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Publications (2)12.66 Total impact

  • Article: eGFP reporter genes silence LCRbeta-globin transgene expression via CpG dinucleotides.
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    ABSTRACT: beta-Globin transgenes regulated by the locus control region (LCR) are dominantly silenced by linked bacterial reporter genes in transgenic mice. Enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) from jellyfish is an alternative reporter used in retrovirus vectors to transfer LCRbeta-globin genes into bone marrow. We show here that the eGFP coding sequence silences LCRbeta-globin in transgenic mice, but the PGK promoter did not provoke such silencing. As eGFP contains 60 CpG dinucleotides, which are targets of DNA methylation, we synthesized a novel CpG-free variant called dmGFP. Its utility was demonstrated in MSCV retrovirus vectors transcriptionally controlled by the viral 5'LTR or internal PGK or EF1alpha promoter. Specific fluorescence was detected from eGFP, and at lower levels from dmGFP, in transduced mouse CFU-S and embryonic stem cells. While eGFP was rarely silenced in CFU-S, dmGFP was not silenced in these progenitors. Moreover, the dmGFP coding sequence did not silence LCRbeta-globin in transgenic mice, showing that the eGFP silencing mechanism acts primarily via CpG dinucleotides. However, LCRbeta-globin expression remained suboptimal, indicating that other silencing pathways recognize dmGFP in the absence of CpG dinucleotides. We conclude that dmGFP ameliorates silencing, but optimal LCRbeta-globin expression is obtained in the absence of nonmammalian reporters.
    Molecular Therapy 05/2005; 11(4):591-9. · 6.87 Impact Factor
  • Article: Glycoprotein 170 induces platelet-activating factor receptor membrane expression and confers tumor cell hypersensitivity to NK-dependent cell lysis.
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    ABSTRACT: Multidrug resistance (MDR) confers resistance to anticancer drugs and reduces therapeutic efficiency. It is often characterized by the expression of the MDR1 gene product P-glycoprotein (or gp170) at the membrane of tumor cells. To further propose a potential complementary tool in cancer treatment, the sensitivity of gp170 tumor cells to NK-dependent lysis was investigated. Two kinds of cells were generated from wild-type K562 erythroleukemic cells: the first were derived from Taxol-selected cells and cloned, whereas the second were retrovirally transduced by the cDNA of the MDR1 gene. The last process was also applied to the human embryonal carcinoma cells called Tera-2 cells. First, both cloned and MDR-1 K562 cells appeared highly susceptible to naive NK cell killing. Interestingly, in addition, Tera-2 cells that were not sensitive to NK lysis could be killed when they expressed gp170 at their membranes. In previous data, we demonstrated that NK cell release of bimolecular complexes composed of perforin and platelet-activating factor (PAF) interacting with the PAF-R, which has to be expressed on the target cell membranes, were components of NK tumor cell killing. In the present study, we show that gp170 has the capacity to drive constitutive PAF-R expression on tumor cells, which could be responsible for hypersensitivity to NK lysis and accelerated cell death.
    The Journal of Immunology 04/2004; 172(6):3604-11. · 5.79 Impact Factor