AU782459B2 - Promoters for swine complement inhibitors - Google Patents

Promoters for swine complement inhibitors Download PDF

Info

Publication number
AU782459B2
AU782459B2 AU47515/02A AU4751502A AU782459B2 AU 782459 B2 AU782459 B2 AU 782459B2 AU 47515/02 A AU47515/02 A AU 47515/02A AU 4751502 A AU4751502 A AU 4751502A AU 782459 B2 AU782459 B2 AU 782459B2
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
promoter
pmcp
dna
porcine
human
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
AU47515/02A
Other versions
AU4751502A (en
Inventor
Tatsuya Fujimura
Hiroshi Murakami
Tamostu Shigehisa
Koji Toyomura
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
NH Foods Ltd
Original Assignee
Nippon Meat Packers Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from AU27904/97A external-priority patent/AU2790497A/en
Application filed by Nippon Meat Packers Inc filed Critical Nippon Meat Packers Inc
Priority to AU47515/02A priority Critical patent/AU782459B2/en
Publication of AU4751502A publication Critical patent/AU4751502A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of AU782459B2 publication Critical patent/AU782459B2/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

Links

Landscapes

  • Preparation Of Compounds By Using Micro-Organisms (AREA)

Description

P/00/011 Regulation 3.2
AUSTRALIA
Patents Act 1990
ORIGINAL
COMPLETE SPECIFICATION STANDARD PATENT Invention Title: Promoters for swine complement inhibitors The following statement is a full description of this invention, including the best method of performing it known to us: Freehills Carter Smith Beadle Melbourne\004077568 Printed 12 June 2002 (11:31) page 2
SPECIFICATION
PRCWJRS FCR SWINE (IvIPiEs INHIBITCRS TECHNICAL FIELD This invention provides DNA consisting of a specific base sequence.
More particularly, the invention provides a promoter gene for a porcine complement inhibitor.
BACKGROUND OFTHE INVENTION Recently, organ transplantation has widely been carried out in many countries. Development of highly effective immunosuppressants Cyclosporin and FK506) has solved the problem of rejection of organs transplanted from man to man, however, lack of donors has become a serious problem. Such a problem has prompted studies on animal-to-man organ transplantation, namely xenotransplantation. Although approximately 3,500 instances of heart transplantation have been performed annually in European countries and the United States, they cover only 20 to 30% of patients who need heart transplantation. Use of animals closely related to human beings as donors (for example, such primates as baboons and chimpanzees) involves a great deal of difficulty due to shortage of these animals and their high intelligence, but use of domestic animals as donors involves less problems.
Particularly, pigs have advantages of easy supply due to mass rearing, their organ sizes similar to those of man, and established basic technology including maintenance of the strains. Consequently, organ transplantation from pig to man has been studied.
Of rejections occurring in pig-to-man organ transplantation, acute rejection by major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-related cellular immunity may not occur, since evolutional relatedness between pigs and man is so scarce that there is no similarity between their MHCs. Moreover, application of the effective immunosuppressants may avoid such rejection, if ever occurs.
Human blood, however, contains endogenous antibodies against pigs (namely, natural antibodies). Consequently, if a porcine organ is transplanted to man, the natural antibodies recognize the organ (antigen) resulting in formation of antigen-antibody complexes, which activate human complements..
The activated human complements cause necrosis of the transplanted organ (rejection). Such a phenomenon occurs immediately (within an hour) after transplantation, so it is termed hyperacute rejection.
No drug preventing hyperacute rejection caused by complement activation has ever been developed. No human organ is injured by human complements, since factors preventing complement activation are expressed in human organs. Such factors are named complement inhibitors (or complement-inhibiting factors). Of the complement inhibitors, three factors, DAF (decay accelerating factor, CD55), MCP (membrane cofactor protein, CD46) and CD59, are important. It is believed that DAF and MCP inhibit activation of complements by accelerating the destruction of C3b and convertase, and CD59 does so by inhibiting the C9 step.
The complement inhibitors are species specific. Porcine complement inhibitors can inhibit the complement activity of pigs but not that of man. The porcine complement inhibitors cannot inhibit human complements activated by the porcine organ transplanted to man. Therefore, the porcine organ transplanted to man undergoes necrosis.
