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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (
ERK
)
95,504
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Skeletal muscle beta-tropomyosin, smooth muscle alpha-tropomyosin, and a low molecular weight fibroblast tropomyosin are generated by alternatively splicing RNA transcripts of the chicken tropomyosin 1 (TM 1) gene (Forry-Schaudies, S., Maihle, N. J., and Hughes, S. H. (1990) J. Mol. Biol. 211; 321-330). Two novel tropomyosin cDNAs that derive from mRNAs of the TM 1 gene have been isolated from a chicken embryo brain cDNA library. Brain cDNA
BRT
-1 is 2.2 kilobases in length and encodes 283 amino acids. It is identical to skeletal muscle beta-tropomyosin from amino acids 1 to 258. The sequence 3' of this point is unique to
BRT
-1; a comparison to genomic sequence indicates that a new carboxyl-terminal exon is used to generate this sequence. 1.4-kilobase brain cDNA
BRT
-2 contains sequences found in both fibroblast cDNA FT-beta (5'-end) and skeletal muscle cDNA SKT-beta (3'-end). RNase and
S1 nuclease
assays using RNA samples from leg muscle, gizzard, fibroblasts, and brain indicate that the TM 1 gene expresses four additional tropomyosin RNAs by alternately splicing previously characterized exons. These results demonstrate that the chicken TM 1 gene encodes nine tropomyosin RNAs through the use of two promoters, two internal exons that are mutually exclusive, and three 3'-exons. Implications for the regulation of alternative splicing are discussed.
...
PMID:The chicken tropomyosin 1 gene generates nine mRNAs by alternative splicing. 185 15
The total sequence of the Drosophila melanogaster gene encoding the myosin light chain dissociated by alkali (MLC-ALK) has been determined. By sequence comparisons with an MLC-
ALK
cDNA clone and by
S1 nuclease
analyses, the pattern of introns and exons within the gene has been deduced. There are multiple polyadenylylation signals that can account for most of the observed heterogeneity in the lengths of mRNAs. In the 3' half of the gene, there are two alternative splicing patterns which result in mRNAs that translate to give proteins with two alternative 14 amino acid carboxyl-terminal sequences. There is developmental regulation of the selection of the above splicing sites. One splicing pattern produces an mRNA that translates into a protein used for both larval and adult musculature, whereas the other splicing pattern is used for the latter stage only.
...
PMID:Developmental variations in the splicing pattern of transcripts from the Drosophila gene encoding myosin alkali light chain result in different carboxyl-terminal amino acid sequences. 298 57
Transcription of mouse mammary tumor virus DNA is stimulated by steroid hormones. The DNA sequences involved in this regulation are located in the viral long terminal repeat between positions -200 and -50 with respect to the transcription initiation site. In this region four, one distal and three proximal, in vitro binding sites for the glucocorticoid hormone-receptor complexes have been identified. We have prepared a series of 5' and 3' deletions of this region, using the exonuclease ExoIII. Combination of suitable 5' and 3' fragments enabled us to reconstitute the entire long terminal repeat with small internal deletions. The mutated long terminal repeats linked to the coding region of the Herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene were introduced into
LTK
- aprt- cells by transfection. Transcription from the mouse mammary tumor virus promoter in the presence or absence of hormone was assayed by
nuclease S1
mapping. Deletion of the proximal in vitro binding sites resulted in a decrease in hormonal inducibility. When a synthetic oligonucleotide harboring the sequence of the distal in vitro binding site was inserted at the site of the proximal ones, hormone response was restored. This indicated that the distal binding site can replace the proximal ones in their hormone-regulatory function. However, insertion at the same site of an oligonucleotide containing the sequence 5' TGTTCT 3' found in all four binding sites, did not restore the hormone response, indicating that sequences flanking the TGTTCT motif are required for hormone response. Insertion of an unrelated DNA fragment at the site of the proximal binding element deletion completely abolished the hormone response. Analyses of different proximal binding-site deletion and insertion mutants suggested the presence of a transcriptional element located downstream from the most proximal hormone-receptor binding site.
...
