To co-express multiple target proteins, we engineered a single-component chimeric tobacco mosaic virus (TMV)-based vector containing homologous and heterologous capsid protein subgenomic RNA promoters. Delivery of this vector into Nicotiana benthamiana plants via agroinfiltration resulted in co-expression of two reporter genes within a single cell. Furthermore, co-expression of a host-specific antisense RNA or a silencing suppressor protein from this vector augmented the accumulation of green fluorescent protein or a vaccine antigen, hemagglutinin from avian influenza virus A/Vietnam/1194/04. These findings suggest that this chimeric vector utilizing the homologous and heterologous subgenomic TMV promoters has a potential for high-level production of multiple therapeutic proteins including monoclonal antibodies.
Summary Female transgenic mice lacking a functional c-mos proto-oncogene develop ovarian teratomas, indicating that c-mos may behave as a tumour-suppressor gene for this type of tumour. We have analysed the entire coding region of the c-MOS gene in a series of human ovarian teratomas to determine whether there are any cancer-causing alterations. DNA from twenty teratomas was analysed by single-strand conformational analysis (SSCA) and heteroduplex analysis (HA) to screen for somatic and germline mutations. In nine of these tumours the entire gene was also sequenced. A previously reported polymorphism and a single new sequence variant were identified, neither of which we would predict to be disease-causing alterations. These results suggest that mutations in the coding region of the c-MOS gene do not play a significant role in the genesis of human ovarian teratomas.
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