Pig-to-man organ transplantation triggers not only hyperacute rejection but also thrombin formation and platelet coagulation, resulting in thrombosis in the hosts vascular system as well as the transplanted organ. Components of the blood coagulation pathway, such as thrombin, fibrin and fibrin degradation products may also amplify tissue damage, modify immune responses and augment inflammatory responses (Xenotransplantation, vol. 24-34, 1996).
Such problems arising when a porcine organ is transplanted to man will be solved, if human complement inhibitors and/or such thrombosis-inhibiting factors as thrombomodulin (collectively termed as complement inhibitors in the following) are expressed in the porcine organs by genetic engineering. In transplantation of the porcine heart, there will be no problem if the human complement inhibitors are being expressed by porcine vascular endothelial cells.
From such a viewpoint, studies on recombinant pigs (transgenic pigs) integrated with human complement-inhibitor genes have widely been carried out.
It has also been considered to be useful to express such factors that are capable of suppressing thrombosis thrombomodulin, Proceedings of the XVth World Congress of the Transplantation Society, pp. 77-79,1995) with or without the human complement inhibitors in the porcine organs by genetic engineering.
As described above, xenotransplantation by using transgenic pigs integrated with the human complement-inhibitor genes have been studied. Up to the present, promoters derived from the human complement-inhibitor gene or viruses have been used to prepare such transgenic pigs. For the complement inhibitors to be expressed in pigs, however, the promoters originating from pigs may be more efficient. To obtain such promoters, cDNA of the porcine complement inhibitors is needed. Therefore, the present inventors carried out studies to isolate and purify cDNA encoding a porcine complement inhibitor (termed pMCP in the following) and succeeded in isolating and sequencing its cDNA (see Japanese Pat. Appln. No.178254/1995).
The present inventors further studied and succeeded in identifying and sequencing the promoter region of pMCP by preparing porcine genomic libraries and then screening them with pMCP's cDNA as a probe.
As described above, pMCP's promoter of the invention was derived from pMCP's genomic DNA, which was isolated by using cDNA of pMCP. pMCP's cDNA was derived from RNA transcribed in porcine vascular endothelial cells.
Namely, pMCP's promoter of the invention regulates expression of pMCP in the porcine vascular endothelial cells. Consequently, by using pMCP's promoter of the invention, genes of human complement inhibitors and those of such thrombosis-inhibiting factors as thrombomodulin can be expressed in the porcine organs, particularly the porcine vascular endothelial cells. Furthermore, by using pMCP's promoter of the invention, various structural genes can effectively, selectively and specifically be expressed in the porcine organs, particularly the porcine vascular endothelial cells.
On the other hand, the promoters derived from the human complementinhibitor gene or viral genome, all of which had been employed in the previous studies, could neither selectively, specifically nor effectively express the 004196952 human complement inhibitor in the porcine endothelial cells.
This invention was accomplished on the basis of such findings. The purpose of the invention was to provide DNA possessing an activity of pMCP's promoter.
DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION This invention provides the base sequence defined by Sequence No. 1, DNA comprising a part of the base sequence, and DNA containing the sequence.
~Another invention provides DNA with an approximately 0.9-, 0.07- or 0.05-kb upstream sequence from the 3'end of the base sequence -10 defined by Sequence No. 1; and DNA with the base sequence defined by 0000 Sequence No. 2.
°These DNAs possess pMCP-promoter activities.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES S•Fig 1. shows the promoter activity of each promoter region 00 0 0 Fig 2. compares the promoter activities of the invention and hDAF THE BEST MODE FOR APPLYING THE INVENTION The present invention is explained in detail in the following: The base sequence of this invention defined by Sequence No. 1 is DNA with the promoter activity of pMCP. Such DNA can be obtained by preparing genomic DNA of the structural gene of pMCP from a commercially available porcine genomic library, identifying the promoter region existing on upstream region of genomic DNA, and digesting it with appropriate restriction enzymes.
