Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.2.1.23 (beta-galactosidase)
14,648 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A non-contracting scar following myocardial infarction can adversely affect ventricular topography and hemodynamic function. Gene transfer has the potential to prevent or alter such pathophysiological processes. Normal myocardium is a proven target for delivery of DNA or viral vectors but the potential for gene therapy in ischemic myocardium has not been evaluated. In an initial series of experiments, we determined whether the direct injection of reporter genes into hearts subjected to coronary artery occlusion followed by reperfusion could result in gene expression comparable to the levels observed in non-occluded normal hearts. Anesthetized rats were subjected to 15 min or 60 min of proximal coronary occlusion or sham operation. Luciferase gene under the control of the Rous sarcoma virus promoter was injected directly into the anterior left wall. At 1 week, high expression of luciferase was observed in both the ischemic/reperfused and non-ischemic tissue. Thus DNA transfer by direct injection is possible after ischemic injury and uptake and expression are not impaired. In a second series of experiments, myocardial infarcts in dogs were injected with a beta-galactosidase expressing retroviral vector. LNPOZ. Six to 11 days later frozen sections revealed macroscopically visible expression of beta-galactosidase activity. Not only can foreign genes be taken up by direct injection of DNA or retroviruses into ischemic/reperfused myocardium but they can be transcribed and the protein synthetic machinery of the injured cells can produce recombinant polypeptides that retain enzymatic activity. These results open the way for the investigation of gene therapy in models of ischemia.
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PMID:Ischemic/reperfused myocardium can express recombinant protein following direct DNA or retroviral injection. 874 21

In vivo targeted gene transfer by non-viral vectors is subjected to anatomical constraints depending on the route of administration. Transfection efficiency and gene expression in vivo using non-viral vectors is also relatively low. We report that in vivo electropermeabilization of the liver tissue of rats in the presence of genes encoding luciferase or beta-galactosidase resulted in the strong expression of these genetic markers in rat liver cells. About 30-40% of the rat liver cells electroporated expressed the beta-galactosidase genetic marker 48 h after electroporation. The marker expression was also detected at least 21 days after transfection at about 5% of the level 48 h after electroporation. The results indicate that gene transfer by electroporation in vivo may avoid anatomical constraints and low transfection efficiency.
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PMID:In vivo gene electroinjection and expression in rat liver. 876 4

Recombinant adenovirus (AdV) vectors are highly efficient at in vitro and in vivo gene delivery. In vivo therapy of established murine fibrosarcoma and mammary carcinomas was attempted with intratumoral injections of a recombinant AdV vector in which the human interleukin-2 (IL-2) gene was driven by the cytomegalovirus enhancer/promoter. Delayed growth and rejection of some tumors could be achieved with a cumulative virus dose of 2 to 6 x 10(9) plaque-forming units in two or three divided doses. Lower viral doses were ineffective, and higher doses resulted in animal death due to IL-2 toxicity. Using AdV vectors with the marker genes beta-galactosidase and luciferase, it is clear that even small volume (10 to 20 microL) intratumoral injections result in substantial systemic delivery of a portion of the virus dose. These findings define the potential and limitations of in vivo AdV-based cancer gene therapy and provide support for strategies to develop tumor-specific vectors.
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PMID:In vivo cancer gene therapy with a recombinant interleukin-2 adenovirus vector. 878 5

A series of enzyme-activated chemiluminescence-based assays of reporter gene expression, useful in many biomedical applications, has been developed. The chemiluminescence detection systems for beta-galactosidase, beta-glucuronidase (GUS), and secreted placental alkaline phosphatase (SEAP) reporter enzymes are all based on use of 1,2-dioxetane substrates. This detection technology also permits the combined luminescence detection of two different reporter enzymes in the same tube, e.g., a dual assay for beta-galactosidase and luciferase. The sensitivity of these chemiluminescence assays is several orders of magnitude greater than that of conventional colorimetric or fluorometric detection methods; e.g., the detection limit for beta-galactosidase by the chemiluminescence assay is 8 fg and by a fluorometric assay is 2 pg. Furthermore, chemiluminescence enables detection of beta-galactosidase, GUS, and SEAP enzyme concentrations over a dynamic range of more than five to six orders in magnitude. These assays offer highly sensitive, quantitative, rapid, nonisotopic detection of reporter enzymes that are widely used in both mammalian cells and plant cells.
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PMID:Chemiluminescence: sensitive detection technology for reporter gene assays. 878 27

Naked plasmid DNA in hypertonic solutions was injected intraportally in mice whose hepatic veins were transiently occluded. High levels of luciferase expression and beta-galactosidase expression in 1% of the hepatocytes throughout the entire liver were achieved using 100 micrograms of the respective plasmid vector. Two days after the intraportal injection of 100 micrograms of pCMVGH, the mean hGH serum concentration was 65 ng/ml +/- 26 (n = 7) which is approximately 50-fold above normal baseline levels. These unprecedented levels of foreign gene expression from naked plasmid DNA document the ability of parenchymal cells in vivo to take up naked DNA following intravascular delivery.
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PMID:Naked DNA delivered intraportally expresses efficiently in hepatocytes. 881 46

