Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.5.1.3 (dihydrofolate reductase)
5,819 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The stability of chromosomes carrying amplified CAD (carbamyl phosphate synthetase-aspartate transcarbamylase-dihydroorotase) or DHFR (dihydrofolate reductase) genes was studied in V79 Chinese hamster cell derivatives resistant to PALA (N-phosphonacetyl-L-aspartate) and MTX (methotrexate), respectively. Cells were maintained in the presence of the selective drugs during the study. In both metaphase chromosomes and interphase nuclei, amplified regions were localized by in situ hybridization. In MTX-resistant cells, the amplification-bearing chromosome moved sluggishly at anaphase and gave rise to bud-shaped formations in interphase nuclei. It is suggested that these buds could eventually separate as micronuclei. In both MTX- and PALA-resistant cells, amplified DNA was observed in micronuclei in interphase and in displaced chromosomes in metaphase. Finally, amplification-bearing dicentric chromosomes were found in both drug-resistant cell lines. Cumulatively, these observations indicate that the presence of the amplified region in a chromosome renders it unstable: chromosomes bearing an amplified region tended to be excluded from cells, and rearrangements were more frequent than in normal chromosomes.
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PMID:The presence of amplified regions affects the stability of chromosomes in drug-resistant Chinese hamster cells. 256 61

Baby hamster kidney (BHK) cells selected simultaneously with N-phosphonacetyl-L-aspartate (PALA) and methotrexate (MTX) gave rise to doubly resistant colonies at frequencies 20 to 260 times greater than the product of the independent frequencies found with PALA or MTX alone. Double resistance was due to amplification of both target genes, CAD and DHFR. Four independent doubly resistant "MP" lines were selected and characterized. Cells resistant to coformycin, pyrazofurin, or ouabain were generated from all four MP lines at rates up to 25 times greater than the rates for BHK cells. These three drugs select cells that have amplified the genes for their target enzymes. Therefore, we conclude that the four MP lines have an amplificator phenotype. All four grew much more slowly than BHK cells, indicating that the amplificator phenotype may be linked to significant defects in metabolism or cell division.
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PMID:Hamster cells with increased rates of DNA amplification, a new phenotype. 381 26

We have studied cell lines of rodent and human origin for their propensity to become resistant to antifolates (methotrexate, trimetrexate), phosphonacetyl-L-aspartate (PALA), and colcemid, resistances associated with amplification of the DHFR, CAD, and MDR1 genes, respectively. We have employed two different methods: (1) a shallow step-wise selection protocol, where time to attain specified resistance is the quantitative measure, (2) the frequency of resistant colonies at specified drug concentrations. Although there are advantages and disadvantages to both methods, the two methods gave the same relative ranking of cell lines. Striking differences in the propensity for gene amplification (resistance) were found: human cell lines were less prone to amplify genes than Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. This ranking was similar with all of the agents employed. Additionally, we observed that whereas PALA resistance in CHO cells is associated with amplification of the CAD gene, PALA resistance in the two human cell lines studied (HeLaS3 and VA13) was not associated with amplification and/or overexpression of the CAD gene, and thus this resistance to PALA occurs by an unknown mechanism.
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PMID:The propensity for gene amplification: a comparison of protocols, cell lines, and selection agents. 750 68

We have investigated the drug resistance and gene amplification potential of NIH3T3 cells transfected with sequences coding for K-FGF, a known oncogene product, or bFGF, a non-oncogene member of the fibroblast growth factor family. Resistance to methotrexate, N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate and hydroxyurea was observed with K-fgf transfectants, due to amplification of dihydrofolate reductase, CAD or ribonucleotide reductase R2 genes, respectively. In keeping with the increase in gene amplification frequency, cells transfected with the K-fgf gene also exhibited a marked increase in CAD gene amplification rate, as determined by fluctuation analysis in the presence of N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate. Cells transfected with bFGF encoding cDNA also exhibited a significant elevation in N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate resistance, and CAD gene amplification. Treatment with suramin, which interferes with the interaction of fibroblast growth factors with their cell surface receptors, did not decrease the drug resistance properties of K-fgf transfected cells. These observations with suramin and the findings with bFGF, which lacks a conventional signal sequence for secretion, suggests that the growth factor-mediated effects on drug resistance and gene amplification occur through an intracellular as opposed to autocrine mode of action. The finding that aberrant growth factor expression regulates gene amplification opens up new possibilities for investigating intracellular mechanisms relevant to this process and also describes new functions for the altered expression of K-FGF and bFGF, which are relevant to mechanisms of malignant progression.
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PMID:Fibroblast growth factor mediated alterations in drug resistance, and evidence of gene amplification. 790 43