With cDNA of pMCP or its parts as probes, genomic DNA of pMCP's structural gene can be cloned from porcine genomic library by the conventional plaque- or colony-hybridization method. By the plaquehybridization method, plaques formed by phages containing the pMCP's genomic DNA are identified as follows: phages containing the porcine genomic library and E. coli are co-cultured on agar plates to make plaques; the plaques are transferred to nitrocellulose membrane filters, and then phage DNA in the plaques are fixed on the filters; and the phage DNAs are hybridized with pMCP's probes labeled with radioisotope, and then autoradiographes of the filters are taken. By repeating such procedures, phages containing the pMCP's genomic DNA can be cloned.
To select the positive phage clones containing the promoter region of the genomic DNA, a region corresponding to the known first exon of human MCP cDNA can be excised from pMCP's cDNA and used as a probe to perform the plaque hybridization similarly as mentioned above, since the promoter gene of pMCP is believed to possess the first exon.
Thus, pMCP's genomic DNA containing the promoter region can be prepared from the cloned phage DNA.
The promoter region's DNA of pMCP can be prepared by digesting the upstream region of pMCP's genomic DNA with proper restriction enzymes, examining promoter activities of digested fragments, and collecting the fragments possessing the promoter activities.
The promoter activity can conventionally be examined: integrating the restriction enzyme-digested fragment into a vector for luciferase-activity determination, transfecting the vector into proper host cells, incubating the cells for a certain period, lysing the cells and then determining fluorescence of luciferase in the cell lysate.
The promoter region of pMCP's genomic DNA was thus obtained from the porcine genomic library. As shown in Examples described in the following, a promoter region comprising approximately 5,400 bp was obtained. By sequencing the region by a conventional method, the base sequence defined by Sequence No. 1 (5,418 bases) was identified.
By digesting the promoter region with proper restriction enzymes and examining the promoter activities of the resulting fragments by the abovedescribed method, the approximately 1,700-bp upstream region proved to possess a high promoter activity. By sequencing the 1,700-bp region, the base sequence as defined by Sequence No. 2 (1,622 bp) was identified.
As shown in Examples, regions shorter and longer as well than the promoter defined by Sequence No. 2 were also found to possess the promoter activities. Consequently, so far as the activity of pMCP's promoter is retained, DNA of the present invention may consist of a part of the base sequence defined by Sequence No. 1 or DNA containing the base sequence defined by Sequence No. 1.
DNA of the present invention may be used as a promoter to express not only pMCP but also various other structural genes. In such cases, appropriate regions can be selected from the entire sequence, depending on the structural genes to express, host cell, and host animal.
The present invention's DNA thus obtained possesses the promoter activity to express the structural genes including pMCP and can be used for various purposes. As described above, DNA of the invention can favorably be integrated into the upstream part of human complement-inhibitor genes and used to generate a transgenic pig transformed with the human complementinhibitor genes. Particularly, DNA of the invention can express the complement inhibitor on the porcine endothelial cells. Moreover, DNA of the invention can be used as the promoter to express other various structural genes than pMCP gene.
DNA of the present invention is not restricted to that prepared by the above-described method, but includes those prepared by other methods. As far as possessing substantially the same promoter activity, it will be validated if parts of the base sequence are deleted or replaced or inserted with one or more than two bases.
INDUSTRIAL
APPLICABILITY
DNA of the present invention is the promoter gene of pMCP. In generating the transgenic pigs transformed with the human complementinhibitor gene, the promoter gene can be integrated into the upstream part of the human complement-inhibitor genes. Since tissues and organs of such transgenic pigs do not cause hyperacute rejection, they can be transplanted to man. Consequently, the problem of the lack of donors for transplantation can effectively be solved.
EXAMPLES
The present invention will specifically be explained in detail with examples, but the scope of the invention is not restricted to these examples.
Example 1 A. Obtaining the promoter region of pMCP (D Cloning of a phage clone by hybridization To obtain the genomic clones of pMCP, A FIXII (Stratagene) and fulllength pMCPcDNA (prepared by expression cloning and digestion of the expression vector with Xhol and Notl) were used for hybridization as the porcine genomic library and a probe, respectively. The plaque hybridization was carried out as follows: First, two million clones of the above-described phage and an E. coli suspension were spread on 50 plates (totally 100 million clones). The phage clones formed plaques after overnight incubation at 37 To absorb the phages in the plaques, a sheet of nitrocellulose membrane filter for hybridization was placed on each plate for approximately 1 min.
