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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The thiopurines 6-thioguanine (6TG) and 6-mercaptopurine (6MP) are cytotoxic to proliferating cells by a mechanism involving incorporation into DNA via the purine salvage pathway, and resistance to these agents can be conferred by lack of the salvage pathway enzyme hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase. However, human and murine hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase-deficient
leukemia
cell lines have been shown to respond to 6TG by growth arrest and differentiation by a mechanism apparently not involving incorporation of 6TG into DNA. If so,
leukemia
cells resistant to 6MP should still respond to 6TG by growth arrest via an undescribed epigenetic mechanism. To test this, polyclonal 6MP-resistant variants were produced from three human
leukemia
cell lines, HL-60, U937, and CCRF-CEM. Treatment of both sensitive and resistant cells with 6TG induced growth arrest. The effect of 6TG in the 6MP-sensitive HL-60 and U937 cells was associated with significant loss of viability and DNA fragmentation. In contrast, the 6TG-treated 6MP-resistant cells exhibited a slower decline in viability and no DNA fragmentation. To identify the mechanism by which 6TG may induce growth arrest,
tRNA
was isolated from 6MP-resistant cells cultured for 48 h with 6TG. 6TG was found to be incorporated into tRNAs normally containing queuine in the anticodon wobble position. These studies may provide a basis for the development of new therapeutic regimens for the treatment of
leukemia
.
...
PMID:6-Thioguanine-induced growth arrest in 6-mercaptopurine-resistant human leukemia cells. 792 70
Liquid chromatography was used to prepare native dimer RNA from Moloney murine
leukemia
retrovirus by gel filtration on a TSK 6000PW column. Three RNA peaks were separated from viral lysate. RNA from the first eluted peak migrated in gel electrophoresis as a native dimer prepared by phenolic extraction and saccharose gradient separation. The last eluted RNA peak likely represents
tRNA
for proline. HPLC preparation was twice as fast and 20 times more productive than the other method, considering the quantity of pure RNA obtained for the same volume of viral lysate. Using several natural RNAs, it was verified that the dispersion coefficient was inversely proportional to RNA size, at least between 3.6 and 16.6 kb. Within the range of laboratory use, peak surface was in a direct ratio to the injected quantity of a given RNA species. Thus size exclusion chromatography could represent a valuable tool for preparation, analysis, and quantitation of large RNAs.
...
PMID:A liquid chromatographic preparation of retroviral RNA. 812 83
N-substituted diphenimides and 6,7-dihydro-5H-dibenz[c,e]azepines demonstrated significant cytotoxic activity against the growth of murine and human cells. These derivatives were active against leukemias, carcinomas and sarcomas. Different derivatives with N-substitutions showed specific activity against the growth of several tumor types. These agents inhibited L1210
leukemia
IMP dehydrogenase and PRPP amido transferase activities; this was reflected in the inhibition of purine and DNA synthesis. Other sites inhibited to a minor degree by these agents included DNA polymerase alpha, r- and
tRNA
polymerases, ribonucleoside reductase, dihydrofolate reductase, pyrimidine synthesis, and nucleoside kinase. d(NTP) pool levels were reduced after 24 h incubation with these derivatives. L1210 DNA strand scission was evident after drug treatment.
...
PMID:The cytotoxicity of N-substituted diphenimides and 6,7-dihydro-5H-dibenz[c,e]azepines. 829 66
The 56 amino acid nucleocapsid protein (NCp10) of Moloney Murine
Leukemia
Virus, contains a CysX2CysX4HisX4Cys zinc finger flanked by basic residues. In vitro NCp10 promotes genomic RNA dimerization, a process most probably linked to genomic RNA packaging, and replication primer
tRNA
(Pro) annealing to the initiation site of reverse transcription. To characterize the amino-acid sequences involved in the various functions of NCp10, we have synthesized by solid phase method the native protein and a series of derived peptides shortened at the N- or C-terminus with or without the zinc finger domain. In the latter case, the two parts of the protein were linked by a Glycine - Glycine spacer. The in vitro studies of these peptides show that nucleic acid annealing activities of NCp10 do not require a zinc finger but are critically dependent on the presence of specific sequences located on each side of the CCHC domain and containing proline and basic residues. Thus, deletion of 11R or 49PRPQT, of the fully active 29 residue peptide 11RQGGERRRSQLDRDGGKKPRGPRGPRPQT53 leads to a complete loss of NCp10 activity. Therefore it is proposed that in NCp10, the zinc finger directs the spatial recognition of the target RNAs by the basic domains surrounding the zinc finger.
