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Query: UMLS:C1261473 (
sarcoma
)
25,952
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The ability of hepatitis B virus (HBV) to stimulate the expression of a cellular gene was investigated by using a transient-expression system. A plasmid in which the expression of the bacterial chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (cat) gene had been placed under the control of the DNA sequences that regulate the expression of the human beta-interferon gene was constructed. In Vero cells, cotransfection of the 2.7-kilobase BglII DNA fragment of HBV together with the test plasmid containing the cat gene resulted in stimulation of the expression of the cat gene. This HBV DNA fragment was specific in its trans-activation; no significant stimulation of CAT activity was observed in constructs when the promoter and enhancer elements were derived from the murine
sarcoma
viral long terminal repeat,
Rous sarcoma
virus, BK virus, or simian virus 40. Results of subcloning of the HBV DNA fragment indicate that the trans-activating function resides in a 944-base-pair EcoRV-BglII DNA fragment of the HBV genome that contains the X structural gene and its promoter element. Removal of the promoter from the X structural gene resulted in loss of the trans-activating function. A frameshift mutation within the X gene region also eliminated the trans-activating activity. These results suggest that the X antigen could play a role in HBV infections by activating the expression of cellular genes.
...
PMID:Transcriptional trans-activating function of hepatitis B virus. 282 53
The cellular mutant B812 isolated from a Fisher rat cell line shows temperature sensitivity of focus formation induced by various retroviruses such as recombinant murine retrovirus containing the middle T gene of polyomavirus (PyMLV), Kirsten murine
sarcoma
virus, Moloney murine
sarcoma
virus, and recombinant murine retrovirus containing the src gene of
Rous sarcoma
virus. B812 cells, however, show normal ability to proliferate and synthesize protein at the nonpermissive temperature, suggesting that their mutation is in a gene specifically concerned with the process of transformation by retroviruses. In this work, experiments with hybrids of mutant and wild-type cells showed that the temperature-dependent defect of this mutant was complemented by wild-type cells. To determine the step of transformation that is restricted at the nonpermissive temperature in B812, we examined the expressions of the oncogene (middle T antigen) in no. 7 (wild-type cells) and B812 cultures infected with PyMLV (the chimeric retrovirus containing the middle T gene of polyomavirus) at the permissive and nonpermissive temperatures. Middle T-associated protein kinase activity, the expression of middle T antigen, and PyMLV-specific mRNA were reduced at the nonpermissive temperature in B812 cultures infected with PyMLV. However, integration of PyMLV into the chromosomal DNA of the mutant was not affected at the nonpermissive temperature. These results suggest that B812 cells have a mutation affecting the expression of viral mRNAs from integrated proviral DNA at the nonpermissive temperature.
...
PMID:Temperature-sensitive cellular mutant for expression of mRNA from murine retrovirus. 282 38
A trans-acting factor, p40, of human T-cell leukemia virus type I profoundly potentiated the function of the enhancer from simian virus 40 but not polyomavirus and
Rous sarcoma
and murine
sarcoma
viruses. This trans-activation was seen in a limited repertoire of cells, in contrast to trans-activation of the human T-cell leukemia virus type I enhancer by p40.
...
PMID:trans-activation of the simian virus 40 enhancer by a pX product of human T-cell leukemia virus type I. 282 22
Products of phosphatidylinositol (PI) turnover have recently been implicated as regulators of cell growth and differentiation. Transformation of cells in culture by infection with certain viruses (
Rous sarcoma
virus, Kirsten
sarcoma
virus, and polyoma virus) or by transfection with the oncogenes carried by these viruses affect the steady-state level of intermediates in the PI turnover pathway. In addition, immunoprecipitates of the transforming gene products of
Rous sarcoma
virus and polyoma virus contain activities of certain enzymes in the PI turnover pathway. We have previously reported that polyoma middle T immunoprecipitates can catalyze phosphorylation of PI to phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate (PIP). This activity is not intrinsic to middle T or pp60c-src but is due to a cellular enzyme that specifically associates with the middle T/pp60c-src complex. The PI kinase is found in immunoprecipitates of the middle t protein from polyoma viruses that are capable of cell transformation but does not associate with mutants of middle t defective in transformation, suggesting that this association may be important for transformation. Two PI kinases from fibroblasts (type I and type II) that are separable by anion exchange chromatography have been partially purified and characterized. These enzymes differ in their Km for ATP as well as their Ki for adenosine and ADP. Only the type I PI kinase specifically associates with the transformation-competent mutants of middle T.