Ribonucleotide reductase is a highly regulated, cell cycle-controlled activity that plays an important role in DNA synthesis and repair. Recent studies have shown that elevated expression of the rate-limiting R2 component of ribonucleotide reductase increases Raf-1 protein activation and mitogen-activated protein kinase activity and acts as a novel malignancy determinant in cooperation with activated oncogenes like H-ras. We show that hydroxyurea-resistant mouse L cells with elevated R2 gene expression and increased ribonucleotide reductase activity exhibit significantly decreased sensitivities to the chemotherapeutic compounds N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate (PALA) and methotrexate (MTX). Furthermore, BALB/c 3T3 cells containing a retroviral expression vector encoding the R2 sequence also showed decreased sensitivity to PALA and MTX when compared to cells containing the same vector but without the R2 coding region. Colonies that developed in the presence of PALA or MTX contained amplifications of the CAD or dihydrofolate reductase genes and exhibited wild-type p53 function as determined in sequence-specific p53 binding activity assays. NIH-3T3 cells containing the R2 retroviral expression vector also showed significantly decreased sensitivity to hydroxyurea and MTX but not to PALA. Furthermore, NIH-3T3 cells transfected with a vector containing the R2 sequence in antisense orientation exhibited increased sensitivity to hydroxyurea, PALA, and MTX. Similarly, mouse 10T1/2 cells that are highly transformed and drug resistant due to alterations in H-ras and a mutant oncogenic form of p53 exhibited significant increases in sensitivity to hydroxyurea, PALA, and MTX when transfected with a vector containing the R2 sequence in antisense orientation and compared to cells containing the same vector without the antisense sequence. These results indicate that altered expression of the R2 component is capable of significantly modifying drug sensitivity properties of tumor cells. We hypothesize that this occurs, at least in part, through a mechanism of increased genetic instability that is independent of direct p53 mutation or loss and involves R2 stimulation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase signal pathway.
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PMID:Ribonucleotide reductase R2 gene expression and changes in drug sensitivity and genome stability. 935 52

Amplification of genes involved in signal transduction and cell cycle control occurs in a significant fraction of human cancers. Loss of p53 function has been proposed to enable cells with gene amplification to arise spontaneously during growth in vitro. However, this conclusion derives from studies employing the UMP synthesis inhibitor N-phosphonacetyl-L-aspartate (PALA), which, in addition to selecting for cells containing extra copies of the CAD locus, enables p53-deficient cells to enter S phase and acquire the DNA breaks that initiate the amplification process. Thus, it has not been possible to determine if gene amplification occurs spontaneously or results from the inductive effects of the selective agent. The studies reported here assess whether p53 deficiency leads to spontaneous genetic instability by comparing cell cycle responses and amplification frequencies of the human fibrosarcoma cell line HT1080 when treated with PALA or with methotrexate, an antifolate that, under the conditions used, should not generate DNA breaks. p53-deficient HT1080 cells generated PALA-resistant variants containing amplified CAD genes at a frequency of >10(-5). By contrast, methotrexate selection did not result in resistant cells at a detectable frequency (<10(-9)). However, growth of HT1080 cells under conditions that induced DNA breakage prior to selection generated methotrexate-resistant clones containing amplified dihydrofolate reductase sequences at a high frequency. These data demonstrate that, under standard growth conditions, p53 loss is not sufficient to enable cells to produce the DNA breaks that initiate amplification. We propose that p53-deficient cells must proceed through S phase under conditions that induce DNA breakage for genetic instability to occur.
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PMID:Gene amplification in a p53-deficient cell line requires cell cycle progression under conditions that generate DNA breakage. 956 27

The view that chemical or physical oncogenesis and tumor therapy resistance represent different parts of common cellular alterations gained considerable attractiveness, because it explains the inherent unreponsiveness of many tumors. Viruses are potent oncogenes and are causally linked to approximately one-fifth of all human malignancies. Whether viral oncogenesis exerts comparable effects was less clear. Recent progress in experimental research provided ample evidence that viruses affect response of tumor cells toward anti-cancer drugs and irradiation. Resistance to cytostatic drugs and radiation develops by alterations at the drug-target sites (i.e., DNA or specific target proteins), upstream (i.e., detoxification mechanisms), or downstream of them (i.e., programmed cell death). Viruses interfere with specific cellular genes at these three levels. Viral proteins induce the expression and expression of drug resistance genes, that is, MDR1, DHFR, or CAD. Viral interactions with the tumor suppressor genes (p53, pRB) abrogate cell cycle arrests and disturb DNA repair of drug- and radiation-induced DNA lesions. The readiness to commit cellular suicide (apoptosis) is also affected by viral genes. The connection between viral oncogenesis and the response of tumor cells to treatment adds a new dimension to tumor biology and may have important consequences for oncological treatment modalities in the future.
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PMID:Impact of viral oncogenesis on responses to anti-cancer drugs and irradiation. 1100 11