
doi: 10.1007/bf00286644
pmid: 6317538
Trisomy 21 human fibroblasts are more sensitive to human interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) than are diploid controls, consistent with the location of the gene (IFRC) which codes for the IFN-alpha receptor on chromosome 21. When compared in the antiviral assay, the difference in sensitivity is five- to tenfold, much greater than the 50% difference in IFRC gene dosage. An understanding of the mechanism by which this amplification of gene dosage occurs is relevant to the specific pathology of Down's syndrome and as a model system for studying the pathogenic effects of chromosomal aneuploidy. The enzyme (2'-5') oligoisoadenylate synthetase (2-5A synthetase), which is believed to be central to the interferon-induced antiviral response, is induced 50% more in trisomy 21 fibroblasts than in diploid controls. Thus the amplification in response occurs subsequent to the binding of IFN-alpha to its receptor and the triggering of the first set of intracellular events, the latter exemplified by the induction of 2-5A synthetase. Similar results were obtained with IFN-gamma, consistent with other evidence which indicates that a gene coding for a separate IFN-gamma receptor is also located on chromosome 21.
Interferon Inducers, Receptors, Cell Surface, Fibroblasts, Diploidy, Polynucleotide Ligases, Genetic Code, Enzyme Induction, Interferon Type I, Humans, Down Syndrome, Receptors, Interferon
Interferon Inducers, Receptors, Cell Surface, Fibroblasts, Diploidy, Polynucleotide Ligases, Genetic Code, Enzyme Induction, Interferon Type I, Humans, Down Syndrome, Receptors, Interferon
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