BMP9 Can Induce Schwann Cells Expressing Simian Virus 40 T Antigen to Differentiate into Fat and Bone In Vivo and In Vitro

2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 108-116
Author(s):  
Rui-Fang Li ◽  
Guo-Xin Nan ◽  
Dan Wang ◽  
Chang Gao ◽  
Juan Yang ◽  
...  
1981 ◽  
Vol 1 (10) ◽  
pp. 919-931
Author(s):  
C L Cepko ◽  
U Hansen ◽  
H Handa ◽  
P A Sharp

Ribonucleic acids (RNAs) transcribed in vitro by using the whole-cell extract system of Manley et al. (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 77:3855-3859, 1980) were tested for their efficiency and fidelity in directing protein synthesis in reticulocyte lysates. Simian virus 40 deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), cleaved by various restriction endonucleases, was used as the template. Successful translation of the small tumor antigen t, as well as the capsid proteins VP1, VP2, and VP3, was detected by immunoprecipitation analysis. Although no synthesis of large T antigen was detected, use of this technology allows detection of large T synthesis resulting from the correct splicing of as little as 0.2% of the in vitro RNA transcripts, making it ideal for use as an in vitro splicing assay. Transcripts synthesized in vitro were used as messages at least as efficiently as were viral messenger RNA's (mRNA's) synthesized in vivo; and in the case of small t, there was more efficient translation of small t mRNA synthesized in vitro than of small t mRNA synthesized in vivo. The transcripts that served as mRNA's for the various polypeptides were identified by using the following two criteria. (i) The sensitivity of synthesis of a given protein to digestion of the template DNA with restriction enzymes allowed the localization of the promoter and coding regions. (ii) Translation of size-fractionated RNA allowed confirmation of the transcript-mRNA assignments. With these techniques we found that VP2, VP3 and, in some cases, VP1 synthesis resulted from the initiation of translation at internal AUG codons. In fact, families of polypeptides were produced by initiation of translation at AUG codons within sequences coding for VP1 and T, presumably as a result of transcription initiation events that generated 5' ends immediately upstream from these AUGs. Application of this technology for the identification of coding regions within cloned DNA fragments is discussed.


1988 ◽  
Vol 8 (9) ◽  
pp. 3582-3590 ◽  
Author(s):  
X Y Fu ◽  
J D Colgan ◽  
J L Manley

We have determined the effects of a number of mutations in the small-t antigen mRNA intron on the alternative splicing pattern of the simian virus 40 early transcript. Expansion of the distance separating the small-t pre-mRNA lariat branch point and the shared large T-small t 3' splice site from 18 to 29 nucleotides (nt) resulted in a relative enhancement of small-t splicing in vivo. This finding, coupled with the observation that large-T pre-RNA splicing in vitro was not affected by this expansion, suggests that small-t splicing is specifically constrained by a short branch point-3' splice site distance. Similarly, the distance separating the 5' splice site and branch point (48 nt) was found to be at or near a minimum for small-t splicing, because deletions in this region as small as 2 nt dramatically reduced the ratio of small-t to large-T mRNA that accumulated in transfected cells. Finally, a specific sequence within the small-t intron, encompassing the upstream branch sites used in large-T splicing, was found to be an important element in the cell-specific pattern of early alternative splicing. Substitutions within this region reduced the ratio of small-t to large-T mRNA produced in HeLa cells but had only minor effects in human 293 cells.


1987 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
H Ariga ◽  
T Itani ◽  
S M Iguchi-Ariga

We have already reported that the cloned mouse DNA fragment (pMU65) could replicate in a simian virus 40 T antigen-dependent system in vivo and in vitro (H. Ariga, Z. Tsuchihashi, M. Naruto, and M. Yamada, Mol. Cell. Biol. 5:563-568, 1985). The plasmid p65-tk, containing the thymidine kinase (tk) gene of herpes simplex virus and the BglII-EcoRI region of pMU65 homologous to the simian virus 40 origin of DNA replication, was constructed. The p65-tk persisted episomally in tk+ transformants after the transfection of p65-tk into mouse FM3Atk- cells. The copy numbers of p65-tk in FM3Atk+ cells were 100 to 200 copies per cell. Furthermore, the p65-tk replicated semiconservatively, and the initiation of DNA replication started from the mouse DNA sequences when the replicating activity of p65-tk was tested in the in vitro DNA replication system developed from the FM3A cells. These results show that a 2.5-kilobase fragment of mouse DNA contains the autonomously replicating sequences.


