Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.1.1.37 (DNA methyltransferase)
4,983 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Human cell-free extracts were used to detect activities specifically incising O6-methylguanine (m6G) paired with C or T in DNA. A 45-bp double-stranded DNA containing one m6G across from a T (m6G:T) was the test substrate. Extracts from glioblastoma cell lines A172 and A1235 (lacking the m6G-specific repair protein m6G-DNA methyltransferase, MGMT) and colon carcinoma cell line HT29, containing MGMT, showed incision activities specific for the T strand of m6G:T [and G:T, as reported previously by Wiebauer and Jiricny (1989)] substrates, but did not cleave m6G:C (or G:C) substrates. Competition experiments showed that the activity was similar to, if not identical with, the activity in human cells that incises G:T mismatches. The incision sites were similar to those recognized by human G:T- or G:A-specific mismatch enzymes, i.e., the phosphodiester bonds both 3' and 5' to the poorly matched T, suggesting the glycolytic removal of the poorly matched T followed by backbone incisions by class I or II AP endonucleases. Three experiments in which MGMT was inactivated showed that the m6G:T incision activity was not simply due to a two-step mechanisms in which MGMT would first mediate conversion of the m6G:T substrate to a G:T substrate which would serve as a substrate for G:T incision. Extracts from HT29 contained a DNA-binding factor, possibly DNA sequence-specific, that inhibited incision of the m6G:T (but not the G:T) substrate, that was removed by the addition of synthetic DNA to the reaction.
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PMID:Incision at O6-methylguanine:thymine mispairs in DNA by extracts of human cells. 151 Sep 86

O6-Methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT; DNA-O6-methylguanine:protein-L-cysteine S-methyltransferase, EC 2.1.1.63), a unique DNA repair protein present in most organisms, removes the carcinogenic and mutagenic adduct O6-alkylguanine from DNA by stoichiometrically accepting the alkyl group on a cysteine residue in a suicide reaction. The mammalian protein is highly regulated in both somatic and germ-line cells. In addition, the toxicity of certain alkylating drugs in tumor and normal cells is inversely related to the levels of this protein. The cDNA of the human gene, henceforth named MGMT, has been cloned in an expression vector on the basis of its rescue of a methyltransferase-deficient (ada-) Escherichia coli host. A 22-kDa active methyltransferase encoded entirely by the cDNA contains an amino acid sequence of 61 residues that bears 60-65% similarity with segments of E. coli methyltransferase (products of the ada and ogt genes), which encompass the alkyl-acceptor residues. The human cDNA has no sequence similarity with the ada and ogt genes, due in part to differences in codon usage, and shows no detectable homology with E. coli genomic DNA. However, it hybridizes with distinct restriction fragments of human, mouse, and rat DNAs. The lack of methyltransferase observed in many human cell lines is due to the absence of the MGMT gene or to lack of synthesis and/or stability of its 0.95-kilobase poly(A)+ RNA transcript.
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PMID:Isolation and structural characterization of a cDNA clone encoding the human DNA repair protein for O6-alkylguanine. 240 87

Common Mer- cell lines deficient in O6-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase (MTase) activity probably result from the down-regulation of, rather than mutations in, the MGMT gene. However, the down-regulation of other unrelated genes was also observed in some of these cell lines, making it difficult to determine the precise functions of the MGMT MTase gene. To study the biological function of human MGMT MTase, we seek to utilize a newly created yeast mgt1 mutant deficient in the DNA repair MTase activity. The human MGMT cDNA was cloned into yeast expression vectors so that the MGMT gene is under the control of either an inducible GAL1 promoter or a constitutive ADH1 promoter. Upon galactose induction, the PGAL1-MGMT transformant had about 40-fold MTase activity compared to the wild-type strain. MGMT overexpression protected the yeast mgt1 mutant against alkylation-induced killing and mutation. Limited expression of the MGMT gene in the mgt1 mutant still provides significant alkylation resistance, albeit at a reduced level. The yeast mgt1 mutants increase spontaneous mutation rate, whereas constitutive expression of the MGMT gene lowered the spontaneous mutation rate in the mgt1 mutant to the wild-type level. We suggest that MGMT MTase may play the same role in human cells as the MGT1 MTase in yeast cells. Thus our results demonstrate that the human MGMT gene functionally complements the yeast MTase-deficient mutant in the protection against exogenous and endogenous DNA alkylation damage, which provides a useful tool for the study of in vivo mammalian MTase functions.
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PMID:Expression of the human MGMT O6-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase gene in a yeast alkylation-sensitive mutant: its effects on both exogenous and endogenous DNA alkylation damage. 788 84