...
PMID:Phosphatidylinositol kinases and cell transformation. 282 83
It is of great interest in tumor immunology to know whether oncogene products could be used not only as tumor markers for cancer diagnosis, but also as immunogens for cancer therapy. BALB/c mice immunized with syngeneic fibroblasts, Escherichia coli cells producing p60v-src, or the purified p60v-src protein extracted from the E. coli producer cells showed transplantation resistance to a
Rous sarcoma
virus-induced tumor but not a Kirsten
sarcoma
virus-induced tumor. In contrast, mice immunized with cells not producing p60v-src or their derived proteins or with chicken ovalbumin did not show any significant resistance. These findings suggest that p60v-src can act as a specific transplantation rejection antigen in mice.
...
PMID:Transplantation resistance to a Rous sarcoma virus-induced tumor in mice immunized with v-src protein. 284 May 16
We compared proliferation and survival of various syngeneic transformed cell lines under conditions of depletion of 15 amino acids in Dulbecco-Eagle's medium. We used a normal fibroblast line 3Y1 and 22 transformed sublines of 3Y1 which had been induced by one of seven transforming agents--simian virus 40, mouse polyomavirus, adenovirus type 12, E1A gene of adenovirus type 12, cDNA of Harvey murine
sarcoma
virus,
Rous sarcoma
virus, or N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine. Unlike other untransformed cells examined (mouse BALB/c-3T3 line, mouse NIH-3T3 line, and primary Fischer rat embryo fibroblasts), 3Y1 ceased to proliferate and accumulated in a viable state with a G1-phase DNA content under 14 singular deprivations of amino acid. None of the transformed 3Y1 lines completely arrested in the G1 phase of the cell cycle and each showed different levels of survival, depending on each transforming agent. As for transformed 3Y1 cells induced by a given virus or a given transforming gene, any one of the three sublines shared the same trend with respect to proliferation and survival. Transformed derivatives induced by N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine showed almost the same trend in proliferation, but the patterns of survival were not uniform. Our observations suggest that the unique responses of 3Y1 to amino acid depletion are differently modified by different transforming agents.
...
PMID:Influence of the deprivation of a single amino acid on cellular proliferation and survival in rat 3Y1 fibroblasts and their derivatives transformed by a wide variety of agents. 284 31
Early embryonic avian tissue is resistant to transformation by
Rous sarcoma
virus. To determine the nature of this resistance, we examined the expression and properties of the
Rous sarcoma
virus transforming protein pp60v-src, in infected embryonic chicken limbs in ovo. Lysates from
Rous sarcoma
virus-infected limbs contained the viral structural protein p19gag, as detected by immunoblot analysis, and showed pp60v-src kinase activity in vitro. Immunoblot analysis of lysates with anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies revealed a number of phosphotyrosine-containing proteins present in lysates of
Rous sarcoma
virus-infected embryos but not in lysates of control, uninfected embryos. Anti-phosphotyrosine immunoreactivity was observed in frozen sections in the same cell types that expressed pp60v-src and p19gag. These studies demonstrate that pp60v-src is co-expressed with viral structural determinants in infected embryonic avian tissue. Furthermore, pp60v-src is active in ovo as a tyrosine-specific phosphotransferase, despite the apparent lack of
sarcoma
induction. The localization pattern of the major src gene substrate p36 (calpactin I) was compared with that of p19gag by double-label immunofluorescence and found to be generally nonoverlapping. These observations are consistent with the concept that the induction of tumors in ovo requires complementation between viral determinants and host factors. These host factors, which may be critical substrates of pp60v-src, are subject to developmental regulation in the avian embryo.
...
