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Gene trapping identifies transiently induced survival genes during programmed cell death

BACKGROUND: The existence of a constitutively expressed machinery for death in individual cells has led to the notion that survival factors repress this machinery and, if such factors are unavailable, cells die by default. In many cells, however, mRNA and protein synthesis inhibitors induce apoptosi...

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Autores principales: Wempe, Frank, Yang, Ji-Yeon, Hammann, Joanna, Melchner, Harald von
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC55320/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11516336
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author Wempe, Frank
Yang, Ji-Yeon
Hammann, Joanna
Melchner, Harald von
author_facet Wempe, Frank
Yang, Ji-Yeon
Hammann, Joanna
Melchner, Harald von
author_sort Wempe, Frank
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The existence of a constitutively expressed machinery for death in individual cells has led to the notion that survival factors repress this machinery and, if such factors are unavailable, cells die by default. In many cells, however, mRNA and protein synthesis inhibitors induce apoptosis, suggesting that in some cases transcriptional activity might actually impede cell death. To identify transcriptional mechanisms that interfere with cell death and survival, we combined gene trap mutagenesis with site-specific recombination (Cre/loxP system) to isolate genes from cells undergoing apoptosis by growth factor deprivation. RESULTS: From an integration library consisting of approximately 2 × 10(6) unique proviral integrations obtained by infecting the interleukin-3 (IL-3)-dependent hematopoietic cell line - FLOXIL3 - with U3Cre gene trap virus, we have isolated 125 individual clones that converted to factor independence upon IL-3 withdrawal. Of 102 cellular sequences adjacent to U3Cre integration sites, 17% belonged to known genes, 11% matched single expressed sequence tags (ESTs) or full cDNAs with unknown function and 72% had no match within the public databases. Most of the known genes recovered in this analysis encoded proteins with survival functions. CONCLUSIONS: We have shown that hematopoietic cells undergoing apoptosis after withdrawal of IL-3 activate survival genes that impede cell death. This results in reduced apoptosis and improved survival of cells treated with a transient apoptotic stimulus. Thus, apoptosis in hematopoietic cells is the end result of a conflict between death and survival signals, rather than a simple death by default.
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spelling pubmed-553202001-09-10 Gene trapping identifies transiently induced survival genes during programmed cell death Wempe, Frank Yang, Ji-Yeon Hammann, Joanna Melchner, Harald von Genome Biol Research BACKGROUND: The existence of a constitutively expressed machinery for death in individual cells has led to the notion that survival factors repress this machinery and, if such factors are unavailable, cells die by default. In many cells, however, mRNA and protein synthesis inhibitors induce apoptosis, suggesting that in some cases transcriptional activity might actually impede cell death. To identify transcriptional mechanisms that interfere with cell death and survival, we combined gene trap mutagenesis with site-specific recombination (Cre/loxP system) to isolate genes from cells undergoing apoptosis by growth factor deprivation. RESULTS: From an integration library consisting of approximately 2 × 10(6) unique proviral integrations obtained by infecting the interleukin-3 (IL-3)-dependent hematopoietic cell line - FLOXIL3 - with U3Cre gene trap virus, we have isolated 125 individual clones that converted to factor independence upon IL-3 withdrawal. Of 102 cellular sequences adjacent to U3Cre integration sites, 17% belonged to known genes, 11% matched single expressed sequence tags (ESTs) or full cDNAs with unknown function and 72% had no match within the public databases. Most of the known genes recovered in this analysis encoded proteins with survival functions. CONCLUSIONS: We have shown that hematopoietic cells undergoing apoptosis after withdrawal of IL-3 activate survival genes that impede cell death. This results in reduced apoptosis and improved survival of cells treated with a transient apoptotic stimulus. Thus, apoptosis in hematopoietic cells is the end result of a conflict between death and survival signals, rather than a simple death by default. BioMed Central 2001 2001-06-27 /pmc/articles/PMC55320/ /pubmed/11516336 Text en Copyright © 2001 Wempe et al., licensee BioMed Central Ltd
spellingShingle Research
Wempe, Frank
Yang, Ji-Yeon
Hammann, Joanna
Melchner, Harald von
Gene trapping identifies transiently induced survival genes during programmed cell death
title Gene trapping identifies transiently induced survival genes during programmed cell death
title_full Gene trapping identifies transiently induced survival genes during programmed cell death
title_fullStr Gene trapping identifies transiently induced survival genes during programmed cell death
title_full_unstemmed Gene trapping identifies transiently induced survival genes during programmed cell death
title_short Gene trapping identifies transiently induced survival genes during programmed cell death
title_sort gene trapping identifies transiently induced survival genes during programmed cell death
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC55320/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11516336
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