...
PMID:Two short basic sequences surrounding the zinc finger of nucleocapsid protein NCp10 of Moloney murine leukemia virus are critical for RNA annealing activity. 845 Nov 85
Nucleocapsid (NC) protein NCp10 of Moloney murine
leukemia
virus is encoded by the 3' domain of gag and contains a zinc finger surrounded by basic amino acids. During virion assembly, NC protein is necessary for core formation and the NC zinc finger is required for the packaging of the genomic RNA dimer. In vitro NCp10 has RNA-binding and -annealing activities critical for virus infectivity, since NCp10 promotes dimerization of viral RNA containing the Psi packaging element and annealing of replication primer
tRNA
(Pro) to the initiation site of reverse transcription (primer-binding site). To investigate the role of the basic amino acids flanking the NCp10 zinc finger, neutral residues were substituted for the basic amino acids and the effects of these mutations in vivo on virus assembly and infectivity and in vitro on the RNA-annealing activity of NCp10 were analyzed. Here we report that the substitution of 1 or 2 neutral amino acids for the basic residues did not impair the production of mature virions but that infectivity was either moderately or strongly attenuated. When more than 2 basic residues were replaced by neutral amino acids, viruses were poorly infectious because of a severe defect in genomic RNA dimer packaging and initiation of reverse transcription. In vitro NCp10-derived peptides with similar mutations were chemically synthesized and were found to be either fully or partially active or completely inactive. These data indicate that the basic residues flanking the zinc finger of NCp10 are required for the production of infectious Moloney murine
leukemia
virus virions.
...
PMID:Basic amino acids flanking the zinc finger of Moloney murine leukemia virus nucleocapsid protein NCp10 are critical for virus infectivity. 847 59
We analyzed viral recombination events that occur during the preleukemic period in AKR mice. We tagged a molecular chimera between the nonleukemogenic virus Akv and the leukemogenic mink cell focus-inducing (MCF) virus MCF 247 with an amber suppressor
tRNA
gene, supF. We injected the supF-tagged chimeric virus that contains all of the genes of MCF 247 except the envelope gene, which in turn is derived from Akv, into newborn AKR mice to evaluate its pathogenic potential. Approximately the same percentage of animals developed
leukemia
with similar latent periods when injected with either the tagged or nontagged virus. DNA from tumors induced in AKR mice by the tagged chimeric virus was analyzed by Southern blotting with the supF gene as a probe. One set of tumors contained the injected supF-tagged virus. Two kinds of supF-tagged proviruses were found in a second set of tumors. One group of supF-tagged viruses had a restriction map consistent with that of the injected virus, while the other group of proviruses had restriction maps that suggested that the proviruses had acquired an MCF virus-like envelope gene by recombination with endogenous viral sequences. These results demonstrate that injected viruses recombine in vivo with endogenous viral sequences. Furthermore, the progression to
leukemia
was accelerated in mice that develop tumors containing proviruses with an MCF virus env gene, emphasizing the importance of the role of the MCF virus env gene product in transformation.
...
PMID:A direct demonstration of recombination between an injected virus and endogenous viral sequences, resulting in the generation of mink cell focus-inducing viruses in AKR mice. 851 Feb 5
We constructed a retroviral vector encoding a mutant
tRNA
(imet) gene followed by a HIV-1 rev-specific antisense sequence in the U3 region of the 3' long terminal repeat (LTR). This Moloney murine
leukemia
virus (MoMLV)-based double-copy retroviral vector was used to transduce human lymphoblastoid T-cell lines (CEM, Jurkat). In some clonal cell lines the expected short transcript initiated either from the 5' or 3' LTR
tRNA
-alpha rev gene was not detectable by Northern blot analyses of transduced, G418-resistant cells with an alpha rev-specific oligonucleotide probe. In other clonal cells, neither the short polymerase III transcript nor the full-length genomic polymerase II transcript (containing the 3' LTR
tRNA
-alpha rev gene) was detectable when compared with the transduced cell pool. Southern blot and DNA-polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analyses specific for the
tRNA
-alpha rev cassette in the 5' or 3' LTR of the retroviral vector suggested that the transfer of the 3' LTR U3 region to the 5' LTR was incorrect in most proviruses. These data were confirmed by DNA sequence analyses of several clonal lines demonstrating deletions and insertions. In summary, our results indicate that this retroviral vector design with direct repeats flanking the polymerase III transcription unit plus the alpha rev insert is prone to genetic rearrangements and consequently not useful for the development of gene therapy protocols.