To assess the possibility that two conserved amino acids (glutamine 90 and asparagine 137) in O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) are involved in protein-substrate contact and/or discrimination between favored and non-favored substrates, families of proteins mutant at these two sites were expressed in alkyltransferase-deficient bacteria and analyzed for stability, ability to repair O6-methylguanine (MG)-containing DNA, and ability to differentially repair a preferred (MG-containing DNA) versus a non-preferred (free base MG) substrate. All seven proteins mutant at glutamine 90 (except a proline mutant) were stable in bacteria and repaired MG-containing DNA (> 50% of wild-type levels). A representative glutamine 90 mutant protein was not, however, significantly different from the wild-type protein in the preferential repair of MG-containing DNA versus MG free base. Of eight proteins mutant at asparagine 137, only glutamine and serine mutants repaired MG-containing DNA to any degree (8.5% and 0.8% of wild-type respectively) and only the glutamine mutant protein was detectable in bacterial sonicates by Western blot analysis. Alanine and leucine mutant alkyltransferases, inactive and unstable as non-fusion proteins, could, however, be stably expressed in bacteria as glutathione S-transferase fusion proteins, although the proteins were still inactive in repair. These results suggest that while glutamine 90 has no direct role in MG-DNA methyltransferase-mediated repair or free base/lesioned DNA substrate specificity, asparagine 137 is important in both the stability and activity of the protein and may contribute to the formation or function of the active site of the protein.
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PMID:The role of two conserved amino acids, glutamine 90 and asparagine 137, in O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase stability, activity and substrate specificity. 792 83

O6-Methylguanine DNA methyltransferase (MGMT; EC 2.1.1.63) is an unusual DNA repair protein in that it directly and specifically repairs a premutagenic DNA lesion without involving other proteins. MGMT removes the alkyl group from O6-alkylguanine in DNA in a unique stoichiometric reaction by accepting the alkyl group on a cysteine residue. The intracellular level of MGMT varies among tissues and appears to be inversely correlated to tissue-specific tumorigenesis induced by monofunctional alkylating agents. Because MGMT acts in solo, genetic manipulation of its expression may provide valuable insight into its contribution to cellular resistance to alkylation toxicity and to tumor induction. The human MGMT full length cDNA has been fused with a portion of the human transferrin (TF) 5'-flanking region (TF/MGMT). Transgenic founder mice were produced carrying the TF/MGMT transgene and then bred to establish stable transgenic lines. Human MGMT transcripts were specifically expressed in abundance in transgenic brain and liver tissues. In vitro MGMT assays revealed approximately 150-fold and approximately 25-fold increases in MGMT activity in transgenic brain and liver extracts respectively. Western blot analysis confirmed that human MGMT protein is specifically synthesized in transgenic brain and liver tissues.
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PMID:Brain and liver targeted overexpression of O6-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase in transgenic mice. 835 38

O6-Methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) is a DNA repair protein that plays an important role in chemotherapy, mutagenesis, and carcinogenesis. Recombinant human MGMT was isolated from an Escherichia coli high performance expression system and purified to homogeneity. The kinetic and DNA-binding properties of the recombinant human MGMT were studied. The purified human MGMT reacted stoichiometrically with methylated DNA under second-order rate kinetics. The rate constant with normal methylated DNA was 1 x 10(9) M-1 min-1 at 37 degrees C. The binding to DNA was the rate determining step in the repair process. Approximately eight base pairs of the DNA substrate were covered by the human MGMT protein. The affinity constant for interaction of DNA to MGMT was approximately 4.7 x 10(5) M-1. The binding to methylated DNA was also examined; the binding affinity to methylated DNA was two times higher than that to unmodified DNA. The interaction with DNA induced a conformational change in the human MGMT protein as monitored by circular dichroism and fluorescence analysis. A similar conformational change was induced by both methylated and unmodified DNA.
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PMID:Kinetic and DNA-binding properties of recombinant human O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase. 842 52

