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Query: EC:1.6.5.2 (
NQO1
)
6,196
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Resistance may limit the clinical usefulness of a variety of chemotherapeutic drugs including mitomycin C (MMC). The MMC-sensitive HT-29 colon cancer cell line and its MMC-resistant subline, HT-29R13, were studied in vitro under aerobic conditions to help characterize the mechanisms associated with MMC resistance. HT-29R13 cells exhibit approximately 2-fold resistance to MMC compared with HT-29 cells and lack the typical multidrug-resistance pattern; resistance is stable in the absence of drug exposure. Levels of glutathione (GSH) and total glutathione-S-transferase (GST) activity were not different between the two cell lines; however, levels of GSH reductase and GSH peroxidase were increased significantly in HT-29R13. Although total GST activity was unchanged, GST-pi and GST-alpha isoenzyme expression as measured using western blot were increased significantly in HT-29R13 compared with HT-29.
DT-diaphorase
levels and
topoisomerase
II activity were decreased significantly in HT-29R13. Both cell lines had equal P-glycoprotein expression. Multiple drug resistance mechanisms are present in HT-29R13 including decreased drug activation (decreased
DT-diaphorase
), increased drug detoxification (increased GST-pi and GST-alpha, GSH reductase, GSH peroxidase), and decreased accessibility of DNA targets (decreased
topoisomerase
II). Further work will be necessary to determine the degree to which each of these mechanisms contribute to MMC resistance in this model.
...
PMID:Biochemical characterization of a mitomycin C resistant colon cancer cell line variant. 790 34
We have reported the establishment of a mitomycin-C (MMC)-resistant non-small-cell lung-cancer cell line, PC-9/MC4. As determined by an MTT assay, this resistant cell line was found to be 4 times more sensitive to adriamycin (ADM) than was the parental PC-9. There were no significant differences in sensitivity to etoposide, mitoxantrone, daunomycin, epirubicin, pirarubicin, 9-aminoanthracycline or 3'-deamino-3'-morpholino-13-deoxo-10-hydroxy carminomycin. These data suggest that neither qualitative or quantitative changes in
DNA topoisomerase II
nor the enhanced repair of DNA can explain the differing sensitivity to ADM observed. No significant differences were found in the accumulation of ADM and glutathione (GSH) in these cell lines. Although total glutathione-S-transferase (GST) activity in PC-9/MC4 cells was lower than that observed in PC-9 cells and treatment with ethacrynic acid (EA) reduced sensitivity to ADM in both cell lines, relative resistance was unaffected. NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase (B5R) activity in PC-9/MC4 cells showed a 3-fold greater decrease than that in PC-9 cells, and
DT-diaphorase
(
DTD
) activity in PC-9/MC4 cells showed an approximately 200-fold greater decrease than that in PC-9 cells. Addition of dicumarol, an inhibitor of
DTD
, decreased the sensitivity of ADM of PC-9 but not of PC-9/MC4.
DTD
activity in the PC-9 cell line was inhibited by treatment with dicumarol while in PC-9/MC4 it remained unchanged. These data suggest that
DT-diaphorase
is a determinant of sensitivity to ADM in the 2 cell lines.
...
