scholarly journals Evidence for transcriptional and post-transcriptional control of the cellular thymidine kinase gene.

1987 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 1156-1163 ◽  
Author(s):  
C J Stewart ◽  
M Ito ◽  
S E Conrad

We have studied the cell cycle-regulated expression of the thymidine kinase (TK) gene in mammalian tissue culture cells. TK mRNA and enzyme levels are low in resting, G0-phase cells, but increase dramatically (10- to 20-fold) during the S phase in both serum-stimulated and simian virus 40-infected cells. To determine whether an increase in the rate of TK gene transcription is responsible for this induction, nuclear run-on transcription assays were performed at various times after serum stimulation or simian virus 40 infection of growth-arrested simian CV1 cells. When assays were performed at 12-h intervals, a small (two- to threefold) but reproducible increase in TK transcription was detected during the S phase. When time points were chosen to span the G1-S interface a larger (six- to sevenfold) increase in transcriptional activity was observed in serum-stimulated cells but not in simian virus 40-infected cells. The large increase in TK mRNA levels and the relatively small increase in transcription rates in growth-stimulated cells suggest that TK gene expression is controlled at both a transcriptional and post-transcriptional level during the mammalian cell cycle. To identify the DNA sequences required for cell cycle-regulated expression, several TK cDNA clones were transfected into Rat-3 TK- cells, and their expression was examined in resting and serum-stimulated cultures. These experiments indicated that the body of the TK cDNA is sufficient to insure cell cycle-regulated expression regardless of the promoter or polyadenylation signal used.

1987 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 1156-1163
Author(s):  
C J Stewart ◽  
M Ito ◽  
S E Conrad

We have studied the cell cycle-regulated expression of the thymidine kinase (TK) gene in mammalian tissue culture cells. TK mRNA and enzyme levels are low in resting, G0-phase cells, but increase dramatically (10- to 20-fold) during the S phase in both serum-stimulated and simian virus 40-infected cells. To determine whether an increase in the rate of TK gene transcription is responsible for this induction, nuclear run-on transcription assays were performed at various times after serum stimulation or simian virus 40 infection of growth-arrested simian CV1 cells. When assays were performed at 12-h intervals, a small (two- to threefold) but reproducible increase in TK transcription was detected during the S phase. When time points were chosen to span the G1-S interface a larger (six- to sevenfold) increase in transcriptional activity was observed in serum-stimulated cells but not in simian virus 40-infected cells. The large increase in TK mRNA levels and the relatively small increase in transcription rates in growth-stimulated cells suggest that TK gene expression is controlled at both a transcriptional and post-transcriptional level during the mammalian cell cycle. To identify the DNA sequences required for cell cycle-regulated expression, several TK cDNA clones were transfected into Rat-3 TK- cells, and their expression was examined in resting and serum-stimulated cultures. These experiments indicated that the body of the TK cDNA is sufficient to insure cell cycle-regulated expression regardless of the promoter or polyadenylation signal used.


1988 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 1551-1557 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Travali ◽  
K E Lipson ◽  
D Jaskulski ◽  
E Lauret ◽  
R Baserga

To identify the regulatory elements of the human thymidine kinase (TK) gene, we have established stable cell lines carrying different chimeric constructs of the TK gene. Our results can be summarized as follows. (i) When the TK coding sequence is under the control of the calcyclin promoter (a promoter that is activated when G0 cells are stimulated by growth factors), TK mRNA levels are higher in G1-arrested cells than in proliferating cells; (ii) when the TK coding sequence is under the control of the promoter of heat shock protein HSP70, steady-state levels of TK mRNA are highest after heat shock, regardless of the position of the cells in the cell cycle; (iii) the bacterial CAT gene under the control of the human TK promoter is maximally expressed in the S phase; (iv) the TK cDNA driven by the simian virus 40 promoter is also maximally expressed in the S phase; and (v) TK enzyme activity is always at a maximum in the S phase, even when the levels of TK mRNA are highest in nonproliferating cells. We conclude that although the TK coding sequence may also play some role, the TK promoter has an important role in the cell cycle regulation of TK mRNA levels.