PMID:Functional analysis of the glucocorticoid regulatory elements present in the mouse mammary tumor virus long terminal repeat. A synthetic distal binding site can replace the proximal binding domain. 302 40
In the proviral DNA of mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV), sequences up to approximately equal to 200 base-pairs from the RNA start site are required for stimulation of transcription by glucocorticoid hormones in cultured cells. A total of 26 mutant plasmids with clustered point mutations or small deletions in the hormone control region of the MMTV long terminal repeat were constructed, linked to the coding portion of the Herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene, and introduced by transfection into
LTK
- cells. Transcription from mutant DNA in the presence or absence of hormone was quantified by
S1 nuclease
protection assays. Our analysis revealed the presence of at least three control elements that affect the extent of transcription stimulation by glucocorticoid hormones: (1) a distal element, between -181 and -172 base-pairs from the RNA initiation site. Linker scanning mutants in this segment have a reduction of up to 20-fold in the hormone response with respect to wild type. (2) An element around position -120, defined by a mutation of 4 base-pairs between -121 and -117, which causes a fivefold reduction. (3) An element from approximately equal to -78 to -70, defined by a mutant with also a roughly fivefold lower stimulation. The first two are included in areas that have been shown by others to interact in vitro with hormone-receptor complexes; the last one overlaps the in vitro binding site of a nuclear protein factor. A mutant lacking all three elements (-193 to -70) is completely non-inducible by glucocorticoids. Together with earlier results obtained with 5' deletion mutants, the data show that the largest contribution to the stimulatory response is made by the distal element, which however does require the presence of both more-proximal ones for the response to be maximal. In the absence of the distal one, the two proximal elements together produce a residual stimulation in the order of 5 to 10% of wild type, while the -70 element alone is ineffective. In addition, we show that a functional TATA homology is required for maximum stimulation. It appears that transcriptional regulation of MMTV by glucocorticoid hormones is achieved by the concerted action of multiple sequence modules, not all of which correspond to receptor binding sites in vitro.
...
PMID:Distinct sequence elements involved in the glucocorticoid regulation of the mouse mammary tumor virus promoter identified by linker scanning mutagenesis. 302 41
Herpes simplex viruses encode a structural protein which induces, in trans, expression of alpha genes, the first set of genes to be expressed after infection of permissive cells. This protein, designated as the alpha-trans-inducing factor (alpha-TIF), maps within the BamHI F fragment, and its gene has been sequenced. In the course of mapping the domain of the alpha-
TIF
gene, it was noted that the intact BamHI fragment was consistently more effective than the complete domain of the alpha-
TIF
gene in inducing expression of alpha genes. Cotransfections of DNA fragments containing an alpha indicator gene and the alpha-
TIF
gene with various regions of the BamHI F DNA fragment revealed that the sequences located 3' to the alpha-
TIF
gene raised the activity of the alpha-
TIF
gene to nearly the same level as that of the intact BamHI F fragment. The nucleotide sequence and
S1 nuclease
mapping analyses revealed the presence of two transcribed open reading frames capable of encoding polypeptides with translated molecular weights of 77,357 and 70,527. To determine whether the effect of these sequences in trans on alpha-
TIF
-mediated induction of alpha genes was due to expression of these genes or competition for transcriptional factors, we constructed plasmids that contained both genes. Into each or both of these genes we inserted, near the translation initiation sites, 14-base-pair linkers carrying translational stop codons (TAG) in all three reading frames. Analyses of these plasmids indicated that the gene encoding the 70,527-molecular-weight polypeptide reduced alpha-
TIF
-dependent induction of alpha genes, whereas the gene encoding the 77,357-molecular-weight polypeptide increased this activity. Insertion of the stop codons abolished these activities.
...
PMID:Characterization and nucleotide sequence of two herpes simplex virus 1 genes whose products modulate alpha-trans-inducing factor-dependent activation of alpha genes. 302 33
We localized the 5' region of the human gene
HER2
in a cloned fragment of genomic DNA. This clone contained exons 1 to 4 of
HER2
, spanning the coding sequence for the first 191 amino acids. The promoter region of
HER2
was identified upstream to exon 1 by
nuclease S1
mapping and by a functional assay in which the promoter region drives the expression of a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene. The
HER2
promoter is different from the promoter of the epidermal growth factor receptor gene (HER1), and the GC boxes which are typical of the promoter of the epidermal growth factor receptor gene are absent from the
HER2
promoter. One major and two minor RNA start sites located at nucleotides 178, 244, and 257 upstream to the initiator ATG were identified. The first one is 21 and 70 base pairs downstream from typical TATAA and CAAT boxes, respectively. This indicates that transcription of
HER2
/neu can be regulated by a mechanism involving a TATA box, as well as by other unidentified regulatory elements.
...
PMID:Human HER2 (neu) promoter: evidence for multiple mechanisms for transcriptional initiation. 303 51
Mapping of the 5' and 3' ends of the Drosophila myosin alkali light chain (MLC-
ALK
) mRNA by
S1 nuclease
and primer extension assays has shown that the primary transcripts are identical irrespective of the time in development that the RNA was prepared. As shown by
S1 nuclease
experiments these transcripts are alternatively spliced in a tissue-specific fashion generating mRNAs that encode tissue-specific protein isoforms. Antibodies were raised to synthetic peptides identical in sequence to the unique portion of each protein. Western blots of one-dimensional polyacrylamide gels using the type-specific antibodies confirmed and extended the results obtained from the
S1 nuclease
experiments. The indirect flight muscle is the only tissue in the adult that accumulates the alternatively spliced mRNA. The choice between splicing pathways involves the use of a nonconsensus 3' splice junction in larvae and in the tubular muscles of adults, whereas in the indirect flight muscle of the adult only consensus sequences are utilized. The involvement of a trans-acting factor to activate the nonconsensus splice site in the myotubes of larvae and the tubular myotubes of adults is proposed.