Conditional transgene expression is a potentially useful approach to investigate complex biological systems in vivo. We recently demonstrated that tetracycline-responsive promoters could be employed to achieve regulated, cardiac-specific expression of target genes in transgenic mice. To more fully define the quantitative and spatial parameters associated with tetracycline-regulated gene expression in the heart, we crossed transgenic mice harboring either a firefly luciferase or a nuclear-localized bacterial lacZ target gene with strains expressing a tetracycline-controlled transactivator (tTA) under the regulatory control of 2.9 kb of 5' flanking sequence from the rat alpha-myosin heavy chain gene. Luciferase activity was induced nearly 300-fold in the hearts of binary-transgenic mice compared with mice carrying only the luciferase reporter gene. No significant transactivation was observed in any other tissues examined. Binary transgenics harboring the lacZ reporter gene showed substantial beta-galactosidase activity throughout the heart, but the response of individual cardiac myocytes was heterogeneous. For both reporter genes, tetracycline treatment fully repressed tTA-dependent transactivation. These data provide important insights into the nature of studies that can be successfully addressed using the tetracycline-regulated gene expression system in the heart.
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PMID:Conditional transgene expression in the heart. 883 92

A recombinant histone (NLS-H1) containing both the SV40 large T antigen nuclear localization signal and the carboxy-terminal domain of human histone H1(0) was produced in bacteria. NLS-H1-plasmid DNA complexes, in the presence of chloroquine, mediated reporter gene transfer into cultured cells with similar efficiencies as plasmid DNA-cationic lipid (lipofectin) complexes. NIH-3T3 or COS-7 cells transfected with NLS-H1-plasmid DNA-lipofectin complexes expressed at least 20 times more luciferase or had at least 2.5 times more beta-galactosidase-positive cells than those transfected with plasmid DNA-lipofectin complexes. Foreign gene expression was also improved by other DNA-binding proteins and cationic lipid formulations, yet the greatest enhancement was obtained with complexes containing either NLS-H1 or calf thymus histone H1. Histone H1-plasmid DNA-lipofectin complexes were internalized by a greater number of cells than plasmid DNA-lipofectin complexes.
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PMID:Gene transfer into mammalian cells using histone-condensed plasmid DNA. 884 98

Gastrointestinal nonepithelial tissue is a useful target for in vivo gene transfer. The aim of this study was to investigate whether gene transfer into this organ could be achieved by submucosal injection of plasmid DNA. Plasmid DNA carrying either the firefly luciferase or Escherichia coli LacZ reporter gene was injected directly into the gastric submucosa of adult rats. Gene expression was characterized by quantitative luciferase assay and qualitative in situ beta-galactosidase (beta-Gal) staining. Luciferase activity was detected as early as 1 day after injection, increased markedly at 2 days, and then decreased. Some of the rats showed detectable levels of luciferase expression at 14 and 21 days postinjection. Histochemical staining for beta-Gal demonstrated that expression of the recombinant genes was localized in smooth muscle cells of the muscularis mucosae and the muscular layer and mesenchymal cells in the lamina propria. Our results indicate that gene transfer into the gastrointestinal tract can be achieved by simple needle insertion of naked plasmid DNA into the submucosa.
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PMID:In vivo gene transfer and expression in rat stomach by submucosal injection of plasmid DNA. 884 83

To study the regulation of expression of the metallothionein gene in normal liver cells, we transfected chick embryo liver cells in primary cultures with constructs containing luciferase or chloramphenicol acetyl transferase (as reporter genes) under the control of differing lengths of the 5'-promoter region of the chick metallothionein gene (containing 30, 122, 190, or 623 base pairs upstream of the transcriptional start site). We controlled for efficiency of transfection by co-transfections with a plasmid containing a bacterial beta-galactosidase gene under the control of the SV 40 promoter and enhancer. Treatment of the transfected cells with transition metallic ions (cadmium, cobalt, and zinc) or sodium arsenite produced increases in activities of luciferase or chloramphenicol acetyl transferase, relative to beta-galactosidase, and this activity mapped to the first 122 base pairs of the promoter. Although heme has recently been reported to induce the endogenous metallothionein gene in chick embryo liver cells, 10-50 microM heme did not increase reporter gene activities in transfected cells. Nevertheless, the heme-dependent induction of endogenous heme oxygenase-1 in these cells was normal. We conclude that the heme-dependent induction of the liver metallothionein gene depends upon DNA region(s) outside the regulatory region of the chick metallothionein gene studied here and that elements within the first 122 base pairs of the metallothionein promoter are sufficient to confer responsiveness to transition metals or sodium arsenite.
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PMID:Regulation of metallothionein gene expression. Studies in transfected primary cultures of chick embryo liver cells. 887 98

A unique combined luminescence assay for firefly (Photinus pyralis) luciferase and beta-galactosidase (beta-gal) reporter gene products is described. Luciferase and beta-gal activities are determined with the same aliquot of cell lysate prepared from cells contransfected with both reporter genes, thereby reducing manual labor and increasing experimental accuracy. With the Dual-Light assay system, luciferase activity is measured first with an enhanced luciferase assay, followed by quantitation of beta-gal with Galacton-Plus chemiluminescent substrate and Sapphire-II enhancer. Highly sensitive detection of luciferase (2 fg) and beta-gal (8 fg) is achieved with a dynamic range over seven orders of magnitude of enzyme concentration. Comparative analysis of both independent and combined (Dual-Light) detection methods for cells contransfected with luciferase and beta-gal reporter genes is also described.
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PMID:Dual luminescence-based reporter gene assay for luciferase and beta-galactosidase. 887 94


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