O6-Methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT), a constitutively expressed DNA repair protein, removes alkyl groups from the O6-position of guanine in DNA. Tumor cells with high MGMT activity are resistant to nitrosoureas and other agents that form toxic O6-alkyl adducts. O6-Benzylguanine (BG) inactivates the MGMT protein and thereby enhances the sensitivity of tumor cells to alkylating drugs. However, the therapeutic potential of BG is limited by its poor solubility and its nonspecific inactivation of MGMT in normal tissues as well as in tumor tissues. Consequently, BG analogues are being developed to identify agents that have more favorable pharmacological characteristics. We evaluated O6-benzyl-2'-deoxyguanosine (dBG), the 2'-deoxyribonucleoside analogue of BG, for its ability to inhibit MGMT and to potentiate 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU) in a MGMT-positive human brain tumor xenograft, Daoy. When given i.p. 1 h before BCNU (25 mg/m2) to animals bearing s.c. tumors, dBG (134 mg/m2) produced a growth delay of 24.7 days, compared to 21.6 days after treatment with an equimolar dose of BG (90 mg/m2) plus BCNU and -0.6 days after treatment with BCNU alone. The combination of dBG + BCNU also increased the survival of animals bearing intracranial tumors by 65%. By increasing the dose of dBG to 300 mg/m2 (the maximum dose that could be delivered i.p. in a standard treatment volume), the growth delay of s.c. tumors increased from -0.1 days with BCNU alone to 39.3 days. dBG suppressed both tumor and liver MGMT activity to less than 1.5% of baseline, and dBG + BCNU induced extensive perivascular apoptosis. Because dBG is a 10-fold less potent MGMT inhibitor than BG in HT-29 cell extracts, these results illustrate the capacity of BG analogues to potentiate BCNU toxicity, despite less in vitro activity than the parent compound, and emphasize the importance of in vivo evaluation of BG analogues.
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PMID:Treatment of human brain tumor xenografts with O6-benzyl-2'-deoxyguanosine and BCNU. 861 53

The DNA repair protein O6-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) removes alkyl adducts from the O6 position of guanine. MGMT expression is decreased in some tumor tissues, and lack of activity has been observed in some cell lines. Loss of expression is rarely due to deletion, mutation, or rearrangement of the MGMT gene, but methylation of discrete regions of the CpG island of MGMT has been associated with the silencing of the gene in cell lines. We used methylation-specific PCR to study the promoter methylation of the MGMT gene. All normal tissues and expressing cancer cell lines were unmethylated, whereas nonexpressing cancer cell lines were methylated. Among the more than 500 primary human tumors examined, MGMT hypermethylation was present in a subset of specific types of cancer. In gliomas and colorectal carcinomas, aberrant methylation was detected in 40% of the tumors, whereas in non-small cell lung carcinomas, lymphomas, and head and neck carcinomas, this alteration was found in 25% of the tumors. MGMT methylation was found rarely or not at all in other tumor types. We also analyzed MGMT expression by immunohistochemistry in relation to the methylation status in 31 primary tumors. The presence of aberrant hypermethylation was associated with loss of MGMT protein, in contrast to retention of protein in the majority of tumors without aberrant hypermethylation. Our results suggest that epigenetic inactivation of MGMT plays an important role in primary human neoplasia.
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PMID:Inactivation of the DNA repair gene O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase by promoter hypermethylation is a common event in primary human neoplasia. 1002 64

