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Query: EC:2.7.7.6 (
RNA polymerase
)
34,946
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A
Wilms' tumor
susceptibility gene (WT1) localized to 11p13 was recently isolated and shown to be altered in some sporadic
Wilms
' tumors. This gene encodes a DNA-binding protein with four zinc fingers (ZFs) in the carboxy-terminal region and a glutamine/proline (Gln/Pro)-rich domain near the 5' end. Two alternative splice sites were described, splice I in the Gln/Pro-rich domain (51 bp) and splice II between ZFs 3 and 4 (9 bp). Using
RNA polymerase
chain reaction (PCR) we show that
Wilms
' tumors contain all four possible transcripts, which are also identified in normal adult and embryonic kidney cells. The transcripts containing the 9-bp ZF insert were always predominant in tumors and normal cells. The presence of all four
WT1
transcripts in tumors and expressing tissues suggests that each encoded protein isoform has an important role for the function of the
WT1
gene.
...
PMID:RNA polymerase chain reaction detects different levels of four alternatively spliced WT1 transcripts in Wilms' tumors. 132 Feb 46
We report expression of the wt1 (
Wilms' tumor
) gene by cultured human melanoma cells. Using
RNA polymerase
chain reaction analysis, wt1 transcripts were detected in 7 of 9 melanoma cell lines but not in 5 normal melanocyte strains. In Northern blot analysis, steady-state wt1 mRNA levels were found in 2 of 4 melanoma lines but not in normal melanocytes. Sequence analysis of the wt1 cDNA expressed by melanoma cell line WM 902-B revealed the presence of 4 previously published splice variants but no evidence for mutations in the coding region. Previous work has shown that
WT1
modulates transcription after binding to the early growth response (EGR)-1 sites present in the platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF)-A chain promoter; the PDGF-A chain gene is known to be expressed by various melanoma cell lines. Based on these findings, we studied the relationship of wt1 and PDGF-A chain gene expression in melanoma cell lines. Co-expression of the wt1 and the PDGF-A chain genes was observed in 2 melanoma cell lines with mutated p53 but not in 2 melanoma cell lines with wild-type p53; this result is consistent with a previous report showing that, in the context of absent or mutated p53,
WT1
acts as a transcriptional activator, whereas in the presence of wild-type p53 it acts as a repressor.
...
PMID:Expression of the wt1 Wilms' tumor gene by normal and malignant human melanocytes. 792 8
The
WT1
gene encoding a zinc finger polypeptide is a tumor suppressor gene that plays a key role in the carcinogenesis of
Wilms' tumor
. Reverse
transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) was used to examine relative levels of
WT1
gene expression (defined in K562 cells as 1.00) in 45 patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), 22 with acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL), 6 with acute mixed lineage leukemia (AMLL), 23 with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML), and 24 with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Significant levels of
WT1
gene were expressed in all leukemia patients and for CML the levels increased as the clinical phase progressed. In striking contrast with acute leukemia, the levels of
WT1
gene expression for NHL were significantly lower or even undetectable. Clear correlation was observed between the relative levels of
WT1
gene expression (< 0.6 v > or = 0.6) and the prognosis for acute leukemia (AML, ALL, and AMLL). Patients with less than 0.6 levels had significantly higher rates of complete remission (CR), disease-free survival, and overall survival than those with > or = 0.6 levels, whereas CR could not be induced in any of the 7 patients with acute leukemia having greater than 1.0 levels of
WT1
gene expression. The quantitation of the
WT1
gene expression made it possible to detect minimal residual disease (MRD) in acute leukemia regardless of the presence or absence of tumor-specific DNA markers. Continuous monitoring of the
WT1
mRNA was performed for 9 patients with acute leukemia. In 4 patients, MRD was detected 2 to 8 months before clinical relapse became apparent. In 2 other patients, the
WT1
mRNA gradually increased after discontinuation of chemotherapy. No MRD was detected in the remaining 3 patients with AML who received intensive induction and consolidation therapy. Simultaneous monitoring of MRD by RT-PCR using primers for specific DNA markers in 3 patients (2 AML-M3 with PML/RAR alpha, and 1 AML-M2 with AML1/ETO) among these 9 patients detected MRD comparable with that obtained from quantitation of
WT1
gene expression. In a patient with acute promyelocytic leukemia, the limits of leukemic cell detection by RT-PCR using either
WT1
or promyelocytic leukemia/retinoic acid receptor-alpha gene primers were 10(-3) to 10(-4) and 10(-4) for bone marrow, and 10(-5) and 10(-4) for peripheral blood, respectively. Therefore, we conclude that
WT1
is a new prognostic factor and a new marker for the detection of MRD in acute leukemia.
