Publication | Open Access
Catecholaminergic cell lines from the brain and adrenal glands of tyrosine hydroxylase-SV40 T antigen transgenic mice
187
Citations
45
References
1993
Year
T-regulatory CellImmunologyAntigen ProcessingAdrenal GlandNeuroendocrine MechanismNeuroimmunologyCatecholaminergic Cell LinesAdrenal GlandsCell LinesAutoimmunityRat Th GeneAdrenal DiseaseNervous SystemEndocrinologyCell BiologySignal TransductionAdrenal HealthNeuroendocrine DisorderNeuroscienceMolecular NeurobiologyCath.a LineMedicineCell Development
Brain (CATH.a) and adrenal (PATH.1 and PATH.2) cell lines have been established that synthesize abundant dopamine and norepinephrine and express the appropriate catecholaminergic biosynthetic enzymes, tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and dopamine beta-hydroxylase. The lines were derived from TH-positive tumors in transgenic mice carrying the SV40 T antigen oncogene under the transcriptional control of 773 base pairs of 5' flanking sequences from the rat TH gene. Although the lines continue to express T antigen, they exhibit neuronal properties such as neurofilaments and synaptophysin and lack glial intermediate filaments. Although in vivo TH is only expressed in postmitotic neurons in the CNS, the CATH.a line demonstrates that TH expression and continued cell division are not incompatible after oncogenic transformation.
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