50 resultados para Selenium deficiency


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Rat skeletal muscle selenoprotein W cDNA was isolated and sequenced. The isolation strategy involved design of degenerate PCR primers from reverse translation of a partial peptide sequence. A reverse transcription-coupled PCR product from rat muscle mRNA was used to screen a muscle cDNA library prepared from selenium-supplemented rats. The cDNA sequence confirmed the known protein primary sequence, including a selenocysteine residue encoded by TGA, and identified residues needed to complete the protein sequence. RNA folding algorithms predict a stem-loop structure in the 3' untranslated region of the selenoprotein W mRNA that resembles selenocysteine insertion sequence (SE-CIS) elements identified in other selenocysteine coding cDNAs. Dietary regulation of selenoprotein W mRNA was examined in rat muscle. Dietary selenium at 0.1 ppm as selenite increased muscle mRNA 4-fold relative to a selenium-deficient diet. Higher dietary selenium produced no further increase in mRNA levels.

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Adenosine deaminase (ADA, EC 3.5.4.4) is a ubiquitous enzyme in the purine catabolic pathway. In contrast to the widespread tissue distribution of this enzyme, inherited ADA deficiency in human results in a tissue-specific severe combined immunodeficiency. To explain the molecular basis for this remarkable tissue specificity, we have used a genetic approach to study ADA deficiency. We demonstrate that ADA deficiency causes depletion of CD8low transitional and CD4+CD8+ double-positive thymocytes by an apoptotic mechanism. This effect is mediated by a p53-dependent pathway, since p53-deficient mice are resistant to the apoptosis induced by ADA deficiency. DNA damage, known to be caused by the abnormal accumulation of dATP in ADA deficiency, is therefore responsible for the ablation of T-cell development and for the immunodeficiency. The two thymocyte subsets most susceptible to apoptosis induced by ADA deficiency are also the two thymocyte subsets with the lowest levels of bcl-2 expression. We show that thymocytes from transgenic mice that overexpress bcl-2 in the thymus are rescued from apoptosis induced by ADA deficiency. Thus, the tissue specificity of the pathological effects of ADA deficiency is due to the low bcl-2 expression in CD8low transitional and CD4+CD8+ double-positive thymocytes.

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DNA repair is required by organisms to prevent the accumulation of mutations and to maintain the integrity of genetic information. Mammalian cells that have been treated with agents that damage DNA have an increase in p53 levels, a p53-dependent arrest at G1 in the cell cycle, and a p53-dependent apoptotic response. It has been hypothesized that this block in cell cycle progression is necessary to allow time for DNA repair or to direct the damaged cell to an apoptotic pathway. This hypothesis predicts that p53-deficient cells would have an abnormal apoptotic response and exhibit a "mutator" phenotype. Using a sensitive assay for the accumulation of point mutations, small deletions, and insertions, we have directly tested whether p53-deficient cells exhibit an increased frequency of mutation before and after exposure to DNA-damaging agents. We report that wild-type and p53-deficient fibroblasts, thymocytes, and tumor tissue have indistinguishable rates of point mutation accumulation in a transgenic lacI target gene. These results suggest that the role of p53 in G1 checkpoint control and tumor suppression does not affect the accumulation of point mutations.

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The retinoblastoma susceptibility gene (Rb) participates in controlling the G1/S-phase transition, presumably by binding and inactivating E2F transcription activator family members. Mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) with no, one, or two inactivated Rb genes were used to determine the specific contributions of Rb protein to cell cycle progression and gene expression. MEFs lacking both Rb alleles (Rb-/-) entered S phase in the presence of the dihydrofolate reductase inhibitor methotrexate. Two E2F target genes, dihydrofolate reductase and thymidylate synthase, displayed elevated mRNA and protein levels in Rb- MEFs. Since absence of functional Rb protein in MEFs is sufficient for S-phase entry under growth-limiting conditions, these data indicate that the E2F complexes containing Rb protein, and not the Rb-related proteins p107 and p130, may be rate limiting for the G1/S transition. Antineoplastic drugs caused accumulation of p53 in the nuclei of both Rb+/+ and Rb-/- MEFs. While p53 induction led to apoptosis in Rb-/- MEFs, Rb+/- and Rb+/+ MEFs underwent cell cycle arrest without apoptosis. These results reveal that diverse growth signals work through Rb to regulate entry into S phase, and they indicate that absence of Rb protein produces a constitutive DNA replication signal capable of activating a p53-associated apoptotic response.

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Gold(I) salts and selenite, which have diverse therapeutic and biological effects, are noted for their reactivity with thiols. Since the binding of Jun-Jun and Jun-Fos dimers to the AP-1 DNA binding site is regulated in vitro by a redox process involving conserved cysteine residues, we hypothesized that some of the biological actions of gold and selenium are mediated via these residues. In electrophoretic mobility-shift analyses, AP-1 DNA binding was inhibited by gold(I) thiolates and selenite, with 50% inhibition occurring at approximately 5 microM and 1 microM, respectively. Thiomalic acid had no effect in the absence of gold(I), and other metal ions inhibited at higher concentrations, in a rank order correlating with their thiol binding affinities. Cysteine-to-serine mutants demonstrated that these effects of gold(I) and selenite require Cys272 and Cys154 in the DNA-binding domains of Jun and Fos, respectively. Gold(I) thiolates and selenite did not inhibit nonspecific protein binding to the AP-1 site and were at least an order of magnitude less potent as inhibitors of sequence-specific binding to the AP-2, TFIID, or NF1 sites compared with the AP-1 site. In addition, 10 microM gold(I) or 10 microM selenite inhibited expression of an AP-1-dependent reporter gene, but not an AP-2-dependent reporter gene. These data suggest a mechanism regulating transcription factor activity by inorganic ions which may contribute to the known antiarthritic action of gold and cancer chemoprevention by selenium.