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Effects of 20-OH-ecdysone on Drosophila cells: Regulation of endogenous and transfected genes
Institution:Biology Department, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755, U.S.A.
Abstract:Drosophila cell lines respond to physiological doses of 20-OH-ecdysone by entering mitotic arrest and differentiating morphologically. The cells also exhibit changes in gene expression. Several enzyme activities are induced, and the synthesis of cytoplasmic actin and of the four small heat-shock proteins (hsp) is initiated. Hybrid genes, containing the 5′ region of Drosophila heat-shock protein genes ligated to the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene (tk), have been transfected into cells of the Drosophila cell line S3. Constructions containing sequences upstream from hsp 70, or from any of the small hsp genes, show heat-inducible tk expression. Ecdysterone-inducible tk expression is seen only in transfections with small hsp-tk hybrid genes. This transient expression system can be used as an assay for function to define regions of DNA, flanking the coding region of inducible genes, which are necessary for normal gene expression and gene regulation in cultured cells.
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