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Publication : Cloning and characterization of the full-length cDNA and genomic sequences encoding murine acid ceramidase.

First Author  Li CM Year  1998
Journal  Genomics Volume  50
Issue  2 Pages  267-74
PubMed ID  9653654 Mgi Jnum  J:48336
Mgi Id  MGI:1267186 Doi  10.1006/geno.1998.5334
Citation  Li CM, et al. (1998) Cloning and characterization of the full-length cDNA and genomic sequences encoding murine acid ceramidase. Genomics 50(2):267-74
abstractText  The full-length cDNA and genomic sequences encoding murine acid ceramidase (AC; E.C. 3.5.1.23) have been isolated and characterized. The 2176-bp cDNA was approximately 80% identical to the human cDNA (Koch et al., 1996) and predicted a 394-amino-acid polypeptide that was approximately 90% identical to the human protein. A fluorescence-based assay system was developed to determine AC enzymatic activity, and transfection of COS-1 cells with the full-length mouse cDNA led to increased AC activity, demonstrating its functionality. The murine AC gene, which spanned approximately 38 kb, consisted of 14 exons separated by 13 introns. The exons ranged in size from 46 to 1038 bp and were flanked by exon/intron junctions that adhered closely to known donor and acceptor splice site consensus sequences. Exon 1 encoded the putative translation start site and the signal peptide region, while exon 14 encoded the carboxy end of the AC polypeptide and all of the 3' untranslated region. Sequence analysis of a 497-bp region upstream from the first in-frame ATG revealed several features of a housekeeping promoter, as well as several tissue-specific and/or hormone-inducible regulatory sites. Insertion of this sequence into a chloramphenicol acyltransferase (CAT) expression vector led an approximately fivefold increase in CAT activity after transfection into NIH3T3 cells. Northern blot analysis and enzymatic assays also were carried out on various murine tissues to examine AC expression. Of the tissues studied, the highest AC activity and mRNA levels were found in the kidney, followed by the brain; almost no AC activity or mRNA was found in the testis or skeletal muscle. These latter studies provided clear evidence that despite the housekeeping function of AC, its expression was tissue-specific.
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