Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.7.49 (reverse transcriptase)
31,746 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Human submandibular/sublingual gland secretions contain a multimeric high molecular weight mucin (MG1) and a monomeric low molecular weight mucin (MG2). MG2 is the product of the MUC7 gene, whereas the gene for MG1 has not been identified. Previously, we isolated a clone (pSM2-1) from a human sublingual gland cDNA expression library using an antibody against deglycosylated MG1 (Troxler et al., Biochem. Biophys. Res Commun., 217, 1112-1119, 1995). In order to identify the mucin gene from which pPM2-1 was derived, Northern blots of human submandibular and sublingual gland RNA were hybridized with a series of probes for tandem repeats found in the high molecular weight secreted mucins MUC2, MUC3, MUC4, MUC5AC, MUC5B, and MUC6. The only known mucin expressed at high levels in sublingual gland was MUC5B, and no known mucin was expressed at high levels in submandibular gland. A series of overlapping clones was obtained by rescreening the sublingual gland cDNA library and by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. The resulting clones connected pSM2-1 to a series of MUC5B tandem repeats at the 3' end of the repeat domain and provided the complete nucleotide and deduced amino sequence of the carboxyl terminal region of MG1. This region is enriched with respect to cysteine (approximately 10 mol %) and contained a D domain and a carboxyl terminal domain that could be aligned with the corresponding domains in human intestinal MUC2, human tracheobronchial MUC5AC, and human von Willebrand factor. The limited expression of known mucin genes, together with the considerable mucin synthesizing capacity of submandibular gland, suggests that a novel (previously not described) mucin gene is expressed in this gland and constitutes a portion of MG1 in salivary secretions.
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PMID:Molecular characterization of a major high molecular weight mucin from human sublingual gland. 936 39

Disseminated epithelial tumor cells have been detected in the bone marrow and blood of cancer patients by means of immunocytochemical or immunofluorescent staining of cytocentrifuge slides, multiparameter flow cytometry, and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. However, it is hardly possible using such methods to detect tumor cells at a frequency below 10(-6). To increase the sensitivity of these detection techniques we have developed a new technology for the enrichment of disseminated epithelial tumor cells from hematopoietic cell samples by high-gradient magnetic cell sorting (MACS). Cells are permeabilized and fixed and carcinoma cells are magnetically labeled specifically with an anti-cytokeratin 8 monoclonal antibody (mAb) directly conjugated to superparamagnetic microbeads. Magnetically labeled cells are enriched on high-gradient magnetic columns. Tumor cells are detected in the enriched cell fraction by flow cytometry, fluorescence microscopy, or immunocytochemisty. In this study we demonstrated the method using a model system in which five to 5,000 cells from a breast cancer cell line were seeded into blood cell samples from a healthy donor containing 1.2 x 10(8) leukocytes. Tumor cells were 10,477+/-4242 (n=25)-fold magnetically enriched, and 57.7%+/-16.9% (n=33) of the initially seeded tumor cells were recovered. Applying the method to 20-40 mL blood samples from patients with advanced carcinomas of the breast, prostate, colon, rectum, or lung, we were able to detect between one and 6.8 x 10(4) cytokeratin-expressing tumor cells in 21 of 34 patients. This corresponds to frequencies of tumor cells between 6.8 x 10(-9) and 1.1 x 10(-3) among nucleated cells in the original sample. Enriched tumor cells were further analyzed for expression of tissue-specific and prognostic markers such as breast mucin glycoproteins, erbB2, and CD44v6 for additional characterization and to confirm their tumor origin. The technique described could become a valuable tool for the quantification and molecular characterization of metastatic carcinoma cells in hematopoietic tissue, and may ultimately prove useful in the diagnosis, prognosis, and monitoring of patients with carcinoma.
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PMID:Immunomagnetic enrichment of disseminated epithelial tumor cells from peripheral blood by MACS. 950 22

A primary cell culture of human gastric mucous cells was developed using enzymatic treatment of surgically obtained gastric mucosal specimens. Preferential attachment of gastric mucous cells during a preincubation step resulted in the enrichment of mucous cells [over 90% stained with periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) and mucin-type lectins] in the primary cell culture. Gastric mucous cells could be maintained in culture for 10 days. DNA synthesis peaked during the first 2 days in culture (8+/-1% bromodeoxyuridine-positive cells). During the entire culture period gastric mucous cells released high-molecular-weight glycoproteins into the medium, as determined by gel chromatography on a Sepharose CL-4B column and by metabolic labelling with [14C]-N-acetylglucosamine. Gastric mucin was verified by gas chromatographic analysis of the carbohydrate composition and fractionation of the void-volume fraction by density gradient centrifugation. Determination of the terminal glycosylation of the secreted glycoproteins by a lectin-ELISA revealed that there was a high quantity of alpha-l-fucose. Prostaglandin E2 significantly stimulated glycoprotein secretion during the entire cultivation period by 29-60%. Analysis of mucin-encoding MUC mRNA expression by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction revealed that gastric mucous cells predominantly express MUC1 and MUC5AC, and to a lesser extent MUC6, which reflects the expression pattern obtained following analysis of biopsied samples of gastric mucosa. This primary cell culture model enables the regulation of mucin secretion and mucin gene expression in man to be investigated.
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PMID:Morphological and molecular characterization of human gastric mucous cells in long-term primary culture. 979 1