O(6)-Benzylguanine (6-BG) inactivates mammalian O(6)-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase (MGMT), an important DNA repair protein that protects cells against chloroethylnitrosourea (CENU) cytotoxicity. 6-BG is being tested as an approach to treat CENU-resistant tumors that overexpress endogenous MGMT. However, in addition to restoring CENU tumor cell sensitivity, 6-BG also increases the cytotoxic effects of CENUs on hematopoietic cells. Several 6-BG-resistant human MGMT mutants have been characterized in Escherichia coli and are predicted to protect mammalian cells against the combination of 6-BG and CENU treatment in vivo. Two mutants, P140A and P140A/G156A, demonstrated 20- and 1200-fold more resistance to 6-BG depletion of MGMT activity compared with wild-type MGMT (WTMGMT). Here, we analyzed retroviral vectors that express either WTMGMT, the P140A or P140A/G156A mutant forms of MGMT. Retroviral-infected L1210 hematopoietic cells demonstrated similar levels of RNA in all transduced clones. However, the amount of MGMT protein and DNA repair activity was reduced in clones expressing the P140A/G156A mutant compared with those expressing WTMGMT or P140A. Expression of P140A was associated with a 4- to 8-fold increase in resistance to 6-BG depletion of MGMT in transduced L1210 clones and a 1, 3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea IC(50) of 50 microM (compared with 27.5 microM for WTMGMT) in primary murine hematopoietic cells. These results demonstrate the utility of screening 6-BG-resistant MGMT proteins in hematopoietic cells and provide evidence that the P140A mutant form of MGMT generates 6-BG- and CENU-resistant hematopoietic cells. Retrovirus vectors expressing this mutant may be useful in future human gene therapy trials.
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PMID:Retroviral-mediated expression of the P140A, but not P140A/G156A, mutant form of O6-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase protects hematopoietic cells against O6-benzylguanine sensitization to chloroethylnitrosourea treatment. 1045 26

Mice deficient in the DNA mismatch repair (MMR) gene, PMS2, develop spontaneous thymic lymphomas and sarcomas. We have previously shown that PMS2(-/-) mice were hypersensitive to a single i.p. injection of 50 mg/kg of N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU) for thymic lymphoma induction. We postulated that MNU sensitivity was due to formation of O(6)-methylguanine (O(6)-mG), which, if unrepaired by O(6)-alkylguanine DNA alkyltransferase (AGT), leads to apoptosis in MMR competent cells and O(6)-mG:T mismatches in MMR deficient cells. Tumor induction is less in MMR(+/+) mice because cells with residual DNA adducts die, whereas mutagenized cells survive in MMR(-/-) mice. Overexpression of AGT (encoded by the methylguanine DNA methyltransferase-MGMT-gene) is known to block MNU induced tumorigenesis in mice with functional MMR. To further determine the sensitivity of PMS2(-/-) mice to MNU and the protective effect of hAGT overexpression, a low dose of MNU (25 mg/kg) was studied in PMS2(-/-) mice and PMS2(-/-)/hMGMT(+) mice. No thymic lymphomas were found in MNU-treated PMS2(+/+) and PMS2(+/-) mice. At 1 year, 46% of the MNU-treated PMS2(-/-) mice developed thymic lymphoma, compared with an incidence of 25% in both untreated PMS2(-/-) mice and MNU treated PMS2(-/-)/hMGMT(+) mice. In addition, a significantly shorter latency in the onset of thymic lymphomas was seen in MNU-treated PMS2(-/-) mice. K-ras mutations were detected almost equally in the thymic lymphomas induced by MNU in both PMS2(-/-) and PMS2(-/-)/hMGMT(+) mice, but not in the spontaneous lymphomas. These data suggest that PMS(-/-) mice are hypersensitive to MNU, that there are different pathways responsible for spontaneous and MNU induced thymic lymphomas in PMS2(-/-) mice, and that overexpression of hMGMT protects the mice by blocking non-K-ras pathways.
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PMID:Transgenic expression of human MGMT blocks the hypersensitivity of PMS2-deficient mice to low dose MNU thymic lymphomagenesis. 1046 9


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