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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The endogenous chicken vitellogenin II (VTGII) gene is transcribed exclusively in hepatocytes in response to estrogen. We previously identified two estrogen response elements (EREs) upstream of this gene. We now present an analysis of the VTGII promoter activated by these EREs in response to estrogen. Chimeric VTGII-
CAT
genes were cotransfected into LMH chicken hepatoma cells along with an estrogen receptor expression vector, and transient
CAT
expression was assayed after culturing the cells in the absence or presence of estrogen. An analysis of constructs bearing deletions downstream of the more proximal ERE indicated that promoter elements relevant to transcription in LMH cells extend to between -113 and -96. The relative importance of sequences within the VTGII promoter was examined by using 10 contiguous linker scanner mutations spanning the region from -117 to -24. Although most of these mutations compromised VTGII promoter function, one dramatically increased expression in LMH cells and also rendered the VTGII promoter capable of being activated by cis-linked EREs in fibroblasts cotransfected with an estrogen receptor expression vector. Gel retardation and DNase I footprinting assays revealed four factor-binding sites within this promoter. We demonstrate that three of these sites bind C/EBP, SP1, and USF (or related factors), respectively; the fourth site binds a factor that we denote TF-V beta. The biological relevance of these findings is suggested by the fact that three of these binding sites map to sites previously shown to be occupied in vivo in response to estrogen.
Mol
Cell Biol 1991 May
PMID:Mutational studies reveal a complex set of positive and negative control elements within the chicken vitellogenin II promoter. 201 74
We have used a host cell reactivation system to study the effect of 8-methoxypsoralen (8-MOP) reaction on
CAT
(chloramphenicol acetyltransferase) and NEO (aminoglycoside phosphotransferase) expression in normal human cells, as well as two cell lines with possible DNA repair-processing defects. Plasmid DNA was treated with psoralen plus near-ultraviolet (NUV) irradiation. The reacted plasmids, pSV2cat and pSV2neo, were transfected into Fanconi anemia (FA), xeroderma pigmentosum (XP), and normal human fibroblast cells for transient or stable assay. The cells were assayed for
CAT
activity at various times after transfection or selected for G418 resistance. The extent of adduct formation required to inhibit expression was much less (difference of D37 greater than 2.5) in FA or XP cells compared to normal. We conclude that in FA and XP cells, the reactivation of
CAT
was much less than in normal cells. The possibility of differential DNA uptake and/or degradation in transient assay was ruled out by analysis of plasmid DNA recovered from transfected cells. The data of the two independent assays indicate that FA and XP cells are deficient in cross-linked DNA repair.
Somat Cell
Mol
Genet 1991 May
PMID:Reactivation of psoralen-reacted plasmid DNA in Fanconi anemia, xeroderma pigmentosum, and normal human fibroblast cells. 204 39
The molecular genetics of human endometrial carcinoma have yet to be defined to any significant extent. Cell lines from 11 endometrial carcinomas were examined for alterations in proto-oncogenes that might predictably be present, based on existing data from the better-characterized human carcinomas of the uterine cervix, ovary, and breast. Codons 12, 13, and 61 of the Ha-ras, Ki-ras, and N-ras genes were examined for possible point mutations, and the c-erbB2/neu, c-myc, and epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) genes were examined for amplification or overexpression. Ras mutations were found in seven of 11 (64%) tumors, including three in codon 61 of Ha-ras (CAG----
CAT
) and four in codon 12 of Ki-ras (GGT----GAT in two and GGT----GTT in two). No evidence was found for amplification or overexpression of the c-erbB2 or EGFR genes in any tumor. One tumor contained amplified c-myc sequences and exhibited relative overexpression of c-myc. These data suggest that the amplification or overexpression of several proto-oncogenes frequently observed in other human gynecologic and breast tumors are not prevalent in endometrial carcinoma and that ras gene mutations are relatively common in this tumor type.
Mol
Carcinog 1991
PMID:Analysis of oncogene alterations in human endometrial carcinoma: prevalence of ras mutations. 206 24
Mutations in the androgen receptor (AR) are thought to cause complete androgen insensitivity (CAIS) in 46,XY human subjects who have a female phenotype despite normal adult male concentrations of plasma testosterone. Assays of AR binding in cultured skin fibroblasts from subjects with CAIS show either an apparent absence of AR (AR-) or normal levels of AR (AR+) binding. In several subjects with CAIS, AR-, no gross AR mutation was detected by Southern blot analyses of genomic DNA and normal sized 10 kilobase mRNA was present on Northern blots of poly(A+) RNA from cultured genital skin fibroblasts. We have used the polymerase chain reaction to amplify individual exons within the human AR gene of subjects with CAIS and have identified point mutations in three subjects. In one AR- subject (R774C), amino acid 774 was changed from arginine (CGC) to cysteine (TGC), in another AR- subject (R831Q), arginine (CGA) was changed to glutamine (CAA) at position 831, and in an AR+ subject (V866M) a methionine (ATG) was substituted for valine (GTG) at position 866. Transfection of wild type and mutant AR cDNA clones into COS cells results in detection of AR protein by immunoblotting. AR ligand binding activity is absent in cells transfected with AR mutants R774C and R831Q, but present with AR mutant V866M. Androgen binding in cells transfected with AR mutant V866M has a 6-fold lower apparent binding affinity than that of wild-type AR. Transcriptional activation of the MMTV-
CAT
reporter gene was androgen dependent and specific and nearly maximal at physiological concentrations (10(-10) M) of androgen when wild-type AR was transfected into cells, whereas neither AR mutants R774C nor R831Q were able to stimulate
CAT
activity even at 10(-8) M androgen. AR mutant V866M was able to stimulate
CAT
activity but the androgen dose dependency was shifted toward pharmacological concentrations of steroid that exceed in vivo levels. The molecular basis of CAIS in humans exhibits genetic heterogeneity. Our study shows that some cases of CAIS are explained by an inability to form a functional AR-steroid complex and hence, the AR is unable to activate transcription of genes essential for male sex differentiation during fetal development.
