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Query: EC:2.7.7.48 (
transcriptase
)
9,479
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To further investigate the role of p53 gene inactivation in gastric tumorigenesis, the mutational status of the p53 gene in primary human gastric cancer samples was examined. Reverse
transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction and subsequent direct sequencing of the p53 gene from gastric cancer samples revealed frequent point mutations of the p53 gene: some of these coincided with those previously identified in gastric cancer cell lines. In addition, both allelic deletion analysis using pYNZ 22 and polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis demonstrated an allelic deletion of the p53 gene in cancer tissue which contained a point mutation of the p53 gene in the remaining allele. Transfection of the wild-type or mutant p53 genes into gastric cancer cells showed that the wild-type but none of the mutated p53 genes suppressed the colony formation of gastric cancer cells. Furthermore, the incorporation of thymidine into DNA was reduced in cancer cells expressing the wild-type p53 gene. The glutathione S-transferase-wild type p53 fusion protein bound to simian virus 40 large T antigen in
COS
-1 cell lysate. None of the p53 fusion proteins containing mutations at codons 143, 175, 248, or 273 bound to simian virus 40 large T antigen. By contrast, two different mutant p53 fusion proteins containing mutations specifically observed in gastric cancer bound to simian virus 40 large T antigen. These results indicate that inactivation of the p53 gene through mutations and the allelic deletion may play an important role in gastric tumorigenesis. These mutations may cause a conformational change in the p53 protein resulting in the loss of the suppression by p53 of the growth of gastric cells, partly through disruption of the association of p53 protein with a cellular component.
...
PMID:p53 gene mutations in human gastric cancer: wild-type p53 but not mutant p53 suppresses growth of human gastric cancer cells. 132 85
The large gene, L, of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), which codes for the multifunctional
RNA-dependent RNA polymerase
, was assembled from five overlapping cDNA clones. The sequence of the 6.4-kilobase gene of the final construct was identical to the consensus sequence reported earlier. The gene was inserted into the simian virus 40 transient expression vector pJC119. Antibodies directed against synthetic peptides corresponding to the amino and carboxyl termini of the L protein were raised in rabbits. Both antibodies specifically immunostained the cytoplasm of
COS
cells that had been transfected with the vector DNA. The expressed L protein was immunoprecipitated from cell extracts and it was identical in size to the L protein of the virion (241 kilodaltons). Most importantly,
COS
cells that expressed the recombinant L protein transcribed, replicated, and consequently complemented and rescued temperature-sensitive RNA polymerase mutants of VSV at the nonpermissive temperature. The kinetics of virus release were similar to those of a wild-type VSV infection. We conclude that the recombinant RNA polymerase protein L is indistinguishable in its size and its functions from the VSV polymerase.
...
PMID:Expression of a cDNA encoding a functional 241-kilodalton vesicular stomatitis virus RNA polymerase. 299 88
Bovine herpesvirus 1 (BHV-1) establishes a latent infection in sensory ganglionic neurons of infected animals. Expression of latency-related (LR) gene products is controlled by a 980-bp fragment (LR promoter). DNA sequence analysis revealed that two major open reading frames (ORFs) are in the LR gene. Antibodies directed against both ORFs were generated in rabbits by using synthetic peptides. Antibody P2, which is directed to sequences near the amino terminus of ORF 2, recognized a 41-kDa protein in lytically infected cells, suggesting that ORF 2 encodes a protein. When the LR gene was inserted into a mammalian expression vector and subsequently transfected into
COS
-7 cells, a 41-kDa protein was detected by use of silver-stained sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels and by the P2 antibody. In contrast, this protein was not detected in mock-transfected cells. Deletion of DNA sequences containing ORF 2 blocked synthesis of the 41-kDa protein in
COS
-7 cells. Reverse
transcriptase
-mediated PCRs indicated that splicing occurs near the C terminus of ORF 2. Further studies indicated that LR RNA was alternatively spliced in latently infected cattle and that a fraction of LR RNA was poly(A)+. Taken together, these studies suggested that a spliced LR transcript has the potential to encode a 41-kDa protein.
