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Volume 271, Number 9, Issue of March 1, 1996 pp. 4993-4998
©1996 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Amplification of the Transketolase Gene in Desensitization-resistant Mutant Y1 Mouse Adrenocortical Tumor Cells

(Received for publication, November 17, 1995)

Bernard P. Schimmer Jennivine Tsao Waldemar Czerwinski

As shown previously, mutants of the Y1 mouse adrenocortical tumor cell line that resist agonist-induced desensitization of adenylyl cyclase have elevated levels of a 68-kDa protein (designated p68), suggesting a possible relationship between p68 and the regulation of adenylyl cyclase activity. In the present study, cDNA cloning and sequencing were used to identify p68 as mouse transketolase. Cells overexpressing p68 exhibited a 17.4-fold increase in transketolase enzymatic activity relative to parental Y1 cells and a 28-fold amplification of the transketolase gene as determined by Southern blot hybridization analysis. Using fluorescent in situ hybridization analysis, the transketolase gene was mapped to mouse chromosome 16B1 and to human chromosome 3p21.2. Transketolase gene amplification was associated with telomeric fusion of the chromosome 16 pair together with the appearance of multiple copies of the transketolase gene throughout a different chromosome. The relationship between overexpression of transketolase and desensitization resistance was evaluated in somatic cell hybrids formed between a desensitization-resistant adrenal cell line and a desensitization-sensitive rat glial cell line. In these hybrids, transketolase overexpression behaved dominantly, whereas desensitization resistance behaved recessively. These results dissociate the desensitization resistance phenotype from overexpression of transketolase and suggest that desensitization resistance may have resulted from disruption of an essential regulatory gene in conjunction with the amplification event.




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