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Complementary DNA

About: Complementary DNA is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 55301 publications have been published within this topic receiving 2752650 citations. The topic is also known as: cDNA & DNA, Complementary.


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Journal Article
TL;DR: In a number of human T cell clones, expression of hIL-10R mRNA is down-regulated after activation of the cells with anti-CD3 Ab and phorbol ester, which suggests possible shared receptor or signal transduction pathway components.
Abstract: cDNA clones encoding a human IL-10R (hIL-10R) from a Burkitt lymphoma cell line, BJAB, express a 90 to 110 kDa polypeptide in COS7 cells that binds hIL-10 specifically. The predicted amino acid sequence of hIL-10R is 60% identical and 73% similar to mouse IL-10R (mIL-10R). rIL-10R expressed in an IL-3-dependent mouse pro-B cell line (Ba/F3) binds hIL-10 with high affinity (200 to 250 pM), and the transfected cells exhibit a proliferative response to hIL-10. Mouse IL-10 does not bind to hIL-10R, and hIL-10R-expressing Ba/F3 cells do not respond to the mouse cytokine, observations consistent with the known species specificity of IL-10. Expression of hIL-10R mRNA seems to be restricted mainly to human hemopoietic cells and cell lines. In a number of human T cell clones, expression of hIL-10R mRNA is down-regulated after activation of the cells with anti-CD3 Ab and phorbol ester. The hIL-10R gene is on human chromosome 11. Like mIL-10R, hIL-10R is structurally related to IFNR. Because IL-10 inhibits macrophage activation by IFN-gamma, this relationship suggests possible shared receptor or signal transduction pathway components.

367 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Northern blot analyses revealed ubiquitous expression of this gene, termed ASCT1, consistent with the general metabolic role ascribed to system ASC, and was found to be dose-dependent, stereospecific, and saturable.

367 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: Results indicate that the MOv18 and MOv19 monoclonal antibodies bind to at least one form of folate-binding protein and that this protein, which is evidently overexpressed in certain malignant tumors, may provide a suitable target for immunotherapy with these antibodies.
Abstract: Monoclonal antibodies MOv18 and MOv19, raised against a membrane preparation of an ovarian carcinoma surgical specimen, react with a surface antigen present on the majority of nonmucinous ovarian malignant tumors tested but not with normal adult tissue (S. Miotti, S. Canevari, S. Menard, D. Mezzanzanica, G. Porro, S. M. Pupa, M. Regazzoni, E. Tagliabue, and M. I. Colnaghi, Int. J. Cancer, 39: 297-303, 1987). This surface antigen was purified as a soluble glycoprotein (molecular mass, 36-38 kDa) released from the cell surface of an ovarian carcinoma cell line (IGROV1) by digestion with Bacillus thuringiensis phospholipase C. Immunoblotting demonstrated that the purified protein reacted with MOv18 and MOv19 and that treatment of the purified preparation with N-glycanase resulted in a protein with a molecular mass of 27 kDa. The NH3-terminal amino acid sequence of the purified antigen was determined. This sequence is highly homologous to an internal stretch of 27 amino acids located near the NH3 terminus of human folate-binding protein. An oligonucleotide probe was synthesized and used to screen an IGROV1 ovarian carcinoma, lambda gt11 complementary DNA library to obtain three complementary DNA clones. The complete nucleotide sequence of one of these complementary DNA clones was determined. This sequence is nearly identical to that of a folate-binding protein clone obtained from the Caco-2 human carcinoma cell line. In addition, the nucleotide sequence of the 5'-untranslated region of the other two clones was determined. This region of all three clones was different. The product of the Caco-2 folate-binding protein clone expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells was recognized by the MOv18 and MOv19 antibodies, confirming that the antigen and folate-binding protein are one and the same. Furthermore, a cell line that binds the MOv18 and MOv19 antibodies expressed increased levels of folate-binding protein mRNA compared with a cell line that does not bind these antibodies. These results indicate that the MOv18 and MOv19 monoclonal antibodies bind to at least one form of folate-binding protein and that this protein, which is evidently overexpressed in certain malignant tumors, may provide a suitable target for immunotherapy with these antibodies.

367 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proposed that the double‐strand ends present in unintegrated cDNA promote apoptosis, as is known to be the case for chromosomal double-strand breaks, and cDNA circularization removes the pro‐apoptotic signal.
Abstract: Early after infection, the retroviral RNA genome is reverse transcribed to generate a linear cDNA copy, then that copy is integrated into a chromosome of the host cell. We report that unintegrated viral cDNA is a substrate for the host cell non-homologous DNA end joining (NHEJ) pathway, which normally repairs cellular double-strand breaks by end ligation. NHEJ activity was found to be required for an end-ligation reaction that circularizes a portion of the unintegrated viral cDNA in infected cells. Consistent with this, the NHEJ proteins Ku70 and Ku80 were found to be bound to purified retroviral replication intermediates. Cells defective in NHEJ are known to undergo apoptosis in response to retroviral infection, a response that we show requires reverse transcription to form the cDNA genome but not subsequent integration. We propose that the double-strand ends present in unintegrated cDNA promote apoptosis, as is known to be the case for chromosomal double-strand breaks, and cDNA circularization removes the pro-apoptotic signal.

367 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: P PvuII digests of human genomic DNA revealed a polymorphism linked to the CD38 gene that ruled out the possibility that CD38 was the human homologue of the murine Qa2 molecule as has been suggested previously.
Abstract: A cDNA clone encoding the human lymphocyte differentiation Ag CD38 was isolated from a mixture of four different lymphocyte CDNA libraries expressed transiently in COS cells and screened by panning with mAb. Transfected COS cells expressed a surface protein of Mr 46,000 that was similar to the native CD38 molecule expressed on the B cell line Daudi and the T cell leukemia HPB-ALL and which was recognized by each of the CD38 specific mAb HIT-2, T16, T168, HB7, 5D2, ICO-18, and ICO-20. The CD38 cDNA sequence predicts an unusual 30-kDa polypeptide with a short N-terminal cytoplasmic tail, and a carboxyl-terminal extracellular domain carrying the four potential N-linked glycosylation sites. The absence of significant homology with other known surface Ag including members of the Ig superfamily ruled out the possibility that CD38 was the human homologue of the murine Qa2 molecule as has been suggested previously. PvuII digests of human genomic DNA revealed a polymorphism linked to the CD38 gene.

366 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023197
2022422
2021178
2020241
2019312
2018349