...
PMID:WT1 as a new prognostic factor and a new marker for the detection of minimal residual disease in acute leukemia. 794 79
Chromosome translocations found in neoplasms often result in the creation of hybrid genes encoding chimeric proteins. This case study describes a patient with desmoplastic small round cell tumor (DSRCT) of the abdomen, an aggressive neoplasm characterized by translocation of chromosomes 11 and 22. Southern hybridization showed that the Ewing sarcoma gene (EWS) gene was rearranged in the DSRCT. Reverse
transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction analysis of tumor cell RNA revealed that exons 1 to 7 of the EWS gene were joined to exons 8 to 10 of the
Wilms' Tumor
-1 (WT-1) gene resulting in the production of a chimeric message. The WT-1 and EWS genes encode DNA and RNA binding proteins involved in
Wilms' tumor
and Ewing sarcoma pathogenesis, respectively. The fusion of these two genes in DSRCT results in the production of a putatively oncogenic protein composed of the zinc finger DNA binding domains of WT-1 linked to potential transcriptional regulatory domains of EWS. DNA sequencing revealed the genomic breakpoints of translocation on chromosomes 11 and 22. The genomic breakpoint on chromosome 22 occurred in EWS intron 7 just 2 nucleotides 3' of exon 7. Polymerase chain reaction-based assays were developed that could detect the fused genes in the DSRCT tumor using either RNA or genomic DNA. The potential diagnostic use of these assays is discussed.
...
PMID:EWS and WT-1 gene fusion in desmoplastic small round cell tumor of the abdomen. 852 11
A t(11;22)(p13;p12) chromosomal translocation, juxtaposing the
Wilms' tumor
(WT1) and Ewing's sarcoma (EWS) genes, is the cytogenetic hallmark of desmoplastic small round cell tumor (DSRCT), a primitive multiphenotypic sarcoma arising in serosal tissues. Chimeric transcripts generated by this rearrangement encode an aberrant transcription factor that fuses the 5' region of EWS with a 3'
WT1
segment. We describe the insertion of a LINE-I DNA mobile genetic element at the genomic breakpoint of a DSRCT chromosomal translocation. A 480 bp heterologous DNA segment with homology to the LINE-I DNA consensus sequence was located between EWS intron 8 and
WT1
exon 8 in the productively rearranged allele. Sequence homology corresponded to the LINE-I ORF-2, which encodes a protein with reverse-
transcriptase
activity. The heterologous inserted fragment was not evident in the germline of normal tissue from the patient, suggesting that transposition occurred in somatic cells, possibly during the process of chromosomal rearrangement. This case represents the first example of LINE-I DNA transposition at the fusion site of a tumor-associated chromosomal rearrangement.
...
PMID:LINE-I element insertion at the t(11;22) translocation breakpoint of a desmoplastic small round cell tumor. 907 77
The
Wilms
'-tumor gene
WT1
may have a different function from a tumor-suppressor gene in some leukemias. Using the 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA)-induced rat leukemia system, we examined whether
WT1
expression was involved during leukemogenesis, since this model enabled us to analyze cells altered by DMBA at various stages of leukemogenesis. By the semi-quantitative reverse-
transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) method,
WT1
expression was detected in 15 (71%) of 21 DMBA-induced erythroblastic leukemias. Among 15
WT1
-expressing leukemias, GATA-1, which is an erythroid-specific transcription factor and might regulate
WT1
expression, was also expressed in 13 cases (p < 0.05). On the other hand,
WT1
expression was not detected in any normal or early pre-leukemic rats and was detected in 1 of 8 rats in late pre-leukemic stages. These results showed that cells with a high expression level of
WT1
tended to develop into leukemia and that
WT1
contributed to leukemogenesis in the late stage, suggesting that the expression of
WT1
plays an important role in cell proliferation and in maintaining the viability of some leukemia cells.
...
PMID:WT1 contributes to leukemogenesis: expression patterns in 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA)-induced leukemia. 925 12
We report here a 15-year-old boy with an intraabdominal desmoplastic small round cell tumor (DSRCT). Cytogenetic analysis of the tumor cells showed the chromosomal translocation (11;22). Reverse-
transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction and sequencing analysis revealed a chimeric transcriptional message of the EWS gene exon 10 fused to the
WT1
gene exon 8. The typical chimeric transcript seen in DSRCT is an in-frame fusion of EWS exon 7 to
WT1
exon 8. The tumor in this case had a novel and longer chimeric transcript, which should be a potent transcription factor. Genetic analysis is a very powerful and specific aid in the differential diagnosis of small round cell tumors.
