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. 1989 Jan 23;1007(1):44-54.
doi: 10.1016/0167-4781(89)90128-0.

Chorionic gonadotropin synthesis by human tumor cell lines: examination of subunit accumulation, steady-state levels of mRNA, and gene structure

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Chorionic gonadotropin synthesis by human tumor cell lines: examination of subunit accumulation, steady-state levels of mRNA, and gene structure

D E Cosgrove et al. Biochim Biophys Acta. .

Abstract

A number of tumor cell lines have been examined that differentially produce human chorionic gonadotropin and the isolated alpha- or beta-subunits. It has been demonstrated that all of the cell lines studied to date contain genes for both alpha- and beta-subunits, indicating that differential and exclusive expression of one subunit is not the result of a particular cell line having lost the gene for the alternate subunit as a consequence of chromosome changes accompanying cell transformation. Because many of these established cell lines are aneuploid, it is also significant that no evidence was found for gene amplification in cell lines producing alpha-subunit at very high levels compared to those with very low level expression. Analysis of restriction endonuclease digests of tumor cell DNAs has demonstrated identical patterns for beta-subunit in KpnI digests and KpnI/HindIII double digests. Polymorphisms were observed for alpha-subunit in EcoRI and HindIII digests, but these did not correspond with expression of the alpha-subunit. Significant levels of either mRNA (as determined by dot blot and Northern transfer hybridization analysis) were accompanied by corresponding elevated levels of alpha- and beta-subunits (as determined by radioimmunoassay), suggesting that regulation of subunit production most likely occurs at a pretranslational stage. However, there were apparent differences in the relative ratio of alpha- and beta-subunits and their cognate mRNAs among the cell lines.

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