1988 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 1551-1557
Author(s):  
S Travali ◽  
K E Lipson ◽  
D Jaskulski ◽  
E Lauret ◽  
R Baserga

To identify the regulatory elements of the human thymidine kinase (TK) gene, we have established stable cell lines carrying different chimeric constructs of the TK gene. Our results can be summarized as follows. (i) When the TK coding sequence is under the control of the calcyclin promoter (a promoter that is activated when G0 cells are stimulated by growth factors), TK mRNA levels are higher in G1-arrested cells than in proliferating cells; (ii) when the TK coding sequence is under the control of the promoter of heat shock protein HSP70, steady-state levels of TK mRNA are highest after heat shock, regardless of the position of the cells in the cell cycle; (iii) the bacterial CAT gene under the control of the human TK promoter is maximally expressed in the S phase; (iv) the TK cDNA driven by the simian virus 40 promoter is also maximally expressed in the S phase; and (v) TK enzyme activity is always at a maximum in the S phase, even when the levels of TK mRNA are highest in nonproliferating cells. We conclude that although the TK coding sequence may also play some role, the TK promoter has an important role in the cell cycle regulation of TK mRNA levels.


2000 ◽  
Vol 74 (19) ◽  
pp. 9152-9166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Grace Y. Lin ◽  
Robert A. Lamb

ABSTRACT Infection of cells by many viruses affects the cell division cycle of the host cell to favor viral replication. We examined the ability of the paramyxovirus simian parainfluenza virus 5 (SV5) to affect cell cycle progression, and we found that SV5 slows the rate of proliferation of HeLa T4 cells. The SV5-infected cells had a delayed transition from G1 to S phase and prolonged progression through S phase, and some of the infected cells were arrested in G2 or M phase. The levels of p53 and p21CIP1were not increased in SV5-infected cells compared to mock-infected cells, suggesting that the changes in the cell cycle occur through a p53-independent mechanism. However, the phosphorylation of the retinoblastoma protein (pRB) was delayed and prolonged in SV5-infected cells. The changes in the cell cycle were also observed in cells expressing the SV5 V protein but not in the cells expressing the SV5 P protein or the V protein lacking its unique C terminus (VΔC). The unique C terminus of the V protein of SV5 was shown previously to interact with DDB1, which is the 127-kDa subunit of the multifunctional damage-specific DNA-binding protein (DDB) heterodimer. The coexpression of DDB1 with V can partially restore the changes in the cell cycle caused by expression of the V protein.


1985 ◽  
Vol 225 (2) ◽  
pp. 529-533 ◽  
Author(s):  
A J Strain ◽  
W A H Wallace ◽  
A H Wyllie

Synchronized CV-1 cells were transfected with SV40 (simian virus 40) DNA-calcium phosphate co-precipitates. In the presence of carrier DNA, the transfection efficiency of SV40 DNA was decreased 5-fold in S-phase cells and was increased 4-fold in preparations of mitotically enriched cells as compared with asynchronous controls. No difference was observed when carrier DNA was omitted, when cells had progressed through S-phase and into G2-phase, or when the infectivity of cells to intact SV40 virus was tested. These results highlight the importance of cell-cycle-dependent factors on DNA-mediated gene transfer.


1985 ◽  
Vol 5 (6) ◽  
pp. 1490-1497 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Stuart ◽  
M Ito ◽  
C Stewart ◽  
S E Conrad