...
PMID:Genetic instability of a MoMLV-based antisense double-copy retroviral vector designed for HIV-1 gene therapy. 854 53
The secondary structure in mRNA is essential for many processes, but it can present a technical problem in making full-length cDNA with reverse transcriptases. Furthermore, different reverse transcriptases have differing abilities to transcribe through regions with secondary structure, which can alter the products obtained by reverse-transcribing RNA and then PCR-amplifying the product (RT-PCR). We have been interested in studying the posttranscriptional regulation of epidermal growth factor by RT-PCR and have tested the ability of several reverse transcriptases to reverse transcribe the 3'-untranslated region (3'UTR), a region that contains substantial secondary structure. When low levels of either total RNA or poly(A)+ mRNA were used, we found avian myeloblastosis virus reverse transcriptase (AMV-RT) to be the most robust of all the enzymes tested. Furthermore, contrary to reports that AMV-RT is inhibited by
tRNA
--which should make it less effective than Moloney murine
leukemia
virus reverse transcriptase (MMLV-RT) at reverse-transcribing total RNA--adding
tRNA
to poly(A)+ RNA actually increased the amount of specific RT-PCR product obtained with AMV-RT while it decreased the amount of product and enhanced mispriming with MMLV-RT. We found that pre-incubation of the oligo(dT) primer with total RNA at elevated temperature prior to reverse transcription improved the efficiency of both native and modified MMLV-RTs. These findings support the concept that secondary structures in RNA differentially affect the abilities of different reverse transcriptases to detect transcript diversity and raise the possibility that such structures could affect quantitation using RT-PCR with internal mRNA standards.
...
PMID:Secondary structure in the 3' UTR of EGF and the choice of reverse transcriptases affect the detection of message diversity by RT-PCR. 858 21
Transduction of primer binding site-impaired Akv murine
leukemia
virus-based retroviral vectors from the murine packaging cell lines psi-2 and omega E was studied. The efficiency of transduction of the neo marker of all mutated constructs was found to decrease by 5 to 6 orders of magnitude compared with that of the wild-type vector. Thirty-two of 60 transduced proviruses analyzed harbored a primer binding site sequence matching a glutamine
tRNA
primer. Sequence analysis of the regions flanking the glutamine
tRNA
primer binding site revealed a distinct pattern of nucleotide differences from the Akv-based vector, suggesting the involvement of a specific endogenous virus-like sequence in patch repair rescue of the primer binding site mutants. The putative recombination partner RNA was found in virions from psi-2 cells as detected by analysis of glutamine
tRNA
-initiated cDNA and by sequence analysis of regions at or around the glutamine
tRNA
primer binding site. We propose that the forced recombination of primer binding site mutants involves initial priming on endogenous viral sequences and requires template switching during minus-strand synthesis in the region between the neo gene and the mutated primer binding site to allow correct second-strand transfer in reverse transcription. The system thereby selects for a reverse transcriptase-mediated recombination event in the 5' untranslated region. A panel of sequence differences between the recombination partners in this region has allowed mapping of the site of recombination for each transduction event. Interestingly, the majority of the recombination events were clustered within a narrow, 33-nucleotide region though to be involved in genomic RNA dimerization.
...
PMID:A preferred region for recombinational patch repair in the 5' untranslated region of primer binding site-impaired murine leukemia virus vectors. 862 61
The human T-cell
leukemia
virus-encoded tax protein is a potent activator of many viral and cellular genes transcribed by RNA polymerase II. We find that both chromatin and cell extracts derived from human T-cell
leukemia
virus type 1-infected human T lymphocytes support higher levels of 5S rRNA and
tRNA
gene transcription than chromatin or extracts from uninfected T lymphocytes. The viral protein Tax was likely responsible for this higher level of class II gene transcription, as purified Tax was found to stimulate both genes when added to the uninfected cell extract or in reconstituted systems. Both limiting-component transcription assays and DNA binding assays identified the class III gene transcription factor TFIIIB as the principle target of Tax activity. Surprisingly, we find that Tax increases the effective concentration of active TFIIIB molecules. These data suggest that Tax stimulates RNA polymerase III-dependent gene expression by accelerating the rate and/or extent of transcription initiation complex assembly.
...
PMID:Transcriptional activation of RNA polymerase III-dependent genes by the human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 tax protein. 865 53
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