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l-Gulono-gamma-lactone oxidase (GULO) is a critical enzyme present in most mammalian species that is required for the terminal step in vitamin C biosynthesis. Primates are absolutely dependent on exogenously supplied dietary vitamin C due to inactivation of the Gulo gene by mutation over 40 million years ago. In this study, we report the cloning and expression of the murine l-gulono-gamma-lactone oxidase cDNA and gene. The cDNA (2.3 kb) encodes an open reading frame of 440 amino acids that shows high homology to the rat l-gulono-gamma-lactone oxidase (>94%). The Gulo gene is 22 kb long and contains 12 exons. The 11 introns range in size from 479 to 5641 bp. Northern blot analysis revealed high expression of Gulo transcript in the liver. To investigate whether metabolic loss of vitamin C biosynthesis in human cells can be corrected by heterologous expression of GULO, we constructed a first-generation adenoviral vector expressing the murine GULO cDNA under the transcriptional control of the murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) early promoter. Low rescue efficiency of Gulo-expressing adenoviral constructs and reduced viral growth in HEK293 cells were observed, suggesting that overexpression of Gulo may be inhibitory to cell growth. Placement of a removable stuffer fragment flanked by lox sites between the MCMV promoter and the Gulo gene resulted in efficient vector rescue and normal viral replication in parental HEK293 cells and high-level expression of Gulo in HEK293 cells expressing Cre recombinase. Cells infected with Gulo-expressing vectors overexpressed an FAD-containing protein that corresponded in size to that predicted for recombinant GULO protein and expressed a functional enzyme as measured by the conversion of l-gulono-gamma-lactone to ascorbic acid in cell-free extracts. The cloning of the murine Gulo cDNA and the construction of Gulo-expressing adenoviral vectors are vital steps toward determining the role of vitamin C in basic metabolism and in disease.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ygeno.2003.08.018 | DOI Listing |
bioRxiv
July 2025
Children's Medical Center Research Institute, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, USA.
The ability to synthesize essential molecules is sometimes lost in evolution. A classic example is ascorbate (Vitamin C), which is synthesized in most animals by L-Gulonolactone Oxidase (GULO), an enzyme lost multiple independent times in animal evolution. This event is thought to be evolutionarily neutral, however, -deficient animals including humans need to obtain ascorbate from their diet and are susceptible to ascorbate deficiency and scurvy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
May 2025
Laboratory for Stem Cell and Developmental Epigenetics, Department of Development and Regeneration, KU Leuven, Leuven 3000, Belgium.
Maternal dietary insufficiencies can reshape the fetal epigenome during gestation, contributing to birth defects and developmental disorders. Vitamin C (VitC) is a critical co-factor for Ten-Eleven-Translocation (TET) DNA demethylases, but the impact of its deficiency on embryonic development has gone largely unappreciated. Here, we show that maternal VitC deficiency in L-gulonolactone oxidase ()-deficient mice, which like humans are unable to synthesize VitC, can cause highly penetrant developmental delays and malformations in non-inbred embryos during the vulnerable period of gastrulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Nutr Sci Vitaminol (Tokyo)
April 2025
Faculty of Food and Health Sciences, Showa Women's University.
Blood ascorbic acid (AsA) concentrations are lower in diabetic patients than in the general population, a phenomenon that is also observed in streptozotocin (STZ)-diabetic models of type 1 diabetes. However, the occurrence of diabetes in KK-Ay mice, a model for type 2 diabetes, the most common form of diabetes, remains unclear. Although this mouse can synthesize AsA, understanding its level changes during diabetes progression could help in analyzing AsA's effects on type 2 diabetes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Biophys Res Commun
June 2025
Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Yale School of Public Health, Yale University, New Haven, CT, 06510, USA. Electronic address:
Glutathione (GSH) and ascorbate (vitamin C) are key antioxidants with well-established biochemical and clinical interplay in protecting against oxidative stress. Glutamate-cysteine ligase is the rate-limiting enzyme in GSH biosynthesis; its modifier subunit (GCLM) regulates tissue GSH levels. L-gulono-γ-lactone oxidase (GULO) catalyzes a critical step in ascorbate biosynthesis; Gulo-knockout (Gulo) mice, like humans, require dietary vitamin C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrief Bioinform
November 2024
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL 33431, United States.
Understanding the genetic basis of phenotypic variation is fundamental to biology. Here we introduce GAP, a novel machine learning framework for predicting binary phenotypes from gaps in multi-species sequence alignments. GAP employs a neural network to predict the presence or absence of phenotypes solely from alignment gaps, contrasting with existing tools that require additional and often inaccessible input data.
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