The function of the enzyme butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) in the developing and mature brain is still unclear. We have inserted 877 bp of the 5' upstream region plus 106 bp of the exert 1 of the rabbit BChE gene in reverse orientation under control of an SV40 early promoter derivative in an expression vector. This vector was introduced by calcium phosphate-mediated transfaction into embryonic chicken retina cells during the first days of reaggregation culture. Depending on the retinal origin, the transfected cell population forms histotypic retina-like spheres, so-called resetted or stratified retinospheroids. We show that antisense 5'-BChE gene expression decreased the steady-state mRNA level of BChE and the translation of the BChE protein, inhibited proliferation, and accelerated histogenesis in both cellular systems. The pronounced effects of antisense 5'-BChE transfection of spheroids document a key role of BChE during the early reaggregation process of retinal cells, most likely by regulating their growth and differentiation.
CITATION STYLE
Robitzki, A., Mack, A., Chatonnet, A., & Layer, P. G. (1997). Transfection of reaggregating embryonic chicken retinal cells with an antisense 5’-DNA butyrylcholinesterase expression vector inhibits proliferation and alters morphogenesis. Journal of Neurochemistry, 69(2), 823–833. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1471-4159.1997.69020823.x
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