1997 ◽  
Vol 17 (8) ◽  
pp. 4877-4882 ◽  
Author(s):  
V V Ogryzko ◽  
P Wong ◽  
B H Howard

The p21(WAF1/CIP1/sdi1) gene product (WAF1) inhibits DNA replication in vitro (J. Chen, P. Jackson, M. Kirschner, and A. Dutta, Nature 374:386-388, 1995; S. Waga, G. Hannon, D. Beach, and B. Stillman, Nature 369:574-578, 1994), but in vivo studies on the antiproliferative activity of WAF1 have not resolved G1-phase arrest from potential inhibition of S-phase progression. Here, we demonstrate that elevated WAF1 expression can retard replicative DNA synthesis in vivo. The WAF1-mediated inhibitory effect could be antagonized by cyclin A, cyclin E, or the simian virus 40 small-t antigen with no decrease in the levels of WAF1 protein in transfected cells. Proliferating-cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) overexpression was neither necessary nor sufficient to antagonize WAF1 action. Expression of the N-terminal domain of WAF1, responsible for cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) interaction, had the same effect as full-length WAF1, while the PCNA binding C terminus exhibited modest activity. We conclude that S-phase progression in mammalian cells is dependent on continuing cyclin and CDK activity and that WAF1 affects S phase primarily through cyclin- and CDK-dependent pathways.


1988 ◽  
Vol 8 (9) ◽  
pp. 3740-3747
Author(s):  
H W Stürzbecher ◽  
C Addison ◽  
J R Jenkins

Several mutant, but not wild-type, p53 proteins form complexes with hsp72/73 heat shock-related proteins in simian virus 40-transformed monkey COS cells. We carried out a detailed biochemical and structural mapping analysis of p53 and report here that p53-hsp72/73 complex formation showed considerable structural specificity. Such complexes were remarkably stable, but unlike analogous complexes formed between p53 and simian virus 40 T antigen, they did not form in in vitro association assays. p53-hsp72/73 complex formation in vivo appears to be dependent on aspects of mutant p53 protein conformation. However, absence of the conformation-sensitive epitope recognized by monoclonal antibody PAb 246 was not reliably diagnostic of such complexes, nor was p53-hsp72173 binding reliably diagnostic of oncogenic activation.


1994 ◽  
Vol 14 (9) ◽  
pp. 6244-6252
Author(s):  
J A Frost ◽  
A S Alberts ◽  
E Sontag ◽  
K Guan ◽  
M C Mumby ◽  
...  

The simian virus 40 small tumor antigen (small t) specifically interacts with protein phosphatase type 2A (PP2A) in vivo and alters its catalytic activity in vitro. Among the substrates for PP2A in vitro are the activated forms of MEK and ERK kinases. Dephosphorylation of the activating phosphorylation sites on MEK and ERKs by PP2A in vitro results in a decrease in their respective kinase activities. Recently, it has been shown that overexpression of small t in CV-1 cells results in an inhibition of PP2A activity toward MEK and ERK2 and a constitutive upregulation of MEK and ERK2 activity. Previously, we have observed that overexpression of either ERK1, MEK1, or a constitutively active truncated form of c-Raf-1 (BXB) is insufficient to activate AP-1 in REF52 fibroblasts. We therefore examined whether overexpression of small t either alone or in conjunction with ERK1, MEK1, or BXB could activate AP-1. We found that coexpression of small t and either ERK1, MEK1, or BXB resulted in an increase in AP-1 activity, whereas expression of either small t or any of the kinases alone did not have any effect. Similarly, coexpression of small t and ERK1 activated serum response element-regulated promoters. Coexpression of kinase-deficient mutants of ERK1 and ERK2 inhibited the activation of AP-1 caused by expression of small t and either MEK1 or BXB. Coexpression of an interfering MEK, which inhibited AP-1 activation by small t and BXB, did not inhibit the activation of AP-1 caused by small t and ERK1. In contrast to REF52 cells, we observed that overexpression of either small or ERK1 alone in CV-1 cells was sufficient to stimulate AP-1 activity and that this stimulation was not enhanced by expression of small t and ERK1 together. These results show that the effects of small t on immediate-early gene expression depend on the cell type examined and suggest that the mitogen-activated protein kinase activation pathway is distinctly regulated in different cell types.


