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)

Exposure to soluble protein Ags in vivo leads to abortive proliferation of responding T cells. In the absence of a danger signal, artificially provided by adjuvants, most responding cells die, and the remainder typically become anergic. The adjuvant-derived signals provided to T cells are poorly understood, but recent work has identified BCL3 as the gene, of those tested, with the greatest differential transcriptional response to adjuvant administration in vivo. As an initial step in analyzing transcriptional responses of BCL3 in T cells, we have identified candidate regulatory regions within the locus through their evolutionary conservation and by analysis of DNase hypersensitivity. An evolutionarily conserved DNase hypersensitive site (HS3) within intron 2 was found to act as a transcriptional enhancer in response to stimuli that mimic TCR activation, namely, PHA and PMA. In luciferase reporter gene constructs transiently transfected into the Jurkat T cell line, the HS3 enhancer can cooperate not only with the BCL3 promoter, but also with an exogenous promoter from herpes simplex thymidine kinase. Deletional analysis revealed that a minimal sequence of approximately 81 bp is required for full enhancer activity. At the 5' end of this minimal sequence is a kappaB site, as confirmed by EMSAs. Mutation of this site in the context of the full-length HS3 abolished enhancer activity. Cotransfection with NF-kappaB p65 expression constructs dramatically increased luciferase activity, even without stimulation. Conversely, cotransfection with the NF-kappaB inhibitor IkappaBalpha reduced activation. Together, these results demonstrate a critical role for NF-kappaB in BCL3 transcriptional up-regulation by TCR-mimetic signals.
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PMID:NF-kappa B regulates BCL3 transcription in T lymphocytes through an intronic enhancer. 1453 Mar 44

To improve the effectiveness of herpes simplex virus (HSV) thymidine kinase/ganciclovir (HSV-tk/GCV) suicide gene therapy, the replication-defective HSV vector TOIkappaB expressing both HSV-TK and a mutant form of the NF-kappaB inhibitor IkappaBalpha (IkappaBalphaM) was developed. TOIkappaB was constructed by recombining the IkappaBalphaM gene into the U(L)41 locus of a replication-defective lacZ expression vector, TOZ.1. Expression of IkappaBalphaM was confirmed by Western blotting, and the ability of the mutant protein to inhibit NF-kappaB nuclear translocation was examined by electrophoretic mobility shift assay. In human glioblastoma U-87MG cells, the p50/p50 dimer of NF-kappaB was already translocated to the nucleus without receptor-dependent signaling by TNF-alpha. Following infection with TOIkappaB, nuclear translocation of NF-kappaB in U-87MG cells was significantly inhibited and caspase-3 activity increased compared with TOZ.1-infected cells. The cytotoxicity of TOIkappaB for U-87MG cells was investigated by colorimetric MTT assay. At an MOI of 3, TOIkappaB infection killed 85% of the cells compared to 20% killed by TOZ.1 infection. In the presence of GCV, these numbers increased to 95-100% for TOIkappaB and 80-85% for TOZ.1. TOIkappaB neurotoxicity measured on cultured murine neurons was relatively low and similar to that of TOZ.1. The survival of nude mice implanted into the brain with U-87MG tumor cells was markedly prolonged by intratumoral TOIkappaB injection and GCV administration. Survival of TOIkappaB+GCV group was significantly longer (P<.02, Wilcoxon test) than for the control groups (TOZ.1 or TOIkappaB only, PBS or PBS+GCV). These results suggest that IkappaBalphaM expression may be a safe enhancement of replication-defective HSV-based suicide gene therapy in vitro and in vivo.
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PMID:Combination gene therapy for glioblastoma involving herpes simplex virus vector-mediated codelivery of mutant IkappaBalpha and HSV thymidine kinase. 1569 8