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Target Concepts:
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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)
The rat gene encoding phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase (PNMT) was cloned and a consensus sequence for a glucocorticoid response element (GRE) was found at -513 bp, 5' to the transcriptional start site. In order to define the function of this element, fusion genes containing the PNMT promoter and a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter gene were constructed. These constructs did not express after transfection into any of 7 continuous cell lines, none of which endogenously produce PNMT. A system for transfecting chromaffin cells in primary culture was therefore devised using constructs containing 200 bp of the
proenkephalin
(ENK) promoter, whose expression characteristics are well known. pENK beta GAL-1, containing the ENK promoter with a lac Z reporter, was introduced into these cells and beta-galactosidase activity was visualized in situ. Approximately 90% of cells transfected were chromaffin; transfection efficiency was 5%. High levels of CAT activity were measured in chromaffin cells transfected with pENKAT12, possessing a CAT reporter. In contrast to tumor cell lines, pENKAT12 induction in these cells by forskolin and phorbol esters did not require a phosphodiesterase inhibitor. In this chromaffin system, both basal and regulated expression of the PNMT fusion genes were detected. Dexamethasone (dex) induced expression of pPNMT3000 and pPNMT900, containing the putative GRE and 3000 bp or 863 bp of PNMT promoter sequence, 4- to 10-fold. Expression of pPNMT300 and pPNMT100, which lack the GRE and contain 273 bp or 99 bp of PNMT promoter sequence, was unaffected by dex. Addition of the PNMT region spanning -490 to -863 bp conferred full dex responsiveness to a
thymidine kinase
promoter. Deletion of the putative GRE sequence by site-directed mutagenesis abolished the dex response. These data identify the sequence at -513 bp in the rat PNMT gene as a functional, positively acting GRE. Primary cultures of bovine chromaffin cells provide a biologically relevant expression system for transcriptional studies of catecholamine genes and their related neuropeptides.
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PMID:Identification of a functional glucocorticoid response element in the phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase promoter using fusion genes introduced into chromaffin cells in primary culture. 230 57
A monkey kidney cDNA that encodes a nuclear regulatory factor was identified by expression and affinity binding to a synthetic retinoic acid response element (RARE) and was used to isolate human placental and rat germ cell cDNAs by hybridization. The cDNAs encode a 59-kDa protein [nuclear DEAF-1-related (NUDR)] which shows sequence similarity to the Drosophila Deformed epidermal autoregulatory factor-1 (DEAF-1), a nonhomeodomain cofactor of embryonic Deformed gene expression. Similarities to other proteins indicate five functional domains in NUDR including an alanine-rich region prevalent in developmental transcription factors, a domain found in the promyelocytic leukemia-associated SP100 proteins, and a zinc finger homology domain associated with the AML1/MTG8 oncoprotein. Although NUDR mRNA displayed a wide tissue distribution in rats, elevated levels of protein were only observed in testicular germ cells, developing fetus, and transformed cell lines. Nuclear localization of NUDR was demonstrated by immunocytochemistry and by a green fluorescent protein-NUDR fusion protein. Site-directed mutagenesis of a nuclear localization signal resulted in cytoplasmic localization of the protein and eliminated NUDR-dependent transcriptional activation. Recombinant NUDR protein showed affinity for the RARE in mobility shifts; however it was efficiently displaced by retinoic acid receptor (RAR)/retinoid X receptor (RXR) complexes. In transient transfections, NUDR produced up to 26-fold inductions of a human
proenkephalin
promoter-reporter plasmid, with minimal effects on the promoters for prodynorphin or
thymidine kinase
. Placement of a RARE on the
proenkephalin
promoter increased NUDR-dependent activation to 41-fold, but this RARE-dependent increase was not transferable to a
thymidine kinase
promoter. Recombinant NUDR protein showed minimal binding affinity for
proenkephalin
promoter sequences, but was able to select DNA sequences from a random oligonucleotide library that had similar core-binding motifs (TTCG) as those recognized by DEAF-1. This motif is also present between the half-sites of several endogenous RAREs. The derived consensus- binding motif recognized by NUDR (TTCGGGNNTTTCCGG) was confirmed by mobility shift and deoxyribonuclease I (DNase I) protection assays; however, the consensus sequence was also unable to confer NUDR-dependent transcriptional activation to the
thymidine kinase
promoter. Our data suggests that NUDR may activate transcription independently of promoter binding, perhaps through protein-protein interaction with basal transcription factors, or by activation of secondary factors. The sequence and functional similarities between NUDR and DEAF-1 suggest that NUDR may also act as a cofactor to regulate the transcription of genes during fetal development or differentiation of testicular cells.
...
PMID:Characterization of a nuclear deformed epidermal autoregulatory factor-1 (DEAF-1)-related (NUDR) transcriptional regulator protein. 977 84
Endogenous opiate peptides acting pre- and post-synaptically in the dorsal horn of spinal cord inhibit transmission of nociceptive stimuli. We transfected neurons of the dorsal root ganglion in vivo by footpad inoculation with 30 microl (3 x 10(7) p.f.u.) of a replication-incompetent (ICP4-deleted) herpes simplex virus (HSV) vector with a cassette containing a portion of the human
proenkephalin
gene coding for 5 met- and 1 leu-enkephalin molecules under the control of the human cytomegalovirus immediate-early promoter (HCMV IEp) inserted in the HSV
thymidine kinase
(tk) locus. Vector-directed expression of enkephalin produced a significant antinociceptive effect measured by the formalin footpad test, that was most prominent in the delayed ("tonic") phase 20-70 min after the administration of formalin. The magnitude of the antinociceptive effect diminished over 4 weeks after transduction, but reinoculation of the vector reestablished the analgesic effect, without evidence for the development of tolerance. The antinociceptive effect was blocked completely by intrathecal naltrexone. These results suggest that gene therapy with an enkephalin-producing herpes-based vector may prove useful in the treatment of pain.
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PMID:Antinociceptive effect of a genomic herpes simplex virus-based vector expressing human proenkephalin in rat dorsal root ganglion. 1131 22