The levels of mRNA corresponding to the MUC1, MUC2, MUC5AC, MUC5B, and MUC6 genes were determined in 19 human colon adenocarcinoma cell lines by the reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction method using specific primers in an attempt to correlate to the levels of cell surface carbohydrate epitopes. All 19 cell lines expressed MUC1 and MUC5B mRNA, whereas MUC2, MUC5AC, or MUC6 mRNA were only detected in 8, 3, or 2 of 19 cell lines, respectively. Sialyl Lewis a carbohydrates, identified by the monoclonal antibody (mAb) CA19-9, and sialyl Lewis X carbohydrates. identified by mAb KM93, were observed, with most of the cell lines expressing multiple mucin core polypeptide genes but with few cell lines expressing only MUC1 and MUC5B. Sialyl Tn epitopes identified by mAb B195.3R11 and by mAb TKH-2 were strongly expressed on both of two MUC6-positive cells, whereas only a small portion of MUC6-negative cells expressed these epitopes. Strict correlation between mucin gene expression and any carbohydrate epitopes examined was not observed.
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PMID:Expression of mucin genes and carbohydrate epitopes in 19 human colon carcinoma cell lines. 1010 Jul 57

Mucus hypersecretion is characteristic of chronic airway diseases. However, regulatory mechanisms are poorly understood. Human airway epithelial cells grown on permeable supports at the air-liquid interface (ALI) develop a mucociliary morphology resembling that found in vivo. Such cultures provide a model for studying secretory cell lineage, differentiation, and function, and may provide insight regarding events leading to mucus hypersecretion. The mucin gene expression profile of well-differentiated human airway epithelial cells in culture has not yet been established. We compared expression of all the currently described mucin genes in poorly differentiated (conventional cultures on plastic) and well-differentiated (ALI) human nasal and bronchial epithelial cells. Differentiation-dependent upregulation of MUC3, MUC5AC, MUC5B, and MUC6 messenger RNA (mRNA) was demonstrated using reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Northern blot analysis showed a similar increase for MUC4 and demonstrated that induction of MUC4 and MUC5B expression depended on retinoic acid. MUC1, MUC2, MUC7, and MUC8 mRNAs were also detected by RT-PCR, but these genes did not appear to be strongly regulated as a function of differentiation. Mucin gene expression was similar in bronchial and nasal cells. Thus, mucociliary differentiation of human airway epithelia in vitro entails upregulation of several mucin genes.
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PMID:Mucin gene expression during differentiation of human airway epithelia in vitro. Muc4 and muc5b are strongly induced. 1010 Sep 90

Free cancer cells exfoliated from cancer-invaded serosa contribute to peritoneal dissemination, the most frequent pattern of recurrence in patients with gastric and ovarian cancers. This study was designed to evaluate the prognostic significance of free cancer cells in peritoneal washes detected using the reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and cytology. RT-PCR analysis with primers specific for the carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) gene was found to be more sensitive than cytology for detection of free tumor cells in the peritoneal washes, collected at laparotomy from 199 gastric carcinoma patients, with higher detection rates for each of the T-categories in the TNM classification. Six patients with synchronous and 5 with recurrent peritoneal dissemination were found among 25 advanced cancer patients with positive PCR and negative cytology results. Positive PCR results were significantly associated with poor survival of curatively resected advanced gastric carcinoma patients (P < 0.001). A rapid method for detecting CEA mRNA using the LightCycler and the dsDNA binding dye SYBR green I was also developed. The results obtained using this technique were essentially the same as those obtained using the conventional RT-PCR method. Furthermore, RT-PCR analysis with primers specific for MUC1 epithelial mucin were performed on peritoneal washes from patients with ovarian cancer. Peritoneal washes from 21 of 25 ovarian carcinoma patients, including all 17 with positive cytology results, were positive for MUC1 mRNA, again indicating a higher sensitivity using this method than conventional cytology. Highly sensitive and rapid detection of free cancer cells in peritoneal washes, most reliably by RT-PCR, is a powerful technique to predict peritoneal dissemination in patients with gastric and ovarian cancers.
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PMID:Molecular diagnostic detection of free cancer cells in the peritoneal cavity of patients with gastrointestinal and gynecologic malignancies. 1035 56