After that, each filter was turned upside down and immersed in an alkaline denaturation solution (0.2 M NaOH, 1.5 M NaCI) to brake nuclei for sec and then in a neutralizing solution [x2 SSC, 0.4 M Tris-HCI (pH for sec. After drying, they were cross-linked under UV irradiation (GS Gene Linker, Bio Rad).
Second, these filters were blocked in a prehybridization buffer [50 deionized formamide, x4 SSC, 50 mM HEPES (pH x10 Denhardt solution, 100 mg/ml denatured salmon sperm DNA] for 4 h at 37 °C.
The probe was labeled by treating pMCPcDNA with dNTP and Klenow (DNA polymerase I) in the presence of a radioisotope P2] ATP. A radioisotope-labeled reverse chain was thus prepared with the cDNA as a template. The reverse chain can hybridize with the phage clone having the identical DNA sequences.
Then, the radio-labeled probe was placed on a gel-filtration column, spun down to remove the nonreacted and nonlabeled nucleotides, incubated for 3 min at 90 chilled on ice to maintain a single-chain form of DNA, and subjected to hybridization.
The prehybridized filters were placed in HybriPack and hybridized overnight at 37 0C with the above-described probe in the hybridization buffer.
Next, the filters were washed twice with SSC and SDS, allowed to react with the image-analyzer plates for 2 h at room temperature, and then analyzed with an image analyzer (Fuji Film Co.).
Finally, 30 positive clones were obtained. Gels of the positive clones were sucked with Pasteur pipettes and diluted with SM buffer. The clone-containing solution was thus prepared.
O( The secondary and further screening The clone-containing solution was appropriately diluted and spread on plates (totally 30 plates). After that, hybridization was carried out again. Many positive plaques were observed on 20 plates. Twenty positive clones were thus obtained.
Such procedures were repeated three times. Finally, all of the clones were purified.
O( Classification of the clones on the basis of the restriction-enzyme digestion profiles To confirm whether the clones were independent, they were digested with a restriction enzyme EcoRI and then electrophoresed. The identical clones exhibit the same digestion profile. From various digestion profiles, distinct clones were thus obtained.
Selection of the phage clones containing the promoter region by using the cDNA's leading region The phage clones containing the promoter region are believed to have the first exon. Consequently, a region supposedly corresponding to the first exon of human MCP was excised (Sall-Sphl) from pMCPcDNA and subjected to hybridization as a probe. Four clones gave positive results.
Selection of the promoter-region containing phage clones by digestion with a rare restriction-enzyme site Four clones were digested with Fspl, since its restriction-enzyme site scarcely exists in the first exon of pMCPcDNA. Only one clone was digested with the enzyme.
Consequently, it was found highly possible that this phage clone contained the promoter region.
Confirmation of the promoter region by sequencing The phage clone was digested with a combination of Fspl and another restriction enzyme (EcoRI) to localize the Fspl site of the first exon at the terminal of the digested fragment, integrated into a sequencing vector pBSIIKS+ (Stratagene) and sequenced (373 DNA Sequencer, Applied Biosystems, Inc.).
The result showed that the phage clone certainly contained the first exon.
From the restriction-enzyme digestion profile, it was proved that this phage clone contained the pMCP's promoter region, of which the full length was approximately 13 kb upstream the genome.
B. Determination of the activity of pMCP's promoter region Preparation of a construct for assaying promoter activity The promoter activity was determined with a system utilizing luciferase cDNA.
A 5.4-kb promoter region of pMCP bearing a T7 primer recognition site for sequencing (as the 13-kb DNA of the phage clone was too large to integrate, it was digested at the EcoRI sites) was digested with restriction enzymes BstEll and BssHII from the above-described sequencing plasmid. DNA sequence of the 5.4-kb promoter gene was conventionally determined as shown by Sequence No. 1 (5,418 bp).
The terminal of the above-described promoter region was blunted with T4 DNA polymerase and subcloned in the pGL-3 basic vector (Promega) for luciferase-activity determination at the Smal sites. The vector for luciferase activity determination itself lacks a promoter gene, so it is useful to evaluate the promoter activity by integrating a to-be-tested promoter into the upstream part of the luciferase gene and determining luciferase activity. The luciferase activity can be determined by lysing transformed cells to prepare enzymecontaining lysate, allowing the lysate to react with a substrate of the enzyme and reading emitting fluorescence intensity.