...
PMID:The indirect flight muscle of Drosophila accumulates a unique myosin alkali light chain isoform. 310 19
Cloned sequences encoding a truncated form of the
HER2
receptor were obtained from cDNA libraries derived from two
HER2
-overexpressing human breast cancer cell lines, BT-474 and SK-BR-3. The 5' 2.1 kb of the encoded transcript is identical to that of full-length 4.6-kb
HER2
transcript and would be expected to produce a secreted form of
HER2
receptor containing only the extracellular ligand binding domain (ECD). The 3' end of the truncated transcript diverges 61 nucleotides before the receptor's transmembrane region, reads through a consensus splice donor site containing an in-frame stop codon, and contains a poly(A) addition site, suggesting that the truncated transcript arises by alternative RNA processing.
S1 nuclease
protection assays show a 40-fold variation in the abundance of the truncated 2.3-kb transcript relative to full-length 4.6-kb transcript in a panel of eight
HER2
-expressing tumor cell lines of gastric, ovarian, and breast cancer origin. Expression of this truncated transcript in COS-1 cells produces both secreted and intracellular forms of
HER2
ECD; however, immunofluorescent labeling of
HER2
ECD protein in MKN7 tumor cells that natively overexpress the 2.3-kb transcript suggests that transcriptionally generated
HER2
ECD is concentrated within the perinuclear cytoplasm. Metabolic labeling and endoglycosidase studies suggest that this
HER2
ECD (100 kDa) undergoes differential trafficking between the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi compartments compared with full-length (185-kDa)
HER2
receptor. Transfection studies indicate that excess production of
HER2
ECD in human tumor cells overexpressing full-length
HER2
receptor can result in resistance to the growth-inhibiting effects of anti-
HER2
monoclonal antibodies such as muMAb4D5. These findings demonstrate alternative processing of the
HER2
transcript and implicate a potentially important growth regulatory role for intracellularly sequestered
HER2
ECD in
HER2
-amplified human tumors.
...
PMID:A truncated intracellular HER2/neu receptor produced by alternative RNA processing affects growth of human carcinoma cells. 809 58
Using a DNA transfection-tumorigenicity assay we have recently identified the
UFO
oncogene. It encodes a tyrosine kinase receptor characterized by the juxtaposition of two immunoglobulin-like and two fibronectin type III repeats in its extracellular domain. Here we describe the genomic organization of the human
UFO
locus. The UFO receptor is encoded by 20 exons that are distributed over a region of 44 kb. Different isoforms of
UFO
mRNA are generated by alternative splicing of exon 10 and differential usage of two imperfect polyadenylation sites resulting in the presence or absence of 1.5-kb 3' untranslated sequences. Primer extension and
S1 nuclease
analyses revealed multiple transcriptional initiation sites including a major site 169 bp upstream of the translation start site. The promoter region is GC rich, lacks TATA and CAAT boxes, but contains potential recognition sites for a variety of trans-acting factors, including Sp1, AP-2 and the cyclic AMP response element-binding protein. Proto-
UFO
and its oncogenic counterpart exhibit identical cDNA and promoter regions sequences. Possible modes of
UFO
activation are discussed.
...
PMID:The genomic structure of the human UFO receptor. 838 Dec 25
The cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27Kip1 plays an important role in regulating cell-cycle progression. p27Kip1 directly inhibits the catalytic activity of cyclin/cdks (cyclin-dependent kinase) complexes and/or interferes physically with cyclin/cdks activation by
CAK
. Interestingly, the expression level of p27Kip1 mRNA was maximal in resting Go T-cells and rapidly declined following anti-CD3 activation. We report here the cloning of p27Kip1 gene from murine genomic DNA and the functional analysis of the promoter of the p27Kip1 gene. The gene consists of at least three exons and spans more than 5.6 kb of DNA. Primer extension and
nuclease S1
protection analysis revealed two major transcription initiation sites. The promoter region lacked a TATA box but contained potential binding sites for the transcriptional factors including two Sp1, CRE, Myb and NFkB located at positions -153, -178, -286, -875, and -1011, respectively. To analyze the regulatory mechanisms controlling p27Kip1 gene expression, we characterized the 5'-flanking region from nt -1609 to +178. The -326 to -615 region contained positive regulatory elements.
...
PMID:Characterization of the murine cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor gene p27Kip1. 897 54
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