...
PMID:Identification of gene products encoded by the latency-related gene of bovine herpesvirus 1. 763 78
Previous mutations associated with lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) deficiency have been identified using genomic DNA. To facilitate mutation analysis, we used cDNA from cultured fibroblasts which were shown to express LCAT mRNA. Using reverse-
transcriptase
PCR, LCAT cDNA was obtained from a 13-year-old boy with complete LCAT deficiency, characterized by low HDL-C (3 mg/dl), nondetectable initial cholesterol esterification rate, LCAT activity, and minimal LCAT mass (0.16 vs. 5-7.5 micrograms/ml). Sequencing of LCAT cDNA clones identified two mutations. A novel frameshift mutations caused by deletion of cytosine at the third nucleotide position of amino acid 168 (exon 5) predicts a disrupted protein catalytic site by converting Ser181-->Ala and creates a Pvu-II restriction site prior to premature truncation at amino acid 238. A C-->T transition results in a substitution of methionine for threonine at amino acid position 321 and creates an Nla-III restriction site on the maternal allele. Expression studies of mutant LCAT cDNA confirmed the virtual absence of LCAT activity in transfected
COS
-1 cells. The molecular defect in a young male with complete LCAT deficiency has been identified using fibroblast cDNA.
...
PMID:Lecithin: cholesterol acyltransferase deficiency: identification of two defective alleles in fibroblast cDNA. 765 65
Two distinct calcitonin (CT) receptor (CTR)-encoding cDNAs (designated GC-2 and GC-10) were cloned and characterized from giant cell tumor of bone (GCT). Both GC-2 and GC-10 differ structurally from the human ovarian cell CTR (o-hCTR) that we cloned previously, but differ from each other only by the presence (GC-10) or absence (GC-2) of a predicted 16-amino acid insert in the putative first intracellular domain. Expression of all three CTR isoforms in
COS
cells demonstrated that GC-2 has a lower binding affinity for salmon (s) CT (Kd approximately 15 nM) than GC-10 or o-hCTR (Kd approximately 1.5 nM). Maximal stimulatory concentrations of CT resulted in a mean accumulation of cAMP in GC-2 transfected cells that was greater than eight times higher than in cells transfected with GC-10 after normalizing for the number of receptor-expressing cells. The marked difference in maximal cAMP response was also apparent after normalizing for receptor number. GC-2 also demonstrated a more potent ligand-mediated cAMP response compared with GC-10 for both human (h) and sCT (the EC50 values for GC-2 were approximately 0.2 nM for sCT and approximately 2 nM for hCT; EC50 values for GC-10 were approximately 6 nM for sCT and approximately 25 nM for hCT). Reverse
transcriptase
PCR of GCT RNA indicated that GC-2 transcripts are more abundant than those encoding for GC-10. In situ hybridization on GCT tissue sections demonstrated CTR mRNA expression in osteoclast-like cells. We localized the human CTR gene to chromosome 7 in band q22. The distinct functional characteristics of GC-2 and GC-10, which differ in structure only in the first intracellular domain, indicate that the first intracellular domain of the CTR plays a previously unidentified role in modulating ligand binding and signal transduction via the G protein/adenylate cyclase system.
...