Preparation of deletion mutants To obtain the promoter regions of various sizes, deletion mutants were prepared with a Kilosequence kit (Takara).
A series of pGL-3 vectors bearing promoters of 0.07- and 0.05-kb lengths were thus prepared.
Similarly, a pGL-3 vector bearing an SV40 promoter was prepared for control.
Furthermore, a vector bearing a reversed sequence of the abovedescribed 5.4-kb promoter and that bearing human DAF (hDAF) promoter (approximately 4 kb) were also prepared for comparison.
Electroporation of the plasmids into porcine aorta endothelial cells Luciferase activities were determined by using a porcine aorta endothelial cell line.
Cultured cells were detached with trypsin/EDTA solution, washed and suspended in HeBS buffer at a concentration of 3x106 cells/800 jl.
A 800-pl portion of the cell suspension and a 15-gg portion of the abovedescribed plasmids were transferred to a cuvette with 0.4-cm electrode clearance (a cuvette for cell electroporation) and electroporated with a Gene Pulser (Bio Rad) at 500 jF and 300 V. The plasmids were integrated into the cells.
Determination of the luciferase activity The above-described cells were cultured for 48 hours, collected, washed with PBS and treated with the cell-lysing solution for 10 min. Ten pl of the cell lysate was mixed with 50 p1 of the substrate of luciferase. Fluorescence of the reaction mixture was read with a Luminescence Reader (Aloka).
The results are shown in Fig. 1. The activities per 1x1 0 5 viable cells were calculated. Each column shows a relative activity, where the activity of a control pGL-3 vector bearing SV40 promoter is defined as 100. In Fig.1, a symbol of -5.4 kb means a vector bearing a reversed fragment of about 5.4-kb promoter region. Similarly, that of hDAF means a vector bearing the hDAF promoter.
From the luciferase activities, the activities of the promoters ranging from approximately 0.07 to 1.7 kb were higher than that of the positive control, which was higher than hDAF promoter's activity (Fig. Activities of the promoters of approximately5.
4 2.4- and 0.05-kb lengths were also noticed. The vector bearing the reversed fragment, however, showed no activity. From these results, it was evident that the above-described regions certainly possessed promoter activities.
Example 2 Sequencing the promoter region DNA of an approximately 1.7-kb promoter region possessing a high activity as shown in Fig. 1 was sequenced.
With the T7 primer-recognition site which had been integrated into the upstream site of each deletion mutant, DNA was sequenced by the dye primer method. Sequencing was repeated twice. With regions difficult to identify, they were subcloned into pBSIIKS+ and sequenced by using the T3 primer recognition sites.
As a result, it was evident that the above-described approximately 1.7-kb promoter region possessed the DNA sequence as defined in Sequence No. 2 (1,622 bases).
Example 3 Determination of the promoter activity (Expression of the human complement inhibitor) O Transfection hDAFcDNA was connected to each of 5.4-kb (Sequence No. 1.7-kb (Sequence No. 2) and 0.9-kb pMCP promoters or hDAF promoter. These genes were linearized, additionally ligated with a neomycin resistance gene as a selection marker and transfected into to 3x106 porcine cells by electroporation at 500 pF and 300 V with a Gene Pulser (Bio Rad). The cells were cultured in a culture medium containing 250 pg/ml neomycin sulfate (Gibco). Colonyforming cells were collected. Expression of hDAF on the cell surface was analyzed with an FACScan (Becton Dickinson) after staining the cells with biotinylated anti-hDAF monoclonal antibodies (IA1 0,11H6 and VHIlA7; Kinoshita, et al.(1985) J. Exp. Med. 162: 75) and PE-conjugated streptavidin.
Assay for complement resistance Some clones obtained by the above-described method were selected.
Fifteen-thousand cells of each clone were allowed to react with antibodies and complement in a 96-well plate. As the antibodies, 100 pl of inactivated human serum was added to each well and allowed to stand for 30 min at 4 OC.
After washing with PBS, appropriately diluted normal human serum was added to each well as a complement source and allowed to stand for 3 h at 37 °C.
Surviving cells were determined with a WST-1 (Behringer Mannheim).
Results 1. Comparison of expression with various promoters: A part of the results indicating relationship between each promoter and hDAF expression is shown in Fig. 2.