PMID:pp60v-src tyrosine kinase is expressed and active in sarcoma-free avian embryos microinjected with Rous sarcoma virus. 284 14
Secondary cultures of chicken embryo fibroblasts were transfected with purified nuclei from lysed cells of a clonal line of temperature-sensitive
Rous sarcoma
virus (tsRSV)-transformed Chinese hamster fibroblasts. After propagation for 3 months an established cell line designated ChR32 was obtained in one chicken cell culture. The cells of this line have been propagated so far for 18 months, whereas normal chicken embryo fibroblasts died after 2 months. The established cells were heteroploid with a diploid modal number of macrochromosomes and two Z chromosomes. No Chinese hamster chromosomes could be identified. Southern blot analysis of DNA from the uncloned ChR32 cells and the clones provided evidence that these established cells were, in fact, clonal in origin and contained full-length RSV proviruses and no defective proviruses. Furthermore, they contained, at the 3' end proviral-cellular junction, Bg/II, HpaI, KpnI, SacI, and XbaI fragments of the same size as the Chinese hamster donor cells, suggesting that the cellular sequence adjacent to the provirus is of Chinese hamster origin. The cells after establishment were able to grow continuously at 37 degrees or 41 degrees C and produce a large amount of ts
sarcoma
virus particles. A corollary finding was that these virus particles were non-leaky for the transforming function at the non-permissive temperature.
...
PMID:Isolation of a line of immortal chicken embryo fibroblasts after transfection with the nuclei of Rous sarcoma virus-transformed Chinese hamster cells. 298 Nov 72
A mouse genomic clone was isolated by cross-hybridization with a DNA fragment which codes for the NH2-propeptide of chick alpha1(III) collagen. The region of cross-hybridization within the mouse clone was localized, its sequence determined, and an exon coding for the NH2-propeptide of mouse alpha1(III) collagen was identified. This DNA fragment hybridizes to an RNA species of approximately 5300 nucleotides, slightly larger than the major alpha2(I) collagen RNA species. The mouse type III collagen probe was used to examine the effect of transformation on alpha1(III) collagen RNA levels in mouse fibroblasts. The levels of type III and type I collagen mRNA levels were compared in control and
sarcoma
virus-transformed murine cell lines, as well as in NIH 3T3 cells transformed by members of the human ras oncogenes. The levels of type III RNA decreased about 10-15-fold in Moloney
sarcoma
virus-transformed cells and in a cell line transformed with a v-mos-containing plasmid, but showed only a 50% decrease in a Kirsten murine
sarcoma
virus-transformed BALB 3T3 cell line, and increased 4-fold in a
Rous sarcoma
virus (RSV)-transformed BALB 3T3 cell line. In contrast, the levels of alpha2(I) collagen mRNA are 8- to 10-fold lower in all these cell lines when compared to untransformed cells. NIH 3T3 cells transformed with two human ras oncogenes showed decreased levels of alpha2(I) and alpha1(III) mRNAs. In contrast to the RSV-transformed mouse cell line, RSV-transformed chick embryo fibroblasts contained much smaller amounts of type III RNA than control chick embryo fibroblasts. We conclude that the levels of alpha1(III) and alpha2(I) collagen mRNA are often but not necessarily coordinately regulated by transformation in mouse cells.
...
PMID:Coordinate regulation of the levels of type III and type I collagen mRNA in most but not all mouse fibroblasts. 298 Dec 17
The relationship between susceptibility to transformation in vitro by different oncogenes and terminal differentiation was analyzed in embryonic quail myogenic cells. Infection with
Rous sarcoma
virus (RSV), Fujinami
sarcoma
virus (FSV), avian erythroblastosis virus (AEV), and the avian myelocytomatosis virus MC29 led to rapid and massive transformation. Transformed cells had distinctive morphological alterations, increased proliferation rates, and the ability to grow in agar suspension. Furthermore, homogeneously transformed cultures failed to fuse into multinucleated myotubes and to express muscle-specific genes. However, cloned populations of RSV-, FSV-, and AEV-transformed myogenic cells could, under appropriate culture conditions, partially differentiate into atypical "revertant" myotubes. In contrast, competence for terminal differentiation was completely and irreversibly suppressed on transformation by MC29. The specificity of action of a given oncogenic sequence on the inhibition of differentiation was further studied by using conditional and nonconditional transformation mutants. Myogenic cells infected with temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants of RSV and FSV exhibited a fully reversible block of differentiation after shift to restrictive temperature, while cells infected with ts34 AEV were not temperature sensitive for differentiation. Cultures infected with the partially transformation-defective mutant of MC29 td10H were morphologically transformed and acquired anchorage independence for proliferation but maintained a residual competence for terminal differentiation.
...
PMID:Distinctive effects of the viral oncogenes myc, erb, fps, and src on the differentiation program of quail myogenic cells. 298 56
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