PMID:DT-diaphorase as a determinant of sensitivity to adriamycin in non-small-cell lung-cancer cell lines. 792 20
This study describes characteristics of a human bladder cancer cell line J82/MMC that is 6-fold more resistant to mitomycin C (MMC) than the parental cells. The J82/MMC subline was isolated by repeated continuous exposures of the J82/WT cells to increasing concentrations of MMC. The J82/MMC cell line showed (1) collateral sensitivity to taxol, 5-FU and
topoisomerase
II inhibitors; and (2) cross-resistance to cisplatin, melphalan and MMC analogues BMY 25282 and BMY 25067. Levels of two key MMC activation enzymes, NADPH cytochrome P450 reductase and
DT-diaphorase
, were significantly lower in J82/MMC cells compared with J82/WT, suggesting that lower sensitivity of J82/MMC cells to MMC may result from deficient drug activation. Further support is indicated by: 1) reduction in the differential in toxicity between the 2 cell lines by BMY 25282; and 2) a higher effect of
DT-diaphorase
inhibitor dicumarol on the wild-type cells compared with J82/MMC. Although glutathione (GSH) levels did not differ in these cells, a small but significant increase in GSH transferase (GST) activity was noticed in J82/MMC cells. GST inhibitor ethacrynic acid significantly enhanced MMC cytotoxicity in the J82/MMC cell line. A small but significant increase in the level of anti-oxidative enzyme catalase, but not GSH peroxidase, was also observed in J82/MMC cell line compared with J82/WT. Thus, the possibility that relatively lower sensitivity of J82/MMC cells to MMC may result from reduced oxygen radical generation cannot be ruled out. MMC-induced DNA interstrand cross-linking was markedly lower in the J82/MMC cell line compared with J82/WT. Our results suggest that the MMC resistance in the J82/MMC cell line may be multifactorial.
...
PMID:Characterization of a human bladder cancer cell line selected for resistance to mitomycin C. 807 54
Chemotherapeutic drug resistance is a major clinical problem and cause for failure in the therapy of human cancer. One of the goals of molecular oncology is to identify the underlying mechanisms, with the hope that more effective therapies can be developed. Several mechanisms have been suggested to contribute to chemoresistance: 1) amplification or overexpression of the P-glycoprotein family of membrane transporters (eg, MDR1, MRP, LRP) which decrease the intracellular accumulation of chemotherapy; 2) changes in cellular proteins involved in detoxification (eg, glutathione S-transferase pi, metallothioneins, human MutT homologue, bleomycin hydrolase, dihydrofolate reductase) or activation of the chemotherapeutic drugs (
DT-diaphorase
, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate:cytochrome P-450 reductase); 3) changes in molecules involved in DNA repair (eg, O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase,
DNA topoisomerase II
, hMLH1, p21WAF1/CIP1; 4) activation of oncogenes such as Her-2/neu, bcl-2, bcl-XL, c-myc, ras, c-jun, c-fos, MDM2, p210 BCR-abl, or mutant p53. An overview of these resistance mechanisms is presented, with a particular focus on the role of oncogenes. Some current strategies attempting to reverse their effects are discussed.
...
PMID:Role of oncogenes in resistance and killing by cancer therapeutic agents. 909 Apr 98
The influence of structure on
DT-diaphorase
substrate activity,
topoisomerase
II inhibition activity, and DNA reductive alkylation was studied for the 6-aziridinylpyrrolo[1,2-alpha]benzimidazolequinones (PBIs) and the 6-acetamidopyrrolo[1,2-alpha]benzimidazolequinones (APBIs). The PBIs are reductively activated by
DT-diaphorase
and alkylate the phosphate backbone of DNA via major groove interactions, while the APBIs are reductively inactivated by this enzyme since only the quinone form inhibits
topoisomerase
II. Bulk at the 7-position (butyl instead of methyl) significantly decreases k(cat)/K(m) for
DT-diaphorase
reductase activity for both PBIs and APBIs. As a result, a 7-butyl PBI has little cytotoxicity while the 7-butyl APBI has enhanced cytotoxicity. The type of 3-substituent and the configuration of the 3-position of the PBIs and APBIs influence
DT-diaphorase
substrate activity to a lesser degree. Bulk at the 7-position (butyl instead of methyl) had an adverse effect on APBI inhibition of
topoisomerase
II while the configuration of the 3-position had either an adverse or positive effect on inhibition of this enzyme. The configuration of the 3-position, when substituted with a hydrogen bond donor, influences the PBI reductive alkylation of DNA homopolymers. The rationale for this observation is that the R or S stereoisomers will determine if the 3-substituent points in the 3' or 5' direction and thereby influence the hydrogen-bonding interactions. The above findings were used to rationalize the relative cytotoxicity of various PBI and APBI derivatives.
