| Literature DB >> 14720299 |
Shrikant S Betrabet1, Jyoti Choudhuri, Manjit Gill-Sharma.
Abstract
Cell-based bioassays have been suggested for screening of hormones and drug bioactivities. They are a plausible alternative to animal based methods. The technique used is called receptor/reporter system. Receptor/reporter system was initially developed as a research technique to understand gene function. Often reporter constructs containing viral promoters were used because they could be expressed with very 'high' magnitude in a variety of cell types in the laboratory. On the other hand mammalian genes are expressed in a cell/tissue specific manner, which makes them (i.e. cells/tissues) specialized for specific function in vivo. Therefore, if the receptor/reporter system is to be used as a cell-based screen for testing of hormones and drugs for human therapy then the choice of cell line as well as the promoter in the reporter module is of prime importance so as to get a realistic measure of the bioactivities of 'test' compounds. We evaluated two conventionally used viral promoters and a natural mammalian promoter, regulated by steroid hormone progesterone, in a cell-based receptor/reporter system. The promoters were spliced into vectors expressing enzyme CAT (chloramphenicol acetyl transferase), which served as a reporter of their magnitudes and consistencies in controlling gene expressions. They were introduced into breast cell lines T47D and MCF-7, which served as a cell-based source of progesterone receptors. The yardstick of their reliability was highest magnitude as well as consistency in CAT expression on induction by sequential doses of progesterone. All the promoters responded to induction by progesterone doses ranging from 10-12 to 10-6 molar by expressing CAT enzyme, albeit with varying magnitudes and consistencies. The natural mammalian promoter showed the most coherence in magnitude as well as dose dependent expression profile in both the cell lines. Our study casts doubts on use of viral promoters in a cell-based bioassay for measuring bioactivities of drugs and hormones for human therapy and suggests caution regardingtranslation in toto, of a research technique as a cell-based bioassay for drug screening.Entities:
Year: 2004 PMID: 14720299 PMCID: PMC331422 DOI: 10.1186/1479-5876-2-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Figure 1Expression of CAT activity by transfected reporter vectors PRE-tk-CAT, MMTV-CAT and UG-CAT into T47 D and MCF-7 cells without the induction by progesterone (in triplicate from six experiments,). MCF-7 cells show over all higher basal expression of CAT activity. Activity of pUG-CAT was 5 fold and that of pPRE-tk-CAT was 2.5 fold in the MCF 7 than in theT47 D cell line. pMMTV-CAT expressed no basal CAT activity in T47 D and minimal basal CAT activity in MCF-7 cell line. The variations in the basal expression viral promoters, in an akin cell milieu of cofactors and number of PR sites suggest that the ligand-independent expression is a "promoter context" occurrence and may have bearing on the ligand induced transcription response profile.
Figure 2Diagrammatic representations of reporter vectors evaluated are depicted on the left side and their progesterone induced expression profile is depicted on the right side of the figure. The expression profile of CAT activity was tested in triplicate at every dose of progesterone induction over a dose range of 10-12 to 10-6 molar. Inter assay variation in the % CAT activity from six experiments is represented as Mean ± SE after subtracting the basal activity of respective promoter constructs in respective cell line. Regression coefficient r2 was determined by linear regression analysis using "GraphPad PRISMR" version 4 statistical software package. The three reporter vectors responded with different magnitude of transcriptional response as well as showed variations in consistencies in their expression profile. The viral reporter vector pPRE-tk-CAT transcribed highest but most inconsistent response profile with r2 values of 0.3367 and 0.7496 in T47D and MCF-7 cells respectively (top row). Over the same dose range of progesterone induction, viral reporter vector pMMTV-CAT showed least yet consistency in expression profile with r2 = 0.5460 and 0.4094 in T47D and MCF-7 cells respectively (middle row). The mammalian reporter vector pUG-CAT containing natural promoter also showed transcriptional consistency in its expression profile but transcribed higher expression of CAT activity and better response profile with r2 = 0.8805 and 0.7524 in T47D and MCF-7 cells respectively (bottom row) than reporter vector pMMTV-CAT in both the cell lines. However, a squelching effect was observed in these two reporter vectors at 10-8 M dose of progesterone (in case of pMMTV-CAT it was at 10-9 M in MCF-7), suggests a biphasic profile. The connotation of squelching effect around 10-8 M needs further investigation.