The horizontal axis of Fig. 2 FL2-H, represents the amount of hDAF expressed; it increases as the axis shifts rightwards. The vertical axis, count, represents cell number; it increases as the axis shifts upwards. Each peak shows the activity of a promoter indicated by the label. Black and blank peaks indicate FACScan responses obtained by cells reacted without and with antihDAF antibodies, respectively. As a result, no hGAF was expressed without the promoter. Comparing with hDAF promoter, any of pMCP promoters expressed hDAF effectively more than 20 times. Namely, it was confirmed that approximately 1.7- and 0.9-kb promoters effectively expressed the human complement inhibitor in the porcine endothelial cells.
2. Comparison of resistance against complement by various promoters: No resistance was noticed in 50% human serum, if hDAF was expressed by the hDAF promoter; whereas, resistance of more than 80% was noticed even in 100% human serum, if hDAF was expressed by the pMCP promoters.
Therefore, it was confirmed that hDAF exhibited its original function and resisted against the human complement, if hDAF was expressed on the porcine endothelial cells by the pMCP promoters.
17.
SEQUENCE LISTING <160> NUMBER OF SEQ ID NOS: 2 <210> SEQ ID NO: 1 <211> LENGTH: 5418 <212> TYPE: DNA <213> ORGANISM: Porcine sp.
<220> FEATURE: <223> OTHER INFORMATION: n g, c, a, or t <400> SEQUENCE: 1 gaattctgcg tacacggggc cccggtggct ttacatcatc gagccgtgjtc tacaacctac acaacaacgc cagatcctt gctcaaacct gcggcctcat agatgctagt cagattcgtl actcctaatt ctagatcgat ctagaattag gagjttcccai tctgactagc atctatgagg ccgcagtttg agccctgtcc ctggcgttgt tgjtgtaggtt gtagacacgg ctcggatccc taaagccacc ggggccccgt gctacgcaga attcntgcac
C
a t t gctacagcga catgggatcc acccaatgca tgaggacagg tctgctgagc cacaatggga tgtggctcag cagaaacgaa tcatgcattg ggttaaggat atgtcgctgt agcgatgatg cccgggggat ccactagttc tagcnagaga gttgaaaatt taaagaacat ttctccccta atctcccaa aggacaggta cccgtggcac tggaaaaata caggcaagca acccatgagt atgctccagg gttcggccta atggaagcct gaacaatgcc tatcacatcg atatgggcaa acatgaaaag tgggjtttctg 0* 0 0 0 0 000 0 000000 0 00 0 0 0 000 0 000 0000 00 0 0* 0.0 0 0 0 00 0 00 00 0 000000 00 00 0 0 0 .0 0 00 0 0* 00 0 aagaagtaac acaaggaaaa acaaatatct ctatgggaaa tccacatctg tgccattctt agagaagtca agaatcaaag caagccttca ttaaagac tagaaattaa atggctttct tagaatgaaa attctctatc atgttgtatg ttgtttttcc gatgcctgtg actttttaat tattgcatat attaatgata gcctttcatc tttcatctaa actgctaaca ttctaatttt ttttaagjtct .gtgacattaa atttaatcta atacacegat aaaccaagag aaaacaaaat cataatggag gtcagtgggc gctatgatta tgcaagaaat ctgtgnagjtt tttttattat tc&cctaact tgtattattg agcaattctg aaagcagggg ctggaccaac tgaccttcag gtttttattg CCtttttgta caaaagjtgtg atgtaatttt Ctgtcttcag cattataata ggaatattgt ttataacgta tttactgttt gagtacctgt tccttctgag aaatgccctt gaatgctctc gagttaacag ccaagtaaga taggtgcaag cagaggtggc agtgctccca cctgtgttta gcagttctct tacgggtttt cttcctgttc agaatccctg tgjtataacag ggcccatcgg ctggcaggtg cccacctagc ggaccaacag cagaaacatg gcttaactat cacaacacct aaaaagcgcc ctgatggggt aaagcctctg ccttcatgct gctgccccgt ctctgaaaag caggacgtaa atatacaatt taggaggtaa gagggacatc tgccattgtt ttctttaaca cagtcagcct attcctaagg tttgcagagg nttctccatc cctcctcatc aggcgccacc agtgtttgag ctcgcgggac cttaggaagt gatctccggg taaagagata agacagttgIt 8&ttcattcc cattaaaatc aaaagctctc atgggcagag ccgtgttcag ctgtttaatg agctgccata ttctcacagg cccctcgttc tcacggtcaa gacagtagct tttcagagac agaaacgtcc cgcgtttgac aatcccagcc acctccctcc acctaccatc gagctcaaaa cacggwntac agacaagcat ccgcttgaca acatctctag gagggggtgg acgcaaagcc ttgactctgg agttctagtc t&Ctccgccc ttgggctcag acactaagag ccatgcctga tttaggaaaa ctgtccgtac aaatcctgct ctcttcctag ttcctgaagt cagcatttgc taagtccacg ctgggggagg agcaacaccc acttatttca ttyagtatcc 480 540 600 660 720 780 840 900 960 1020 1080 1140 1200 1260 1320 1380 1440 1500 1560 1620 1680 1740 1800 1860 1920 1980 2040 2100 2160 2220 2280 2340 2400 2460 2520 2580 2640 ataggcatat fltcatgcacc tggtataggc CtCtCtctca gcactggaga tacagcaaga aaacgctatt cctgccccat ggagcttgtw maraaaaata gannnaaaaa Ccctttaflaa anggaagctr ccngmtgggn cmaagtnaaa attaagtaaa aagaaawccg tgarraaacc cttcagtnat attaagaaag aaantagctt gatgaaaccc caqgtgtana aattoncact aaaacaatgs tcccaattaa aacccccmaa ttcatggaat ttactcnagt aflCCtgflaac taggraaacc aaattctagc Cfatagtttc tcccttctaa atnttctcat gagaaaacaa yttatttcca aaganatttt ccatgatggg gaaagttttt ttcaactttg ctcaggtata aactgaanat acagcattaa agtaaagata gttgcagaga ccaccaaat& gatacccgtt ttcanaaaaa gtgccaacat ggagccagag aacatttccg ttacatcacg cttttacggc tttgaaaatt aacagagatg ataatccccc mccttgggtt tccnactccn tCCCtCCtna attttacctc ctttaattgt catcatgtct ggagattata atccaagata ctaagatgtt 18.