PMID:Expression of two human skeletal calcitonin receptor isoforms cloned from a giant cell tumor of bone. The first intracellular domain modulates ligand binding and signal transduction. 776 7
We have isolated the murine cDNA homologue of the human protein tyrosine phosphatase PTP-PEST (MPTP-PEST) from an 18.5-day mouse embryonic kidney library. The cDNA isolated has a single open reading frame predicting a protein of 775 amino acids. When expressed in vitro as a glutathione S-transferase fusion protein, the catalytic domain (residues 1-453) shows intrinsic phosphatase activity. Reverse
transcriptase
PCR and Northern-blot analysis show that MPTP-PEST mRNA is expressed throughout murine development. Indirect immunofluorescence in
COS
-1 cells against a heterologous epitope tag attached to the N-terminus of MPTP-PEST, together with cellular fractionation and Western-blot experiments from different murine cell lines, indicate that MPTP-PEST is a free cytosolic protein of 112 kDa. Finally, sequence analysis indicates that the C-terminal portion of the protein contains four regions rich in proline, glutamate, serine and threonine, otherwise known as PEST sequences. These are characteristic of proteins that display very short intracellular half-lives. Despite the presence of these motifs, pulse-chase labelling experiments demonstrate that MPTP-PEST has a half-life of more than 4 h.
...
PMID:Murine protein tyrosine phosphatase-PEST, a stable cytosolic protein tyrosine phosphatase. 777 23
Using a combination of polymerase chain reaction and genomic library screening we have cloned a human gene for a subtype of the somatostatin (SST) receptor (SSTR) termed human SSTR5 (hSSTR5), which is located on chromosome 16. The predicted amino acid sequence of hSSTR5 displays 75% sequence identity with a recently identified rat SSTR [Mol. Pharmacol. 42:939-946 (1992)], suggesting that it is the human homologue of this receptor. hSSTR5 consists of a 363-residue polypeptide exhibiting a putative seven-transmembrane domain topology typical of G protein-coupled receptors. The receptor displays considerable sequence identity to hSSTR1 (42%), hSSTR2 (48%), hSSTR3 (47%), and hSSTR4 (46%). Membranes prepared from
COS
-7 cells transiently expressing the hSSTR5 gene bound 125I-Leu8,D-Trp22,Tyr25-SST-28 (125I-LTT-SST-28) with high affinity and in a saturable manner. SST-14, SST-28, and various synthetic SST peptide agonists produced dose-dependent inhibition of radioligand binding with the following rank order of potency: LTT-SST-28 > SST-28 > D-Trp8-SST-14 > SST-14 approximately RC-160 approximately BIM 23014 > MK-678 > SMS 201-995. hSSTR5 bound SST-28 with a 12.6-fold greater affinity (Ki = 0.19 nM), compared with SST-14 (Ki = 2.24 nM), indicating that the receptor is SST-28 selective. Addition of GTP, guanosine-5'-O-(3-thio)triphosphate, Na+ ions, or pertusis toxin greatly reduced 125I-LTT-SST-28 binding, thereby indicating that hSSTR5 is coupled to pertussis toxin-sensitive G proteins. Both SST-14 and SST-28 displayed dose-dependent inhibition of forskolin-stimulated cAMP accumulation, consistent with functional coupling of the receptor to adenylyl cyclase inhibition. Northern blot analysis of SSTR5 mRNA revealed a 2.4-kilobase transcript in normal rat pituitary and GH3 rat pituitary tumor cells and a 4.0-kilobase transcript in normal human pituitary. Reverse
transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction revealed expression of the hSSTR gene in fetal human pituitary and hypothalamus but not in human cerebral cortex. In situ hybridization of the rat pituitary showed that SSTR5 mRNA is selectively localized in the anterior lobe. SSTR5 mRNA was not expressed in four human pituitary tumors (somatotroph adenoma, prolactinoma, and chromophobe adenomas) or in a human insulinoma. Although hSSTR5 displays approximately 75% sequence identity with rat SSTR5, the two receptors display significantly different pharmacological profiles, especially with respect to their binding affinities for the SST analogue SMS 201-995.
...