The thymidine kinase (TK) gene has been isolated from human genomic DNA. The gene was passaged twice by transfection of LTK- cells with human chromosomal DNA, and genomic libraries were made in lambda Charon 30 from a second-round TK+ transformant. When the library was screened with a human Alu probe, seven overlapping lambda clones from the human TK locus were obtained. None of the seven contained a functional TK gene as judged by transfection analysis, but several combinations of clones gave rise to TK+ colonies when cotransfected into TK- cells. A functional cDNA clone encoding the human TK gene has also been isolated. Using this cDNA clone as a probe in restriction enzyme/blot hybridization analyses, we have mapped the coding sequences and direction of transcription of the gene. We have also used a single-copy subclone from within the coding region to monitor steady-state levels of TK mRNA in serum-stimulated and simian virus 40-infected simian CV1 tissue culture cells. Our results indicate that the previously reported increase in TK enzyme levels seen after either treatment is paralleled by an equivalent increase in the steady-state levels of TK mRNA. In the case of simian virus 40-infected cells, the induction was delayed by 8 to 12 h, which is the length of time after infection required for early viral protein synthesis. In both cases, induction of TK mRNA coincides with the onset of DNA synthesis, but virally infected cells ultimately accumulate more TK mRNA than do serum-stimulated cells.


1988 ◽  
Vol 8 (12) ◽  
pp. 5280-5291
Author(s):  
H B Lieberman ◽  
P F Lin ◽  
D B Yeh ◽  
F H Ruddle

We previously isolated and characterized the structure of murine thymidine kinase (tk) genomic and cDNA sequences to begin a study designed to identify regions of the tk gene important for regulated expression during the transition of cells from G0 to a proliferating state. In this report, we describe the stable transfection of the cloned gene into L-M(TK-) cells and show that both thymidine kinase (TK) enzyme activity and DNA synthesis increase in parallel when transfectants in G0 arrest are stimulated by serum. To define promoter and regulatory regions more precisely, we have constructed a series of tk minigenes and have examined their expression in stable transfectants after serum stimulation. We have identified a 291-base-pair DNA fragment at the 5' end of the tk gene that has promoter function, and we have determined its sequence. In addition, we have found that DNA sequences which mediate serum-induced expression of TK are transcribed, since expression of the murine tk cDNA, fused to a promoter from either the murine tk gene, the simian virus 40 early region, or the herpes simplex virus tk gene, is stimulated by serum. Our constructs also reveal that the murine tk polyadenylation signal is not required for regulation, nor is most of the 3' untranslated region. RNA dot blot analysis indicates that murine cytoplasmic tk mRNA levels always parallel TK enzyme activity. Nuclear runon transcription assays show less than a 2-fold increase in transcription from the cloned tk gene in serum-stimulated transfectants, but an 11-fold increase in mouse L929 cells, which are inherently TK+. These results taken together suggest that the murine tk gene is controlled in serum-stimulated cells by a transcriptional mechanism influenced by DNA sequences that flank tk and also by a posttranscriptional system linked to gene sequences that are transcribed.


1985 ◽  
Vol 5 (6) ◽  
pp. 1490-1497
Author(s):  
P Stuart ◽  
M Ito ◽  
C Stewart ◽  
S E Conrad

The thymidine kinase (TK) gene has been isolated from human genomic DNA. The gene was passaged twice by transfection of LTK- cells with human chromosomal DNA, and genomic libraries were made in lambda Charon 30 from a second-round TK+ transformant. When the library was screened with a human Alu probe, seven overlapping lambda clones from the human TK locus were obtained. None of the seven contained a functional TK gene as judged by transfection analysis, but several combinations of clones gave rise to TK+ colonies when cotransfected into TK- cells. A functional cDNA clone encoding the human TK gene has also been isolated. Using this cDNA clone as a probe in restriction enzyme/blot hybridization analyses, we have mapped the coding sequences and direction of transcription of the gene. We have also used a single-copy subclone from within the coding region to monitor steady-state levels of TK mRNA in serum-stimulated and simian virus 40-infected simian CV1 tissue culture cells. Our results indicate that the previously reported increase in TK enzyme levels seen after either treatment is paralleled by an equivalent increase in the steady-state levels of TK mRNA. In the case of simian virus 40-infected cells, the induction was delayed by 8 to 12 h, which is the length of time after infection required for early viral protein synthesis. In both cases, induction of TK mRNA coincides with the onset of DNA synthesis, but virally infected cells ultimately accumulate more TK mRNA than do serum-stimulated cells.


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