Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P00492 (hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase)
2,385 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The pattern of segregation of hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT, E.C. 2.4.2.8) was determined in synchronized Chinese hamster-chick red blood cell hybrids. Three hybrid lines were synchronized at the G1-S boundary. Bromodeoxyuridine pulses were subsequently applied throughout the S phase, and the frequency of the segregant clones was determined. It was found that the segregation of the chicken-specific HPRT phenotype associated with the loss of a chromosome was potentiated by bromodeoxyuridine administered during the first hour following release of the block.
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PMID:Pattern of segregation of chicken HPRT phenotype in Chinese hamster-chick red blood cell hybrids. 47 10

DNA-mediated gene transformation of mouse Ltk-aprt-hprt-cells was used to obtain stable, doubly selected transformants simultaneously expressing herpes virus thymidine kinase (TK) and mammalian adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (APRT). Cotransformants occurred at a frequency of 5 X 10(-6), a similar frequency for the transfer of the aprt marker has been previously observed. Isozyme and Southern blot analysis show that the TK and APRT expressed in these transformants resulted from gene transfer. For one stable cotransformant, [3H]thymidine [( 3H]TdR) selection against TK activity resulted in the loss of APRT activity as well, suggesting that these genes had become genetically linked together. Similarly selection against APRT expression resulted in the loss of a subset of the transferred herpes simplex virus tk genes. 5-Bromodeoxyuridine (BUdR) selected TK- variants differed from [3H]TdR selected TK- variants, in that they retained tk genes. However, BUdR-selected variants expressed full levels of APRT. Therefore, even though the transferred tk and aprt genes had become genetically linked together, they were, in this case, independently expressed since these cells were phenotypically TK- and APRT+.
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PMID:Genetic linkage but independent expression of functional HSV-1 tk and mammalian aprt genes after cotransfer to L cells. 298 26

It has only recently been possible to demonstrate the expected mutagenic effect of 5-bromodeoxyuridine (BUdR) in heteroploid hamster cells in culture. We have now extended this observation to diploid human fibroblasts utilizing techniques adapted from the work of Albertini and DeMars on X-ray mutagenesis at the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT) locus in these cells. In four separate experiments, fibroblasts from a female donor were exposed to 500 micrograms/ml ethylmethane sulfonate (EMS) or 3 micrograms/ml BUdR yielding survivals of 9% and 5%, respectively. After a 6-day expression period, survivors were plated in selection medium containing 0.3 micrograms/ml 8-azaguanine (8-AG). After 3-5 weeks, azaguanine-resistant colonies were isolated for characterization or stained for counting. The average spontaneous mutation rate/cell/generation was 0.6.10(-6). The average induced mutation rates for EMS and BUdR were 7.8.10(-6) and 6.3.10(-6)/cell/generation, respectively. Similar results were obtained in two experiments with an additional fibroblast line. Mutant colonies isolated following BUdR treatment demonstrated from 1.4 to 61.5% of the HGPRT activity of the parental line and showed at least 8% Barr bodies, excluding the possibility of contamination by Lesch-Nyhan cells. This demonstration of a BUdR effect comparable to that of an alkylating agent or X-irradiation opens the study of mutation due to base-analog substitution in diploid human cells.
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PMID:Mutagenic effect of BUdR in diploid human fibroblasts. 453 17