in seven patients (63.6%) as assessed by TUNEL assay, and histomorphological change (mediation of fibrosis) was detected in all posttreated specimens; (3). one patient showed stabilization of the treated lesion for 317 days with no alternative therapy. Of the two patients who complained of tumor-associated symptoms before the treatment, one patient with bone pain had resolution of pain, although significant remission of treated lesions was not observed by image examination; (4). CD8-positive T cells were predominant compared with CD4-positive T cells, B cells (L26 positive), and natural killer cells (CD56 positive) in posttreated tissue specimens; (5). levels of HSV TK gene transduction correlated well with coxsackie-adenovirus receptor expression but less well with the titers of adenovirus injected; and (6). intrinsic OC expression and the efficiency of HSV TK gene transduction affected the levels of HSV TK protein expression in clinical specimens. Our data suggest that this form of gene therapy requires further development for the treatment of androgen-independent prostate cancer metastasis although histopathological and immunohistochemical evidence of apoptosis was observed in the specimens treated. Further studies including the development of viral delivery will enhance the efficacy of Ad-OC-hsv-TK.
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PMID:Phase I dose escalation clinical trial of adenovirus vector carrying osteocalcin promoter-driven herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase in localized and metastatic hormone-refractory prostate cancer. 1263 3