Mol
Endocrinol 1990 Dec
PMID:Functional characterization of naturally occurring mutant androgen receptors from subjects with complete androgen insensitivity. 208 79
Expression of a chimeric potato Inhibitor II-
CAT
gene in transgenic tobacco plants was enhanced 50-fold when leaf tissue was floated on solutions containing 1% sucrose. The expression of the chimeric gene was also enhanced when leaf sections were floated on solutions of glucose, fructose, and maltose, but not when floated on solutions of mannitol. The increased expression due to sucrose was found to be correlated with an increase in
CAT
mRNA. Thus, the carbohydrates or their metabolic products may control Inhibitor II gene expression by regulating transcription. Levels of potato Inhibitor II proteins in leaf sections from young potato plants floated on 3% sucrose solutions increased 3-fold compared to leaf sections floated on water, supporting the possibility that sucrose may have a role in regulating or enhancing the expression of wound-inducible proteinase inhibitor genes in potato tissues. It is suggested that the Inhibitor II gene and perhaps other genes regulated by sucrose may contain a specific 'sucrose enhancer' that strongly increases transcription of genes already active at low levels.
Plant
Mol
Biol 1990 Apr
PMID:Wound-inducible potato inhibitor II genes: enhancement of expression by sucrose. 210 32
Sporamin, the tuberous root storage protein of the sweet potato, accounts for about 60 to 80% of the total soluble protein of this organ. The amount of sporamin present in other organs is very low, or even not detectable, in the normal field-grown plants. However, the stem of sweet potato plantlets grown axenically on agar medium containing sucrose was found to accumulate large amounts of sporamin. Two-dimensional gel electrophoretic profiles of sporamin precursors synthesized in vitro by poly(A)+ RNA are indistinguishable between tuberous roots of the field-grown plants and stems of the axenically cultured plants, suggesting that an essentially identical set of the members of sporamin multigene family are expressed in these two organs under different growth conditions. Transgenic tobacco plants having a
CAT
(chloramphenicol acetyltransferase) fusion gene with the 5' upstream region of a sporamin A gene, gSPO-A1, show preferential expression of
CAT
activity in stems when the plants are maintained in axenic culture on sucrose medium as is the case for sporamin in sweet potato. Deletion analysis revealed that the DNA sequence of gSPO-A1 between -94 and -305, relative to the transcription start site, is important for its expression in tobacco. This region contains two of the previously postulated putative regulatory elements conserved between sporamin A and B genes.
Plant
Mol
Biol 1990 Apr
PMID:High-level expression of tuberous root storage protein genes of sweet potato in stems of plantlets grown in vitro on sucrose medium. 210 38
In order to scan the 5' flanking region of the chalcone synthase (chs A) gene for regulatory sequences involved in directing flower-specific and UV-inducible expression, a chimaeric gene was constructed containing the chs A promoter of Petunia hybrida (V30), the chloramphenicol acetyl transferase (cat) structural sequence as a reporter gene and the chs A terminator region of Petunia hybrida (V30). This chimaeric gene and 5' end deletions thereof were introduced into Petunia plants with the help of Ti plasmid-derived plant vectors and
CAT
activity was measured. A 220 bp chs A promoter fragment contains cis-acting elements conferring flower-specific and UV-inducible expression. A promoter fragment from -67 to +1, although at a low level, was still able to direct flower-specific expression but could not drive UV-inducible expression in transgenic Petunia seedlings. Molecular analysis of binding of flower nuclear proteins to chs A promoter fragments by gel retardation assays showed strong specific binding to the sequences from -142 to +81. Promoter sequence comparison of chs genes from other plant species, combined with the deletion analysis and gel retardation assays, strongly suggests the involvement of the TACPyAT repeats (-59 and -52) in the regulation of organ-specificity of the chs A gene in Petunia hybrida. We also describe an in vitro organ-specific transient expression system, in which flower or purple callus protoplasts are used, that enables us to pre-screen organ-specific expression of a chimaeric reporter gene.
