3 resultados para Nonmarket strategy, international expansion, regulated firms
em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI
Resumo:
A system for tetracycline-regulated inducible gene expression was described recently which relies on constitutive expression of a tetracycline-controlled transactivator (tTA) fusion protein combining the tetracycline repressor and the transcriptional activation domain of VP16 [Gossen, M. & Bujard, H. (1992) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 89, 5547-5551]. This system yielded only low levels of transactivator protein, probably because tTA is toxic. To avoid this difficulty, we placed the tTA gene under the control of the inducible promoter to which tTA binds, making expression of tTA itself inducible and autoregulatory. When used to drive expression of the recombination activating genes 1 and 2 (RAG-1 and RAG-2), the autoregulatory system yielded both substantially higher levels of variable (diversity) joining [V(D)J] recombination activity (70-fold on average) and inducible expression in a much larger fraction of transfected cells (autoregulatory, 90%, vs. constitutive, 18%). In addition, this system allowed the creation of transgenic mice in which expression of a luciferase transgene was inducible tens to hundreds of times the basal levels in most tissues examined. Induced levels of expression were highest in thymus and lung and appear to be substantially higher than in previously reported inducible luciferase transgenic mice created with the constitutive system. With the modified system, inducible transactivator mRNA and protein were easily detected in cell lines by RNA and Western blotting, and transactivator mRNA was detected by RNA blotting in some tissues of transgenic mice. This autoregulatory system represents an improved strategy for tetracycline-regulated gene expression both in cultured cells and in transgenic animals.
Resumo:
P210 Bcr-Abl is an activated tyrosine kinase oncogene encoded by the Philadelphia chromosome associated with human chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). The disease represents a clonal disorder arising in the pluripotent hematopoietic stem cell. During the chronic phase, patients present with a dramatic expansion of myeloid cells and a mild anemia. Retroviral gene transfer and transgenic expression in rodents have demonstrated the ability of Bcr-Abl to induce various types of leukemia. However, study of human CML or rodent models has not determined the direct and immediate effects of Bcr-Abl on hematopoietic cells from those requiring secondary genetic or epigenetic changes selected during the pathogenic process. We utilized tetracycline-regulated expression of Bcr-Abl from a promoter engineered for robust expression in primitive stem cells through multilineage blood cell development in combination with the in vitro differentiation of embryonal stem cells into hematopoietic elements. Our results demonstrate that Bcr-Abl expression alone is sufficient to increase the number of multipotent and myeloid lineage committed progenitors in a dose-dependent manner while suppressing the development of committed erythroid progenitors. These effects are reversible upon extinguishing Bcr-Abl expression. These findings are consistent with Bcr-Abl being the sole genetic change needed for the establishment of the chronic phase of CML and provide a powerful system for the analysis of any genetic change that alters cell growth and lineage choices of the hematopoietic stem cell.
Resumo:
Elongation rates of barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv Hanna) leaves decreased with decreasing soil water content, whereas the pH of xylem sap increased from 5.9 to 6.9 over 6 d as the soil dried. The reduction in leaf-elongation rate (LER) was correlated with the increase in sap pH. Artificial sap buffered to different pH values was fed via the subcrown internode to derooted seedlings. Although leaves elongated at in planta rates when fed artificial sap at a well-watered pH of 6.0, LER declined with increasing sap pH. This effect persisted in the light and in the dark. pH had no effect on the relative water content or the bulk abscisic acid (ABA) concentration of the growing zone of these leaves. LERs of the ABA-deficient mutant Az34 were uniformly high over the pH range tested, whereas those of its isogenic wild-type cultivar Steptoe were reduced as the artificial sap pH was increased from 6.0 to 7.0. However, supplying a well-watered concentration of ABA (3 × 10−8 m) in the artificial xylem sap restored the pH response of the Az34 mutant. The results suggest that increased xylem sap pH acts as a drought signal to reduce LER via an ABA-dependent mechanism.