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)

Expression vectors have been constructed for a region of the human retinoic acid receptor-alpha (hRAR-alpha) and transferred into F9 embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells. When the vectors are overexpressed in F9 cells, clones can be selected for resistance to retinoic acid-induced differentiation. This effect is obtained even when the hRAR-alpha region is expressed as a beta-galactosidase fusion protein. Using the beta-galactosidase component of the fusion protein as a marker, overexpression of the fusion protein has been correlated with the retinoic acid-resistance effect. The clones resistant to retinoic acid no longer exhibit the normal retinoic acid induction of endo B cytokeratin, laminin B-1, and tissue plasminogen activator mRNAs observed with normal F9 cells. Retinoic acid induction of type IV alpha-1 collagen and Hox-1.3 RNAs is observed with these clones. When transfected with a thyroid receptor DNA-binding sequence (TRE)/thymidine kinase promoter/luciferase construct, the retinoic acid-resistant clones do not yield the same retinoic acid-induced level of luciferase obtained with F9 cells. It is hypothesized that the RAR vectors are interfering with endogenous RAR(s) in a dominant-negative manner to inhibit retinoic acid-induced differentiation of F9 EC cells.
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PMID:Retinoic acid receptor expression vector inhibits differentiation of F9 embryonal carcinoma cells. 255 44

We investigated the role of sequences flanking the transcription initiation site of the delta 1-crystallin gene in transient transfection assays of primary embryonic chicken lens epithelial cells or fibroblasts. Varying lengths of the 5' flanking sequence of the delta 1-crystallin gene (containing some untranslated sequence from exon 1) were fused to the bacterial chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene in the pSVOCAT plasmid. A plasmid carrying the bacterial beta-galactosidase gene driven by the Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) promoter was used as an internal control. Standardized results showed that the sequence located between -120 to -43 exhibited strong promoter activity; however, the promoter activity was markedly reduced (20-fold) when the upstream sequence between -603 and -120 was included in the construct. The delta 1-crystallin promoter displayed little lens preference. This upstream sequence did not reduce the activity of the Simian virus 40 (SV40) early promoter (with or without its enhancer) or the Herpes thymidine kinase promoter in transfection tests, indicating some specificity in its effect. Evidence for a delta 1-crystallin negative trans-acting factor was provided by competition experiments. Our data raise the possibility that expression of the delta 1-crystallin gene involves a negative cis-acting transcription element, a speculation which may deserve further attention in view of the gradual decrease in delta-crystallin synthesis in the developing lens.
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PMID:Evidence for positive and negative regulation in the promoter of the chicken delta 1-crystallin gene. 283 46

We have inserted a modified Escherichia coli lacZ gene, placed under the control of herpes simplex virus alpha 4 or beta 8 regulatory signals, into the HSV-1 genome disrupting the viral thymidine kinase gene. Using beta-galactosidase as an in situ indicator of viral gene expression, we detected expression from these recombinant HSV in dermal and neural tissues of the BALB/c mouse. Our detection of beta-galactosidase expression in neuronal cells indicates that TK-deficient viruses are capable of invading mouse neuronal cells and expressing up to the beta class of gene product.
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PMID:Beta-galactosidase as a marker in the peripheral and neural tissues of the herpes simplex virus-infected mouse. 284 16

The expression of Herpes Simplex Virus 1 (HSV-1) glycoprotein C (gC), a well defined herpesvirus late gene, was studied by linking the promoter-regulatory region of this gene to the coding sequences for the bacterial enzyme, beta-galactosidase (beta-gal). A chimeric gene, containing the beta-gal gene under the control of gC sequences from -1350 to +30 relative to the mRNA start site, was inserted by homologous recombination into the thymidine kinase (TK) locus of the HSV-1 genome. Selection of the TK- recombinant virus by plaque assay was facilitated by addition of a beta-gal indicator to the agarose overlay. Recombinant virus containing the gC promoter-beta-gal chimeric gene faithfully expressed beta-gal as a viral late gene, as shown by the absence of beta-gal expression when viral DNA replication was inhibited with phosphonoacetic acid. In contrast, the inhibition of viral DNA replication had no effect on the expression of beta-gal when the beta-gal gene was under the control of the early HSV-1 TK promoter in a separate recombinant virus. Analysis of recombinant viruses containing 5' to 3' deletions in the gC regulatory region revealed no apparent difference in beta-gal expression as deletions extended from -1350 to -109 base-pairs (bp) before the RNA start site, demonstrating that sequences between -109 and +30 are sufficient for regulated gC expression in the viral genome. Analysis of the mRNA made by these recombinant viruses confirmed the results of the beta-gal assays, and demonstrated that the transcriptional start sites of the gC promoter-beta-gal chimeric genes were the same as the start site of the gC gene.
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PMID:The use of beta-galactosidase as a marker gene to define the regulatory sequences of the herpes simplex virus type 1 glycoprotein C gene in recombinant herpesviruses. 284 20

Analyses of enzymes from various metabolic pathways in pulmonary carcinoid tumors and radiological measurements of their volume increase were compared with those for lung carcinomas of various cell types. The results describe new biochemical features in carcinoid tumors, present the first quantitative evidence for their slow growth rate (i.e., long doubling time) in vivo, and show that measurement of 2 or 3 appropriate enzymes in biopsy samples can guard against instances in which carcinoids and adeno- or oat cell carcinomas are mistaken for one another on histological examination. The uridine kinase to thymidine kinase ratio as well as the beta-galactosidase concentration of carcinoid tumors were 5 times higher than of carcinomas, and their gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase was below that of all 35 adeno- and the 11 squamous cell carcinomas. Thymidine kinase, which bears a quantitative inverse correlation to volume doubling time (irrespective of cell type), had much lower titers in the 9 carcinoids than in the 6 oat cell carcinomas and reflects most clearly their very different (despite common histogenesis) clinical malignancy. Owing to their long doubling time, carcinoid tumors on the average required a much longer period (40.5 years) to attain final volume than did carcinomas (17.8 years). The calculated mean age of the subjects when growth began, -0.5 years (as opposed to 51 years for carcinomas), suggests a prenatal or early childhood inception for pulmonary carcinoid tumors.
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PMID:Pulmonary carcinoid tumors: enzymic discriminants, growth rate, and early age of inception. 287 Jul 99