...
PMID:Studies of pyrrolo[1,2-alpha]benzimidazolequinone DT-diaphorase substrate activity, topoisomerase II inhibition activity, and DNA reductive alkylation. 913 30
NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase
(
NQO1
) converts benzene-derived quinones to less toxic hydroquinones and has been implicated in benzene-associated hematotoxicity. A point mutation in codon 187 (Pro to Ser) results in complete loss of enzyme activity in homozygous subjects, whereas those with 2 wild-type alleles have normal activity. The frequency of homozygosity for the mutant allele among Caucasians and African Americans is 4% to 5% but is higher in Hispanics and Asians. Using an unambiguous polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method, we assayed nonmalignant lymphoblastoid cell lines derived from 104 patients with myeloid leukemias; 56 had therapy-related acute myeloid leukemia (t-AML), 30 had a primary myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), 9 had AML de novo, and 9 had chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). All patients had their leukemia cells karyotyped. Eleven percent of the t-AML patients were homozygous and 41% were heterozygous for the
NQO1
polymorphism; these proportions were significantly higher than those expected in a population of the same ethnic mix (P =.036). Of the 45 leukemia patients who had clonal abnormalities of chromosomes 5 and/or 7, 7 (16%) were homozygous for the inactivating polymorphism, 17 (38%) were heterozygous, and 21 (47%) had 2 wild-type alleles for
NQO1
. Thus,
NQO1
mutations were significantly increased compared with the expected proportions: 5%, 34%, and 61%, respectively (P =.002). An abnormal chromosome no. 5 or 7 was observed in 7 of 8 (88%) homozygotes, 17 of 45 (38%) heterozygotes, and 21 of 51 (41%) patients with 2 wild-type alleles. Among 33 patients with balanced translocations [14 involving bands 11q23 or 21q22, 10 with inv(16) or t(15;17), and 9 with t(9;22)], there were no homozygotes, 15 (45%) heterozygotes, and 18 (55%) with 2 wild-type alleles. Whereas fewer than 3 homozygotes were expected among the 56 t-AML patients, 6 were observed; 19 heterozygotes were expected, but 23 were observed. The gene frequency for the inactivating polymorphism (0. 31) was increased approximately 1.4-fold among the 56 t-AML patients. This increase was observed within each of the following overlapping cohorts of t-AML patients: the 43 who had received an alkylating agent, the 27 who had received a
topoisomerase
II inhibitor, and the 37 who had received any radiotherapy. Thus, the frequency of an inactivating polymorphism in
NQO1
appears to be increased in this cohort of myeloid leukemias, especially among those with t-AML or an abnormality of chromosomes 5 and/or 7. Homozygotes and heterozygotes (who are at risk for treatment-induced mutation or loss of the remaining wild-type allele in their hematopoietic stem cells) may be particularly vulnerable to leukemogenic changes induced by carcinogens.
...
PMID:Prevalence of the inactivating 609C-->T polymorphism in the NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase (NQO1) gene in patients with primary and therapy-related myeloid leukemia. 1039 48
Rearrangements and fusion of the MLL gene with various alternative partner genes occur in approximately 80% of infant leukemias and are acquired during fetal hemopoiesis in utero. Similar MLL gene recombinants also occur in
topoisomerase
II-inhibiting drug-induced leukemias. These data have led to the suggestion that some infant leukemia may arise via transplacental fetal exposures during pregnancy to substances that form cleavable complexes with
topoisomerase
II and induce illegitimate recombination of the MLL gene. A structural feature shared by many
topoisomerase
II-inhibiting drugs and other chemicals is the quinone moiety. We assayed, by PCR-RFLP, for a polymorphism in an enzyme that detoxifies quinones,
NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase
(
NQO1
), in a series (n = 36) of infant leukemias with MLL rearrangements versus unselected cord blood controls (n = 100). MLL-rearranged leukemias were more likely to have genotypes with low
NQO1
function (heterozygous CT or homozygous TT at nucleotide 609) than controls (odds ratio, 2.5; P = 0.015). In contrast, no significant allele bias was seen in other groups of pediatric leukemias with TEL-AML1 fusions (n = 50) or hyperdiploidy (n = 29). In the subset of infant leukemias that had MLL-AF4 fusion genes (n = 21), the bias increase in low or null function
NQO1
genotypes was more pronounced (odds ratio, 8.12; P = 0.00013). These data support the idea of a novel causal mechanism in infant leukemia involving genotoxic exposure in utero and modulation of impact on a selective target gene by an inherited allele encoding a rate-limiting step in a carcinogen detoxification pathway.
