Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.1.30.1 (
S1 nuclease
)
3,660
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Stably transfected cell lines containing the normal human growth hormone (hGH-N) and human growth hormone-variant (hGH-V) genes have been established in order to study the expression of these two highly homologous genes. Each gene was inserted into a bovine papillomavirus shuttle vector under the transcriptional control of the mouse metallothionein gene promoter and the resultant recombinants were transfected into mouse C127 cells. The transfected cells containing the hGH-N gene secrete two
hGH
proteins, 91% migrating at 22 kD and 9% migrating at 20 kD, the same relative proportions synthesized in vivo by the human pituitary.
S1 nuclease
analysis of mRNA from these cells confirms that 20 kD
hGH
is encoded by an alternatively spliced product of the primary hGH-N gene transcript in which the normal exon 3 splice-acceptor site is bypassed for a secondary site 15 codons within exon 3. Although the hGH-V gene is identical to the hGH-N gene for at least 15 nucleotides on either side of the normal and alternative exon 3 AG splice-acceptor sites, hGH-V synthesizes only a 22-kD protein. Reciprocal exchange of exon 3 and its flanking intron sequences between the hGH-N gene and the hGH-V gene, eliminates the synthesis of the 20-kD protein in both resultant chimeric genes. These results directly demonstrate that both the major 22-kD and the minor 20-kD forms of pituitary
hGH
are encoded by the alternative splicing products of a single hGH-N gene transcript. This alternative splicing is neither species nor tissue-specific and appears to be regulated by at least two separate regions remote from the AG splice-acceptor site.
...
PMID:Human growth hormone gene and the highly homologous growth hormone variant gene display different splicing patterns. 339 9
The sequence of one of the two major expressed human chorionic somatomammotropin genes (hCS-1) was determined. The hCS-1 gene and the human growth hormone gene (
hGH
-1) share 92% nucleotide sequence homology in their 5'- and 3'-flanking regions, introns and exons. This finding, in addition to the existence of multiple closely linked
hGH
and hCS genes, suggests that these genes are evolving by concerted mechanisms.
S1 nuclease
, hybridization, and primer extension analysis of placental poly(A+) RNA demonstrated the presence of two functional initiation sites within the hCS-1 and/or the hCS-2 gene(s). The majority (about 95%) of the transcripts initiate 30 nucleotides downstream from the TATAAA sequence, and about 5% of the transcripts initiate 30 nucleotides downstream from a CATAAA sequence located 55 nucleotides 5' to the TATAAA sequence. The presence of two functional promoter elements as well as direct repeated sequences flanking the TATAAA sequence and exon I of the hCS genes are consistent with the hypothesis (Cooke, N. E., and Baxter, J. D. (1982) Nature (Lond.) 297, 603-606) that an important regulatory element may have been inserted into the gene in a separate evolutionary event. An analysis of other direct repeats, internal homology, and homology between other growth hormone and chorionic somatomammotropin genes offers a more extensive conceptualization of how this gene family evolved.
...
PMID:Analysis of a major human chorionic somatomammotropin gene. Evidence for two functional promoter elements. 620 92
Gamma-glutamyl hydrolase
(GH) plays an important role in the metabolism of folic acid and the pharmacology of antifolates such as methotrexate. We have previously cloned and characterized the human GH cDNA. In this report, the complete organization and structure of the human GH gene was determined. The human GH gene spans 24 kb in the human genome, with nine exons sized from 51 to 371 bp. All of exon-intron splice junctions follow the GT-AG rule. The sequence upstream of exon 1 consists of a promoter-like, GC-rich region and a number of putative cis active elements including Sp1, AP1, and MZF1 sites. A TATA sequence in the 5' region of human GH gene was not observed, similar to housekeeping genes known to be tissue-specific and differentially expressed.
S1 nuclease
protection analysis with human liver, prostate, brain, and mammary gland revealed a major transcription start point at nucleotide -125 relative to the ATG start codon and several minor transcription start points. Analysis of GH cDNA isolated from human liver indicated a nucleotide change, T-->C, in the leader sequence of GH, which suggested a polymorphism. Studies of cDNA from different human tissue sources provided evidence that there is a single spliced cDNA species in human.
...
PMID:Structural organization of the human gamma-glutamyl hydrolase gene. 1057 Sep 74