Our goal was to determine the effect of transdermal nicotine on cytokine and mucin gene transcription in ulcerative colitis (UC). Sixty-four nonsmoking patients with active UC were randomly assigned to transdermal nicotine (maximum dose 22 mg/day) or placebo for 4 weeks. Clinical assessment and colonic mucosal biopsies were obtained at entry and after 4 weeks. Inflammatory and immunoregulatory cytokines were assessed by qualitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Based on this initial screen. IL-8 mRNA levels were measured by RT-competitive PCR. MUC1, MUC2, MUC3, MUC4, MUC5AC, MUC5B, and MUC6 mRNA concentrations were measured by quantitative dot blot analysis. Cytokine mRNA expression, except for IL-8, was similar in all patients. IL-8 mRNA levels were significantly decreased in the colonic mucosa of nicotine-treated patients who improved (p = 0.04). IL-8 mRNA values were similar before and after treatment in nonresponding nicotine-treated patients and in all placebo-treated patients. Mucin gene expression was similar in all patient groups. Beneficial effects of transdermal nicotine in active UC may result from decrease of IL-8 expression at the transcriptional level. Transdermal nicotine has no effect on mucin gene transcription.
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PMID:Transdermal nicotine decreases mucosal IL-8 expression but has no effect on mucin gene expression in ulcerative colitis. 1045 73

Differential display reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was used to identify genes expressed by murine macrophages exposed to glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored mucin-like glycoproteins isolated from Trypanosoma cruzi trypomastigotes. Among the different PCR product bands identified in the differential display gel, one showed high homology with the serum amyloid A3 protein (SAA3). Northern blot assays showed augmentation of SAA3 mRNA expression by inflammatory macrophages exposed to live trypomastigotes or parasite glycolipids, as compared to unstimulated macrophages. Our results also showed the expression of SAA3 mRNA, in liver and heart from animals in the acute phase of Chagas disease. It is important that expression of SAA3 mRNA was closely associated with tissue parasitism and presence of inflammatory cells. Together, our findings indicate the possible involvement of SAA3 protein on immunopathology of Chagas disease and establish a new infectious disease model to study the pathophysiological role of this acute-phase protein.
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PMID:Expression of serum amyloid A3 mRNA by inflammatory macrophages exposed to membrane glycoconjugates from Trypanosoma cruzi. 1053 15

It has been reported that MUC2 mucin is expressed in goblet cells of gastric intestinal metaplasia, but not in its normal epithelium. To confirm this finding, we have examined the expression of the MUC2 gene by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and immunohistochemical methods in gastric tissues obtained by routine upper gastrointestinal tract endoscopy and compared the results with pathological findings based on hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining. In 16.7% of the tissue specimens tested, MUC2 mRNA was detected in spite of the absence of intestinal metaplasia in HE specimens. A possible explanation for this was the identification by immunohistochemistry of MUC2 protein in regenerative gastric mucosal cells in biopsies that did not contain intestinal metaplasia. Sialyl-Le(x) epitope, which is suggested to be located on MUC2 mucin core protein (MUC2 protein), was also immunohistochemically detected in both goblet cells of intestinal metaplasia and regenerative epithelium. With regard to carcinoma, MUC2 protein was predominantly expressed in intestinal-type adenocarcinoma. These data indicate that MUC2 mucin is expressed in gastric regenerative epithelium in addition to intestinal metaplasia and intestinal type adenocarcinoma.
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PMID:Expression of MUC2 gene in gastric regenerative, metaplastic, and neoplastic epithelia. 1063 92

In the present study we examined the localization and overexpression of heat shock proteins (hsps), mainly hsp90, in pancreatic carcinoma tissue compared with control tissue (including chronic pancreatitis and normal pancreas tissue), with the aid of immunohistochemical staining, in situ hybridization and reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. Hsp90 alpha mRNA was overexpressed more highly in pancreatic carcinoma than in the control tissue. The proliferating-cell-nuclear-antigen labeling index was also high in pancreatic carcinoma tissue compared with the other tissue. These findings suggest that the overexpression of hsp90 alpha mRNA in carcinomas may be correlated with cell proliferation. However, hsp90 beta was constitutively overexpressed almost equally in all groups of pancreatic tissue including pancreatic carcinoma, chronic pancreatitis and normal pancreas tissue. Immunohistochemical staining demonstrated a differentiation in the expression of hsp90 between histological types of pancreatic carcinoma. These findings suggest that hsp90 alpha is involved in carcinogenesis and that hsp90 beta is correlated to structural conformation. Hsp90 alpha and hsp90 beta seem to perform different functions in tissue containing malignant cells. P53, MDM2 and WAF1, that were cell-cycle-related oncogene product were more strongly expressed in the nuclei of the cancer cells of the cancer tissue. Especially, MDM2 was more strongly expressed in mucinous carcinoma and the mucin secreting tissues surrounding pancreatic carcinoma tissue. The expression of MDM2 protein might also be correlated to secretion systems during structural conformation and be correlated to hsp90 beta.
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PMID:Overexpression and localization of heat shock proteins mRNA in pancreatic carcinoma. 1085 51


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