PMID:Molecular cloning, functional characterization, and chromosomal localization of a human somatostatin receptor (somatostatin receptor type 5) with preferential affinity for somatostatin-28. 790 5
By using a mouse delta opioid receptor cDNA as a probe, a kappa opioid receptor gene was isolated from a human genomic library. Reverse
transcriptase
/PCR was subsequently used to isolate the corresponding cDNA from human placenta mRNA. Characterization of the cloned receptor with a kappa agonist in transfected
COS
-7 cells, revealed a Kd of 0.67 nM, which is similar to rodent kappa 1 receptors. In competition binding experiments, non-kappa agonists had kis > 1000nM. Furthermore, when expressed in
COS
-7 cells, the kappa receptor is negatively linked to cAMP. A Northern blot showed the presence of two transcripts, 6 and 7 kB in size, in both placenta and brain mRNA, which hybridized to the kappa cDNA.
...
PMID:Isolation of a human kappa opioid receptor cDNA from placenta. 806 Mar 24
gp49 was originally defined as a 49-kDa surface glycoprotein preferentially expressed on mouse interleukin-3-dependent, bone marrow-derived mast cells, which are immature progenitor cells. A previously cloned cDNA (gp49A) indicated that gp49 was a member of the immunoglobulin (Ig) superfamily, and genomic DNA analysis indicated that two genes might encode a gp49 family. We have now characterized a 5.6-kilobase pair gene, gp49B, that encodes two novel gp49 cDNAs, gp49B1 and gp49B2. The two cDNAs are identical except that gp49B2 is missing exon 6, which encodes a predicted transmembrane domain. In contrast to gp49A, gp49B1 and gp49B2 have 32 additional amino acids at their C termini containing 4 of the 6 consensus amino acids of the antigen receptor homology 1 motif found on several signal-transducing members of the Ig superfamily. When
COS
-7 cells were transfected with either the gp49B1 or gp49B2 cDNA, only the gp49B1 transfectants bound the B23.1 monoclonal antibody that originally defined gp49. Reverse
transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction analysis of the transfectants established that both transcripts were expressed, suggesting that the product of the gp49B2 transcript was not inserted in the plasma membrane. Thus, cloning of the gp49B gene has established the organization of one of the gp49 genes and provided evidence of alternate splicing of transcripts from that gene.
...
PMID:Cloning of the gp49B gene of the immunoglobulin superfamily and demonstration that one of its two products is an early-expressed mast cell surface protein originally described as gp49. 813 64
Inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) functions as a second messenger for many neurotransmitters, hormones and growth factors. It causes the release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores by binding to specific receptors that are coupled to Ca2+ channels. Recent studies have shown that there is a family of IP3 receptors, and the complete sequences of two members of this family and partial sequences of two others have been reported. We have determined the complete sequence of a third IP3 receptor, designated IP3R-3, and characterized its pharmacological properties and sites of expression. Rat IP3R-3 is 2670 amino acids in size, has 62 and 64% identity with IP3R-1 and IP3R-2, and is predicted to have a similar structure including a region of eight potential membrane-spanning segments at its COOH terminus, which presumably functions as a Ca2+ channel. Expression of recombinant rat IP3R-3 in
COS
-7 cells showed that it bound IP3 as well as inositol 1,3,4,5-tetrakisphosphate and inositol hexakisphosphate. Immunohistocytochemical studies of cells expressing recombinant IP3R-3 indicated that it has a preferential cellular distribution in the endoplasmic reticulum. RNA and protein blotting studies indicate that IP3R-3 is expressed in a number of different cultured cell lines including insulin-secreting RINm5F cells. The IP3R-3 is also expressed in adult pancreatic islets, kidney, gastrointestinal tract, and brain. Reverse
transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction amplification of IP3R-1, -2, and -3 mRNAs in adult rat pancreatic islets indicated that IP3R-3 was the predominant subtype expressed in this tissue and thus may be responsible for mediating the effects of IP3 on insulin secretion.
...
PMID:Sequence and functional characterization of a third inositol trisphosphate receptor subtype, IP3R-3, expressed in pancreatic islets, kidney, gastrointestinal tract, and other tissues. 838 91
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