@0 0: *0 0Oo .0 0 00 0: tatntcatac gtgctggtct catctccgag tccactgttg tcagaaaatg aggacaaaaa ttcacaatag aagacgtggt gccatttgca gaaagagaaa catgaaactt csccaagggg gcaaaactat aactatanct tgtgtgtgtk acaccgtaaa tccaatgtgt cggagagctt attctcacca aaaatttctt acagccaaag atctcttttt ttgctttttc tagaatttca agggcttata gataaactct aaaaaaggta gctgacattt cttaatactg tctacaaaaa acgttctcac aaatacggca aataaaacat cccagtgtga Ctaagtgact tcaggccacg aaattttgcc gtgccccagt CtCtagggtt atcgcctcca gggtagaaaa gtaaaactgt gtgggaatgt aagtatagaa attcgctgca ccaagacatg atatacacac gcaacatggc gacaaatacc tccacagaaa ggargggggg tgcctttnga agtcacttgc agagagagag ccattaaata ttaaaagcaa ccattcctta ttctatgaac taccaggatc aganatatac aagtgtatca tgcttacaa atccataaag ttttctccaa aaatggaact agttaaaaag ttattctttg gtcatgttac aatcttactc tctcaccaag cttaaggcac tgagjttgttc tgtaataatt ttaagctgtt agacacttcg tgactcgtgc ccccaccaga tctgttttca cacagtgtgt ggaaattcca ttaaatacaa aaactggjtac ctaccacagg aaagatgcat gaaacgacct aatggaatac atggctggaa acatgatatc agaaaacctn aagaccgtgg atggataagc kLntagaacat agactggctc aaaatccagt taaagttcta ccatcctctc aaaagagcag ccaaatgtaa ataagccttt atatattatt tacggtttct ctacctattg atttatacat agaggtttaa taaaagtttg acaacaaata ttttctttcc attcctaatg tcccaacagt cctcgtcctt caaggccaga taccttccca gggagaacaa gtagcggacg caaagattga gccctgaagg ggtcgctgcg ctnanaagct tggtttgttg ttaaagttct aatcactatg atccagcact gcacccatag aaatgtccat tactcaagtc ctagagactc acttatatct catggacttt gaggactggg caatgggatc gatggaggat cactttgctg aaaaatttaa taattgcagc attccttaac ctgatttaca caaagggtca caactattaa cattttaata caaatcgatt aaaattcctt ccttgctcac aagttatgtc gggaggctgc ggaagaaaat ttttgctaat ttccttcatt cccaactcta acctttttca ccatagagtt ggggtcctct tggccaaacc ctcaaccctg gccagggccc gtgtcgggcc ctttattctc cttgcaagaa aacccaggaa acagttaaag aaaaacagga ctcactcctg ctatgttcac caacagctga atgaaaaaga atgctaaatg ggaatctaat ggagaacaga gagctttggg ctgctgtacc natntgagan tatagtagaa aaataaaaac agatgcatct tctaatgtga ggjttggattt atatagaaaa ttttgattaa aaagaaattg ttttttatat atatttctgc agjttctgacg catttaaaac tggtcgcccc gtcaatgtct catacaggct gagagattgg acgacggtcg tgcatgtgta gagccccaac ccgggggggt tttcgtgatt ggaatccca gggtgtccag ccacgaaacc taattcagcg tccaaacatt ctcttcagta ggtaccctcc tggaggtact ggcacctatc tgcagcagca atgcattaag acaaaagaat aagtcagtga atacgacaca cttgtggttt gttaatagat agaaccrggg aaagaatatn aactgacaga acacattggt gaggtttaca tacaggttct ttcaaaaaaa cttaaaaagc tatccaacga cangaggeac actgtttgca taaacactta atgtctttgg ttttaacaca cccaacattg ttttttactg tactcacaac tttgccggaa ctgcttccag tttcattttc atgctagtgg acaggcgaga ttgaaatcta ctattgtccc gcagtctgca gctgcccggg ttcccgaaag 2700 2760 2820 2880 2940 3000 3060 3120 3180 3240 3300 3360 3420 3480 3540 3600 3660 3720 3780 3840 3900 3960 4020 4080 4140 4200 4260 4320 4380 4440 4500 4560 4620 4680 4740 4800 4860 4920 4980 19.
agaccatgag gacccgccca ttacgaagaa gagtgcacca ggagccaggg cgtcgggccg caagggcgtc cctctctcgg cggcccgccc ettggctccg ggcggggccc aggccacgcc ttcttactcc tgctgtcgga ctcatcttcc cgaaaatg gtgtccttta caccttcccg tgjtcgggtgg cgacagctgt ccctttcccg caagccgcag cggttagttc cgcagaagga cagctgggag agaggcccgg cagcgggcgc cgcggagcag ccggagcccc gccccgcccc gcccccacgg ccccgccttg ccgggccctg gagtcectcc ctagagccac ttccgcccag cactggcctg accgcgcggg aggctcccgg ageccgtgga actcgaagag gtctccgcta ggctggtgtc gggttacctg 0 0 0 <210> SEQ ID NO: 2 <211> LENGTH: 1622 <212> TYPE: DN4A <213> ORGAN4ISM: Porcine sp.
<400> SEQUENCE: 2 gatcccaaat gtaacaaagg gtcaatatag aaaacttaaa aagcacagcc aaagagaaat atacataagc atcaatatat caaatacggt aaagctacct ccaaatttat aactagaggt aaagtaaaag tttgacaaca ttacttttct acteattoct caagtcccaa gcaccctcgt gttccaaggc aatttacctt tgttgggaga ttcggtagcg gtgccaaaga cagagccctg ttcaggtcgc cccagtgtcc accacccttt gccgcagctg tcggccggag ctttcaacta ttaattttga tattcatttt aataaaagaa ttctcaaatc gatttttttt attgaaaatt ccttatattt acatccttgc tcacagttct ttaaaagtta tgtccattta tttgggqagg ctgctggtcg antaggaaga aaatgtcaat ttccttttgc taatcataca aatgttcctt cattgagaga cagtcccaac tctaacgacg ccttaccttt ttcatgcatg cagaccatag agttgagccc cccaggggtc ctctccgggg acaatggcca aacctttcgt gacgctcaac cctgggaatc ttgagccagg gcccgggtgt aagggjtgtcg ggccccacga tgcgctttat tctctaattc tttacacctt cccgtgtcgg cccgcaagcc gcagcggtta ggagagaggc ccggcagcgg ccccgccccg ccccgccccc ttaatatcca acgaatctct ttttaagtgt attgcaagag gcacttgctt tttctgctta atatactgtt tgcatagaat ttcaatccat ctgctaaaca gacgatgtct aaacttttaa cccccccaac gtcttttttt ggcttactca ttggtttgcc gtcgctgctt tgtatttcat caacatgcta gggtacaggc gattttgaaa ccaactattg ccaggcagjtc aaccgctgcc agcgttcccg gtggcgacag gttccgcaga gcgccgcgga acggccccgc cttaagggct tatattttct ttgggataaa ctctaaatgg cacaaaaaaa ggtaagttaa attggctgac atttttattc actgcttaat actggtcatg caactctaca aaaaaatctt ggaaacgttc tcactctcac ccagaaatac ggcacttaag tttcaataaa acattgagtt gtggcccagt gtgatgjtaat gagactaagt gactttaagc tctatcaggc cacgagacac tcccaaattt tgcctgactc tgcagtgccc cagtccccac cgggctctag ggtttctgtt aaagagacca tgaggacccg ctgtttacga agaagagtgc aggaggagcc agggcgtcgg gcagcaaggg cgjtccctctc.
cttgcggccc gcccattggc tccgccgggc cctggagtca ctccctagag ccacttccgc ccagggcggg gcccaggcca 1500 cgcccactgg cctgaccgcg cgggaggctc ccggagaccg tggattctta ctcctgctgt 1560 cggaactcga agaggtctcc gctaggctgg tgtcgggtta cctgctcatc ttcccgaaaa 1620 tg 1622 0S 0 9 eq e 900 0 6 60 3* 9 0 0 900 0 @9 @09 0 0@@9 @9 0 9@ .9 9 000@ 9 9 9* 9 0*
S.
*9 99 9 0 9 99 9 @9 9