Plasmids containing the vaccinia virus thymidine kinase gene, its flanking DNA sequences, and the Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase gene were used in conjunction with a thymidine kinase-deficient virus to examine the viral products of recombination. Progeny derived from single-crossover events could be distinguished from those generated by gene conversion or double-crossover events when the beta-galactosidase gene was separated from the thymidine kinase gene by the flanking sequences. Using methotrexate to select for recombinant virus and a chromogenic indicator to detect beta-galactosidase, the generation of viral recombinants was measured over a 48-h period. Recombinant progeny were first observed at 12 h and increased to a maximum of 2.5% at 48 h. Single-crossover products, as determined by beta-galactosidase expression, reached a maximum of 57% of the recombinant population at 24 h and thereafter declined. DNA hybridization analysis was used to examine genomic structures of the progeny of the initial viral plaques, plaques purified three times, and those subject to a 10(4)-fold amplification. These analyses confirmed that single-crossover events within either the 5'- or 3'-homologous flanking sequences generated unstable recombinant structures. These structures were shown to contain a single copy of the intact thymidine kinase gene within the corresponding copy of the duplicated thymidine kinase flanking sequences, separated by the beta-galactosidase gene and plasmid DNA. Significantly, these duplicated structures could undergo further recombination to produce repeats of either the intact or the deleted thymidine kinase sequences. These intermediate structures ultimately degenerated to produce either the parental thymidine kinase-deleted or the wild-type genome. The wild-type genome was also shown to be generated directly by gene conversion or double-crossover events.
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PMID:Delineation of the viral products of recombination in vaccinia virus-infected cells. 333 12

Using plasmids containing the genes for thymidine kinase (tk) and neomycin resistance (neo), we have shown that DNA-mediated genotypic transformation of L and Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells is increased several-fold by the presence of the sterol-binding polyene antibiotic, amphotericin. Transformation into the same host cells, using genomic DNA, was also enhanced by amphotericin. Phenotypic expression of beta-galactosidase activity of a plasmid containing the gene for the enzyme was also markedly elevated when the antibiotic was added at transfection. Other sterol-binding polyene antibiotics also showed activity in these DNA-mediated gene transfer assays.
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PMID:Amphotericin B enhances efficiency of DNA-mediated gene transfer in mammalian cells. 392 Jul 60

We constructed a plasmid coexpression vector that directs the insertion of a foreign gene of interest together with the Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase (beta gal) gene into the thymidine kinase (TK) locus of the vaccinia virus genome. Tissue culture cells that had been infected with vaccinia virus were transfected with a plasmid vector containing a foreign gene. TK- recombinants could be selected by a plaque assay on TK- cells in the presence of 5-bromodeoxyuridine and distinguished from spontaneous TK- mutants by the addition of a beta-gal indicator to the agarose overlay. Plaques that expressed beta-gal stained dark blue within several hours at 37 degrees C. Alternatively, TK- selection could be eliminated, and recombinant plaques could be readily identified solely by their blue color. The reverse procedure, in which the starting virus expresses beta-gal (i.e., forms blue plaques) and the desired recombinant has deleted the entire beta-gal gene (i.e., forms white plaques), is another alternative. Each protocol was tested by constructing vaccinia virus recombinants that express hepatitis B virus surface antigen.
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PMID:Vaccinia virus expression vector: coexpression of beta-galactosidase provides visual screening of recombinant virus plaques. 393 16

Some intestinal enZymes were assayed which were related to: (i) Cellular proliferation, for example, aspartate carbamoyltransferase, thymidine kinase, uridine kinase, and dihydroorotase; (ii) cellular differentiation, for example, lactase, invertase, maltase, alkaline phosphatase, and dipeptidase; and (iii) lysosomes, for example, beta-glucuronidase, acid beta-galactosidase, and acid phosphatase. These enzymatic determinations can be used to distinguish the crypt from the villus during healthy or diseased states.
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PMID:Intestinal enzymes: indicators of proliferation and differentiation in the jejunum. 431 2

A plasmid-borne Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) thymidine kinase (TK) gene (tk) was expressed in Escherichia coli by inserting a 203-bp lacL8/UV5 promoter-operator segment, in frame, 53 bp 5' to the native tk translational start codon. The hybrid gene created by this fusion encodes a polypeptide which has 25 additional amino acids on the amino terminus of the HSV-1 TK protein and phenotypically complements a tdk- mutation of E. coli. This fusion polypeptide has been characterized by maxicell, immunoprecipitation, and native gel techniques, and its activity is inhibited by anti-HSV-1 antibody. In a tk expressor strain containing a F' lacIq (which overproduces the lactose repressor), the isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactoside (IPTG) causes greater than 1000-fold coordinate induction of the plasmid-encoded TK and chromosomal beta-galactosidase activities. Pulse-chase induction demonstrates the fused TK polypeptide to be as stable as beta-galactosidase. HSV-1 tk-specific RNA isolated from this bacterial strain has a short half-life characteristic of bacterial messages.
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PMID:Regulated high-level expression of the Herpes simplex type I thymidine kinase gene in Escherichia coli. 608 61


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