Plant
Mol
Biol 1990 Jul
PMID:Promoter analysis of the chalcone synthase (chsA) gene of Petunia hybrida: a 67 bp promoter region directs flower-specific expression. 210 46
Expression of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I and class II antigens and the class II-associated invariant chain (Ii) is strongly increased by treatment of cells with tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) and gamma interferon. We investigated elevation of expression of the invariant chain gene by TNF-alpha. Rat fibroblast cells transfected with the mouse Ii gene containing 802 base pairs of 5' sequences could be stimulated for Ii expression by treatment with TNF-alpha. Analysis of 5'-deleted Ii gene promoter-
CAT
constructs provided evidence for the presence of a TNF-alpha response box (TRB). Cloning of TRB in front of a non-TNF-alpha-responsive promoter could transfer the TNF-alpha stimulatory effect. We demonstrate binding of a TNF-alpha-induced factor to a kappa B-like motif within TRB. Mutations introduced into the kappa B element of the Ii promoter-
CAT
plasmid abolished the TNF-alpha-mediated stimulatory effect. Comparison of the TNF-alpha-induced factor and lipopolysaccharide-induced NF-kappa B in gel mobility shift assays upon partial protease digestion suggests similar DNA-binding protein cores. Further support for the NF-kappa B-like nature of the TNF-alpha-induced factor was obtained in methylation interference assays. The TNF-alpha-induced nuclear factor comprises DNA contact sites that are identical to those described for NF-kappa B. This TNF-alpha-induced factor also interacts with kappa B-like sequences of the MHC Kb, Ek alpha, and beta 2-microglobulin promoter, suggesting a common TNF-alpha-mediated regulatory signal for expression of MHC antigens and Ii.
Mol
Cell Biol 1990 Aug
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor alpha regulates expression of the major histocompatibility complex class II-associated invariant chain by binding of an NF-kappa B-like factor to a promoter element. 211 19
We have delineated a positive regulatory element in the interleukin-2 receptor alpha-chain gene (IL-2R alpha) between positions -299 and -243 that can potently activate a heterologous (herpesvirus thymidine kinase [tk]) promoter in phorbol myristate acetate (PMA)-induced Jurkat T cells and is functional when cloned in either orientation. This enhancerlike element contains a site (-268/-257) that can bind NF-kappa B; however, unlike the immunoglobulin kappa gene kappa B enhancer element, the IL-2R alpha kappa B-like site alone can only weakly activate a heterologous promoter. Adjacent 5' and 3' sequences also weakly activate the tk-
CAT
vector, but constructs combining the IL-2R alpha kappa B-like site plus adjacent 5' and 3' sequences potently activate gene expression. This combination of regions is essential for potent PMA-induced transcription from the tk promoter. Experiments using constructs in which IL-2R alpha upstream sequences are sequentially deleted suggested that there is a region 5' of position -299 which can suppress IL-2R alpha promoter and/or enhancer activity. Thus, it is possible that both positive and negative elements may be important in the regulation of IL-2R alpha gene transcription.
Mol
Cell Biol 1990 Feb
PMID:Delineation of an enhancerlike positive regulatory element in the interleukin-2 receptor alpha-chain gene. 215 27
An iso-1-cytochrome c-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase fusion protein (iso-1/
CAT
) was expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and used to delineate two stages in the cytochrome c import pathway in vivo (S. H. Nye and R. C. Scarpulla,
Mol
. Cell. Biol. 10:5753-5762, 1990 [this issue]). Fusion proteins with the
CAT
reporter domain in its native conformation were arrested at the initial stage of mitochondrial membrane recognition and insertion. In contrast, those with a deletional disruption of the
CAT
moiety were relieved of this block and allowed to translocate to the intermembrane space, where they functioned in respiratory electron transfer. In the present study, iso-1/
CAT
was used to map structural determinants in apoiso-1-cytochrome c involved in the initial step of targeting to the mitochondrial membrane. Carboxy-terminal deletions revealed that one of these determinants consisted of the amino-terminal 68 residues. Deletion mutations either within or at the ends of this determinant destroyed mitochondrial targeting activity, suggesting that functionally important information spans the length of this fragment. Disruption of an alpha-helix near the amino terminus by a helix-breaking proline substitution for leucine 14 also eliminated the targeting activity of the 1 to 68 determinant, suggesting a contribution from this structure. A second, functionally independent targeting determinant was found in the carboxy half of the apoprotein between residues 68 and 85. This determinant coincided with a stretch of 11 residues that are invariant in nearly 100 eucaryotic cytochromes c. Therefore, in lieu of an amino-terminal presequence, apocytochrome c has redundant structural information located in both the amino and carboxy halves of the molecule that can function independently to specify mitochondrial targeting and membrane insertion in vivo.
Mol
Cell Biol 1990 Nov
PMID:Mitochondrial targeting of yeast apoiso-1-cytochrome c is mediated through functionally independent structural domains. 217 85
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