|
|
|
|
Vol. 60, Issue 2, 388-393, August 2001
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Jonsson
Comprehensive Cancer Center, and Molecular Biology Institute,
University of California, Los Angeles, California
Clones of the mouse hepatoma cell line Hepa1c1c7 (Hepa-1) with
lesions in the Cyp1a1 gene were isolated previously. A
subset of these clones fails to express CYP1A1 mRNA even when
treated with 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin, which
induces this mRNA in wild-type Hepa-1 cells. The current investigation
sought an explanation for this phenotype in one of these clones, c33.
Loss of mRNA expression in c33 was shown to be caused by mutational changes in the Cyp1a1 gene rather than by its epigenetic
silencing. No mutations were identified in the 5' flanking region of
the Cyp1a1 gene, containing the promoter and
dioxin-responsive enhancer sequences. A single nucleotide insertion
occurred at nucleotide 418 in the coding region of one
Cyp1a1 allele, and a single nucleotide insertion
occurred at nucleotide 465 in the other allele in c33. These sequence
alterations were confirmed in the genomic DNA of the clone. Both
insertions generate a premature termination codon at codon 172. This
termination codon occurs in a position within the intron/exon structure
of the Cyp1a1 gene such that the encoded mRNA should be
subject to "nonsense-mediated decay" (NMD). Inhibition of protein
synthesis is known to reverse NMD. The protein synthesis inhibitors
cycloheximide and puromycin fully restored CYP1A1 mRNA expression to
c33 cells, supporting the notion that NMD degrades CYP1A1 mRNA in this
strain. The mutations identified in the coding region of c33 provide an
explanation, therefore, for its loss of both CYP1A1 enzymatic activity
and inducible CYP1A1 mRNA expression.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
F. Busi and T. Cresteil CYP3A5 mRNA Degradation by Nonsense-Mediated mRNA Decay Mol. Pharmacol., September 1, 2005; 68(3): 808 - 815. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
J. K. Lamba, M. Adachi, D. Sun, J. Tammur, E. G. Schuetz, R. Allikmets, and J. D. Schuetz Nonsense mediated decay downregulates conserved alternatively spliced ABCC4 transcripts bearing nonsense codons Hum. Mol. Genet., January 15, 2003; 12(2): 99 - 109. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||