...
PMID:Novel breakpoints of the EWS gene and the WT1 gene in a desmoplastic small round cell tumor. 979 82
The
WT1
gene is normally expressed in fetal kidney and mesothelium, and its expression has been suggested as a marker for
Wilms tumor
and mesothelioma. We examined
WT1
expression levels by reverse-
transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in 38 childhood small-cell tumors including
Wilms tumor
, embryonal and alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma, Ewing sarcoma, lymphoma, desmoplastic small round-cell tumor (DSRCT), synovial sarcoma, extrarenal rhabdoid tumor, and two tumors that were atypical for this group of tumors.
WT1
expression was only detected in
Wilms tumor
, rhabdoid tumor, and in these two cases of uncertain histogenesis. Both arose in the peritoneal cavity and by immunohistochemistry were diffusely positive for vimentin, keratin, and desmin. Tonofilaments were identified by electron microscopy in one of the cases. RT-PCR failed to detect the t(11;22) translocation associated with DSRCT in either case. Our results suggest that
WT1
expression is an unusual feature of childhood non-
Wilms
tumors and, in the right setting, it may indicate a mesothelial origin. The expression of
WT1
may play a role in mesodermal cells acquiring epithelial characteristics, a concept supported by the mixed epithelial and mesenchymal phenotype of these two cases.
...
PMID:Expression of WT1 in pediatric small cell tumors: report of two cases with a possible mesothelial origin. 984 4
We have studied the ability of the wt1 tumor suppressor gene product to repress different classes of activation domains previously shown to stimulate the initiation and elongation steps of
RNA polymerase II
transcription in vivo. Repression assays revealed that
WT1
represses all three classes of activation domains: Sp1 and CTF, which stimulate initiation (type I), human immunodeficiency virus type I Tat fused to a DNA-binding domain, which stimulates predominantly elongation (type IIA), and VP16, p53 and E2F1, which stimulate both initiation and elongation (type IIB).
WT1
is capable of exerting its repression effect over a significant distance when positioned approximately 1700 bp from the core promoter. Deletion analysis of
WT1
indicates that the responsible domain resides within the first 180 N-terminal amino acids of the protein. Nuclear run-ons analyzing the effects of
WT1
on initiation of transcription demonstrate inhibition of this process. Our observations imply that
WT1
can repress activators that stimulate initiation and/or elongation.
...
PMID:The Wilms' tumor suppressor gene (wt1) product represses different functional classes of transcriptional activation domains. 1039 May 30
Desmoplastic small round cell tumor (DSRCT) is a unique, highly aggressive neoplasm that chiefly affects male adolescents and young adults. This tumor is characterized by nests of small undifferentiated cells that show immunohistochemical evidence of epithelial, mesenchymal, and neural differentiation. We report two cases of DSRCT that lacked immunohistochemical evidence of epithelial differentiation, but were found to have the fusion transcripts characteristic of this tumor. Both patients (a 41-year-old male and a 31-year-old female) presented with large intra-abdominal masses. After diagnostic biopsy, both were treated with multi-agent chemotherapy. One patient expired 18 days after diagnosis, and the other is currently alive 28 months later. Histologically, both tumors had the characteristic features of DSRCT and were composed of small round cells with hyperchromatic nuclei and scanty cytoplasm. In one of the cases, perinuclear intracytoplasmic hyaline inclusions were seen. Immunohistochemically, neither case expressed any of the epithelial markers tested, including AE1/AE3, CAM 5.2 and EMA. Both tumors were diffusely immunoreactive for desmin with a prominent globoid "dot-like" pattern of staining in one case. Both tumors stained for vimentin, neuron specific enolase, and synaptophysin, but were negative for CD99, muscle-specific actin, and myogenin. Reverse
transcriptase
-polymerase chain reaction revealed EWS-
WT1
fusion transcripts characteristic of this neoplasm. In conclusion, we describe two cases of DSRCT that lacked immunohistochemical evidence of epithelial differentiation but had histologic and other immunohistochemical features which suggested this diagnosis. The ability to confirm the diagnosis of this rare tumor using molecular genetic techniques is particularly useful in those cases with unusual histologic or immunophenotypic features.
...
PMID:Cytokeratin-negative desmoplastic small round cell tumor: a report of two cases emphasizing the utility of reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. 1049 92
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