1985 ◽  
Vol 5 (8) ◽  
pp. 2051-2060
Author(s):  
B W Stillman ◽  
Y Gluzman

Soluble extracts prepared from the nucleus and cytoplasm of human 293 cells are capable of efficient replication and supercoiling of added DNA templates that contain the origin of simian virus 40 replication. Extracts prepared from human HeLa cells are less active than similarly prepared extracts from 293 cells for initiation and elongation of nascent DNA strands. DNA synthesis is dependent on addition of purified simian virus 40 tumor (T) antigen, which is isolated by immunoaffinity chromatography of extracts from cells infected with an adenovirus modified to produce large quantities of this protein. In the presence of T antigen and the cytoplasmic extract, replication initiates at the origin and continues bidirectionally. Initiation is completely dependent on functional origin sequences; a plasmid DNA containing an origin mutation known to affect DNA replication in vivo fails to replicate in vitro. Multiple rounds of DNA synthesis occur, as shown by the appearance of heavy-heavy, bromodeoxyuridine-labeled DNA products. The products of this reaction are resolved, but are relaxed, covalently closed DNA circles. Addition of a nuclear extract during DNA synthesis promotes the negative supercoiling of the replicated DNA molecules.


1988 ◽  
Vol 8 (9) ◽  
pp. 3582-3590
Author(s):  
X Y Fu ◽  
J D Colgan ◽  
J L Manley

We have determined the effects of a number of mutations in the small-t antigen mRNA intron on the alternative splicing pattern of the simian virus 40 early transcript. Expansion of the distance separating the small-t pre-mRNA lariat branch point and the shared large T-small t 3' splice site from 18 to 29 nucleotides (nt) resulted in a relative enhancement of small-t splicing in vivo. This finding, coupled with the observation that large-T pre-RNA splicing in vitro was not affected by this expansion, suggests that small-t splicing is specifically constrained by a short branch point-3' splice site distance. Similarly, the distance separating the 5' splice site and branch point (48 nt) was found to be at or near a minimum for small-t splicing, because deletions in this region as small as 2 nt dramatically reduced the ratio of small-t to large-T mRNA that accumulated in transfected cells. Finally, a specific sequence within the small-t intron, encompassing the upstream branch sites used in large-T splicing, was found to be an important element in the cell-specific pattern of early alternative splicing. Substitutions within this region reduced the ratio of small-t to large-T mRNA produced in HeLa cells but had only minor effects in human 293 cells.


1986 ◽  
Vol 6 (12) ◽  
pp. 4570-4577
Author(s):  
R Gerard ◽  
Y Gluzman

One boundary of the minimal origin of replication of simian virus 40 DNA lies within the A + T-rich region. Deletion of only a few bases into the adenine-thymine (AT) stretch results in a DNA template which is defective for replication both in vivo and in vitro (B. Stillman, R. D. Gerard, R. A. Guggenheimer, and Y. Gluzman, EMBO J. 4:2933-2939, 1985). In the present study, such deletion mutations have been reconstructed into a simian virus 40 genome containing an intact early promoter-enhancer region. The resulting mutants synthesized wild-type levels of T antigen, but were defective for replication and would not form plaques on CV-1 monkey cells. Replication-competent phenotypic revertants were selected after transfection of large quantities of the replication-defective viral DNAs into CV-1 cells. DNA sequence analysis showed that most of these revertants contained insertions or point mutations which partially regenerate the length of the AT stretch. These genotypic alterations were shown to be responsible for the revertant phenotype by replication analysis in vivo of subcloned revertant origin fragments. In general, our results emphasize the importance of the AT region to simian virus 40 origin function. However, one revertant retained the altered AT region but deleted six nucleotides upstream. Experiments using this mutant indicate that the 21-base-pair repeats identified as part of the early transcriptional promoter may compensate for defects in simian virus 40 DNA replication in vivo caused by mutations in the A + T-rich region when positioned at an appropriate distance from the core origin.


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