...
PMID:A lack of a functional NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase allele is selectively associated with pediatric leukemias that have MLL fusions. United Kingdom Childhood Cancer Study Investigators. 1046 13
Described herein are the synthesis, cytotoxic properties, and
topoisomerase
II inhibition assays of benzodiimidazole and dipyrroloimidazobenzimidazole structural variants of the pyrrolo[1, 2-a]benzimidazole or APBI ring system. These ring variants were designed to inhibit
topoisomerase
II, much as the APBIs are able to do. Since only the quinone form of the APBIs can intercalate DNA, two-electron reduction to the hydroquinone by
DT-diaphorase
is known to deactivate these compounds. Indeed, the APBIs possess a high inverse correlation with the cellular concentration of
DT-diaphorase
. Therefore one feature of the ABPI structural variants is the excessive bulk about the quinone ring, which was predicted to diminish
DT-diaphorase
substrate activity. Another feature is the presence of one or two alkylating centers, which would permit alkylation of DNA and/or
topoisomerase
II. Inhibition assays for
topoisomerase
II-mediated relaxation of supercoiled DNA indicate that the benzodiimidazole and dipyrroloimidazobenzimidazole quinone ring systems are catalytic inhibitors of
topoisomerase
II. Both quinone systems exhibit cytotoxicity perhaps due to the lack of inactivation by
DT-diaphorase
as well as
topoisomerase
II inhibition. One quinone displayed the novel feature of cytotoxicity selectively against melanoma cell lines. In conclusion, the benzodiimidazole and dipyrroloimidazobenzimidazole quinone ring systems will be subjected to future analogue development and structure-activity studies.
...
PMID:Inhibitors of topoisomerase II based on the benzodiimidazole and dipyrroloimidazobenzimidazole ring systems: controlling DT-diaphorase reductive inactivation with steric bulk. 1069 89
New drug development requires simple in vitro models that resemble the in vivo situation more in order to select active drugs against solid tumours and to decrease the use of experimental animals. In this paper, we review the characteristics and scope of a relatively simple cell-culture system with a three-dimensional organisation pattern - the multilayered postconfluent cell culture model. Solid tumour cell lines from diverse origins when grown in V-bottomed microtiter plates reach confluence in 3-5 days and then start to form multilayers. The initial exponential growth of the culture is followed by a plateau phase when cells reach confluence. This produces changes in the morphology of the cells. For some cell lines, it is possible to observe cell differentiation. A substantial advantage of the system is the use of the sulforodamine B (SRB) assay to determine relative cell growth or viability, which allows semiautomation of the experiments. Several experiments were performed to assess the differences and similarities between cells cultured as monolayers and multilayers, and eventually, compared with the results for solid tumours and some other models such as spheroids. Cell-cycle analysis for multilayers showed a lower S-phase arrest, which is accompanied by a decrease in the expression of cell-cycle-related proteins and a decrease in cellular nucleotide pools. Gene and protein expression of topoisomerase I,
topoisomerase
II and thymidylate synthase expression were lower for multilayers, but no substantial changes were observed for the expression of
DT-diaphorase