Claims (3)

1. An isolated DNA comprising SEQ ID NO:1 or isolated DNA comprising a part of the sequence, wherein said part has a size of at least 0.05 kb from the 3' end of the base sequence defined as SEQ ID NO:1.
2. Isolated DNA comprising 4.1, 2.4, 1.7, 0.9, 0.5, 0.07 or 0.05 kb from the 3' end of the base sequence defined as SEQ ID NO:1 as claimed in claim 1.
3. Isolated DNA comprising a base sequence defined as SEQ ID NO:2 as claimed in claim 1. 4e 00 090 0 a. 9 S. S NIPPON MEAT PACKERS, INC. 10 By its Registered Patent Attorneys Freehills Carter Smith Beadle 23 December 2002
AU47515/02A 1996-05-17 2002-06-12 Promoters for swine complement inhibitors Ceased AU782459B2 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU47515/02A AU782459B2 (en) 1996-05-17 2002-06-12 Promoters for swine complement inhibitors

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP8-148335 1996-05-17
AU27904/97A AU2790497A (en) 1996-05-17 1997-05-19 Promoters for swine complement inhibitors
AU47515/02A AU782459B2 (en) 1996-05-17 2002-06-12 Promoters for swine complement inhibitors

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU27904/97A Division AU2790497A (en) 1996-05-17 1997-05-19 Promoters for swine complement inhibitors

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
AU4751502A AU4751502A (en) 2002-08-01
AU782459B2 true AU782459B2 (en) 2005-07-28

Family

ID=34812557

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
AU47515/02A Ceased AU782459B2 (en) 1996-05-17 2002-06-12 Promoters for swine complement inhibitors

Country Status (1)

Country Link
AU (1) AU782459B2 (en)

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
AU4751502A (en) 2002-08-01

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
Strauss et al. Germ line transmission of a yeast artificial chromosome spanning the murine α1 (I) collagen locus
Dziennis et al. The CD11b promoter directs high-level expression of reporter genes in macrophages in transgenic mice [published erratum appears in Blood 1995 Apr 1; 85 (7): 1983]
Li et al. Regulation of the PU. 1 gene by distal elements
Gordon et al. Regulation of Thy-1 gene expression in transgenic mice
Robertson et al. Mapping and characterization of a novel cochlear gene in human and in mouse: a positional candidate gene for a deafness disorder, DFNA9
US5596089A (en) Oligonucleotide probe and primers specific to bovine or porcine male genomic DNA
PL195604B1 (en) Regulating dna of hamster&#39;s ef-1alpha transcription
Amakawa et al. Human Jk recombination signal binding protein gene (IGKJRB): comparison with its mouse homologue
Yukawa et al. Strain dependency of B and T lymphoma development in immunoglobulin heavy chain enhancer (E mu)-myc transgenic mice.
Chen et al. A lymphoproliferative abnormality associated with inappropriate expression of the Thy-1 antigen in transgenic mice
Miura et al. Molecular cloning of a human RP105 homologue and chromosomal localization of the mouse and human RP105 genes (Ly64andLY64)
US6482937B1 (en) Porcine Oct-4 promoter
US20020045241A1 (en) T cells specific for kidney carcinoma
US6255474B1 (en) Promoters for swine complement inhibitors
EP0692026B1 (en) A human t-cell receptor of the g-protein coupled receptor family
Boyer et al. Position-dependent variegation of a CD4 minigene with targeted expression to mature CD4+ T cells.
AU782459B2 (en) Promoters for swine complement inhibitors
Charreau et al. Analysis of human CD59 tissue expression directed by the CMV-IE-1 promoter in transgenic rats
Konrad et al. Cloning, structure, cellular localization, and possible function of the tumor suppressor gene lethal (3) malignant blood neoplasm-1 of Drosophila melanogaster
CA2254889C (en) A promoter gene for a porcine complement inhibitor
US6172278B1 (en) Ikaros transgenic cells and mice
WO1999033987A1 (en) Cloning of a high growth gene
Sinclair et al. Cloning of the complete Ly-6E. 1 gene and identification of DNase I hypersensitive sites corresponding to expression in hematopoietic cells
Kim et al. Identification of candidate target genes for EVI-1, a zinc finger oncoprotein, using a novel selection strategy
JP3897858B2 (en) Promoter of porcine complement inhibitor