. P53 expression increased. Multilayer cultures present distinctive properties for drug transport across the membrane, drug accumulation and retention. In fact, the transport of antifolates across the membrane, accumulation of topotecan and gemcitabine-triphosphate are reduced in multilayers when compared with monolayers, which may be related to a decrease in drug penetration to the inner regions of the multilayers. Alteration of these pharmacodynamic parameters is directly related to a decrease in drug activity. The most powerful application of multilayers is in the assessment of cytotoxicity. Solid tumour cell lines from different origins have been treated with several conventional and investigational anticancer drugs. The data show that multilayers are more resistant to the drugs than the corresponding monolayers, but there are substantial differences between the drugs depending on culture conditions, e.g. the difference was rather small for a drug such as cisplatin, miltefosine and EO9, a drug, which is activated under hypoxic conditions. Gemcitabine was active against ovarian cancer but not against colon cancer, resembling the in vivo situation. This observation was not evident with monolayer experiments. Another interesting application is the possibility to perform drug combination studies. The combination of gemcitabine and cisplatin proved to produce selective cell kill in H322 cells (non-small cell lung cancer cell line). Neither of the drugs was independently able to produce similar effects. In summary, multilayer cultures are relatively simple three-dimensional systems to study the effect of microenvironmental conditions on anticancer drug activity. The model might serve as a base for a more rigorous secondary in vitro screening.
...
PMID:The multilayered postconfluent cell culture as a model for drug screening. 1103 3
The efficacy of
topoisomerase
(Topo) I-active drugs may be improved by better understanding the molecular and cellular responses of tumor compared to normal cells after genotoxic insults. Ionizing radiation (IR) + Topo I-active drugs (e.g., Topotecan) caused synergistic cell killing in various human cancer cells, even in cells from highly radioresistant tumors. Topo I poisons had to be added either during or immediately after IR. Synergy was caused by DNA lesion modification mechanisms as well as by concomitant stimulation of two pathways of cell death: necrosis (IR) + apoptosis (Topo I poisons). Cumulative data favor a mechanism of synergistic cell killing caused by altered DNA lesion modification and enhanced apoptosis. However, alterations in cell cycle regulation may also play a role in the synergy between these two agents in certain human cancers. We recently showed that NF-kappa B, a known anti-apoptotic factor, was activated in various cancer cells after poisoning Topo I using clinically active drugs. NF-kappa B activation was dependent on initial nuclear DNA damage followed by cytoplasmic signaling events. Cytoplasmic signaling leading to NF-kappa B activation after Topo I poisons was diminished in cytoplasts (lacking nuclei) and in CEM/C2 cells that expressed a mutant Topo I protein that did not interact with Topo I-active drugs. NF-kappa B activation was intensified in S-phase and blocked by aphidicolin, suggesting that activation was a result of double-strand break formation due to Topo I poisoning and DNA replication. Dominant-negative I kappa B expression augmented Topo I poison-mediated apoptosis. Elucidation of molecular signal transduction pathways after Topo I drug-IR combinations may lead to improved radiotherapy by blocking anti-apoptotic NF-kappa B responses. Recent data also indicate that synergy caused by IR + Topo I poisons is different from radiosensitization by beta-lapachone (beta-lap), a "reported" Topo I and II-alpha poison in vitro. In fact, beta-lap does not kill cells by poisoning either Topo I or II-alpha in vivo. Instead, the compound is "activated" by an IR (damage)-inducible enzyme,
NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase
(
NQO1
), a gene cloned as x-ray-inducible transcript #3, xip3. Unlike the lesion modification pathway induced by IR + Topo I drugs, beta-lap kills cells via
NQO1
futile cycle metabolism. Downstream apoptosis caused by beta-lap appears to be noncaspase-mediated, involving calpain or a calpain-like protease. Thus, although Topo I poisons or beta-lap in combination with IR both synergistically kill cancer cells, the mechanisms are very different.
...
PMID:Cellular and molecular responses to topoisomerase I poisons. Exploiting synergy for improved radiotherapy. 1119 3
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