Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
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Query: EC:2.3.1.21 (
CPT
)
4,580
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The synthesis and pharmacological activity of a series of terbenzimidazoles are described. The ability of these derivatives to induce DNA cleavage in the presence of topoisomerase I was evaluated in vitro. These analogs were also assayed for their cytotoxicity in
RPMI
8402 cells and the camptothecin-resistant
CPT
-K5 cells. In addition the potential for these compounds to serve as substrates for MDR1 was also determined. Several terbenzimidazoles exhibited similar cytotoxicity against variants of human tumor cells that either overexpress MDR1 or are camptothecin-resistant.
...
PMID:Synthesis and evaluation of terbenzimidazoles as topoisomerase I inhibitors. 765 51
Hoechst dye 33342 (Ho33342), like many other DNA minor groove binding ligands and its parent compound Hoechst dye 33258 (Ho33258), nonspecifically inhibits the catalytic activities of many DNA enzymes. However, both Ho33258 and Ho33342 also specifically interrupt the breakage/reunion reaction of mammalian DNA topoisomerase I by trapping reversible topoisomerase I cleavable complexes. The enhanced membrane permeability of Ho33342 over its parent compound Ho33258 has allowed studies of the cellular action of Ho33342. Our results suggest that Ho33342 also traps topoisomerase I but not topoisomerase II into reversible cleavable complexes in human KB cells. Although Ho33342 shares a similar mechanism of action with camptothecin, a prototypic topoisomerase I poison, in trapping topoisomerase I cleavable complexes, Ho33342 differs from camptothecin in its effect on drug-resistant cells. Different from camptothecin, Ho33342 was shown to be about 200-fold less cytotoxic in MDR1-overexpressing human KB V1 cells relative to parental human KB 3-1 cells. Ho33342 is only 5-fold less cytotoxic for camptothecin-resistant
CPT
-K5 cells, which expresses a highly camptothecin-resistant from of topoisomerase I, than for the wild type human lymphoblast
RPMI
8402 cells. Our studies suggest a potential use of Hoechst 33342 as a new topoisomerase I poison in antitumor chemotherapy.
...
PMID:A new mammalian DNA topoisomerase I poison Hoechst 33342: cytotoxicity and drug resistance in human cell cultures. 838 8
We studied the effects of fatty acid oxidation on insulin secretion of db/db mice and underlying molecular mechanisms of these effects. At 2-3 months of age, db/db mice were markedly obese, hyperglycemic, and hyperinsulinemic. Serum free fatty acid (FFA) levels were increased in 2-month-old (1.5 +/- 0.1 vs. 1.1 +/- 0.1 mmol/l, P < 0.05) and 3-month-old (1.9 +/- 0.1 vs. 1.2 +/- 0.1 mmol/l, P < 0.01) mice compared with the age and sex-matched db/+ mice serving as controls. Glucose-induced insulin release from db/db islets was markedly decreased compared with that from db/+ islets and was specifically ameliorated (by 54% in 2-month-old and 38% in 3-month-old mice) by exposure to a
carnitine palmitoyltransferase I
inhibitor, etomoxir (1 micromol/l). Etomoxir failed to affect the insulin response to alpha-ketoisocaproate. The effect of etomoxir on glucose-induced insulin release was lost after culturing db/db islets in
RPMI
medium containing 22 mmol/l glucose but no fatty acid. Culture of db/+ islets with 0.125 mmol/l palmitate led to a decrease in glucose-induced insulin secretion, which was partially reversible by etomoxir. Both islet glucose oxidation and the ratio of glucose oxidation to utilization were decreased in db/db islets. Etomoxir significantly enhanced glucose oxidation by 60% and also the ratio of oxidation to glucose utilization (from 27 +/- 2.5 to 37 +/-3.0%, P < 0.05). Pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) activity was decreased in islets of db/db mice (75 +/-4.2 vs. 91 +/- 2.9 nU/ng DNA, P < 0.01), whereas PDH kinase activity was increased (rate of PDH inactivation -0.25 +/- 0.02 vs. - 0.11 +/- 0.02/min, P < 0.0 1). These abnormalities were partly but not wholly reversed by a 2-h preexposure to etomoxir. In conclusion, elevated FFA levels in the db/db mouse diminish glucose-induced insulin secretion by a glucose-fatty acid cycle in which fatty acid oxidation inhibits glucose oxidation by decreasing PDH activity and increasing PDH kinase activities.
...
PMID:A fatty acid-induced decrease in pyruvate dehydrogenase activity is an important determinant of beta-cell dysfunction in the obese diabetic db/db mouse. 862 Oct 7
DNA topoisomerases are nuclear enzymes responsible for modifying the topological state of DNA. The development of agents capable of poisoning topoisomerases has proved to be an attractive approach in the search for novel cancer chemotherapeutics. Coralyne, an antileukemic alkaloid, has appreciable structural similarity to the potent topoisomerase I and II poison, nitidine. Analogues of coralyne were synthesized and evaluated for their activity as topoisomerase I and topoisomerase II poisons. These analogues were also evaluated for cytotoxicity in the human lymphoblast cell line,
RPMI
8402, and its camptothecin-resistant variant,
CPT
-K5. The pharmacological activity of these analogues exhibited a strong dependence on the substitution pattern and the nature of substituents. Several 1-benzylisoquinolines and 3-phenylisoquinolines were also synthesized. These compounds, which incorporate only a portion of the ring structure of coralyne, were evaluated as topoisomerase poisons and for cytotoxicity. These structure-activity studies indicate that the structural rigidity associated with the coralyne ring system may be critical for pharmacological activity. The presence of a 3,4-methylenedioxy substituent on these coralyne analogues was generally associated with enhanced activity as a topoisomerase poison. 5,6-Dihydro-3,4-methylenedioxy-10,11-dimethoxydibenzo[a,g]quinoliz inium chloride was the most potent topoisomerase I poison among the coralyne analogues evaluated, having similar activity to camptothecin. This analogue also possessed exceptional potency as a topoisomerase II poison. Despite the pronounced activity of several of these coralyne derivatives as topoisomerase I poisons, none of these compounds had cytotoxic activity similar to camptothecin. Possible differences in cellular absorption between these coralyne analogs, which possess a quaternary ammonium group, and camptothecin may be responsible for the differences observed in their relative cytotoxicity.
...
PMID:Coralyne and related compounds as mammalian topoisomerase I and topoisomerase II poisons. 881 27
Camptothecins contain a lactone ring that exists in the closed form below ph 7. Above 7, the open (CPT+) and the closed (
CPT
) form coexist in a 50-50 ratio in mouse plasma and in a 90-10 ratio in human plasma due to the high affinity of human serum albumin (HSA) for CPT+. CPT+ is much less toxic than
CPT
and it is excreted much faster. In complete
RPMI
1640 culture medium, the equilibrium
CPT
(+)-
CPT
is 50-50. If 4% HSA is added, it moves to 90-10 modeling for the human physiological situation.
...
PMID:Dependence of anticancer activity of camptothecins on maintaining their lactone function. 1119 2
It has been shown that the human acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) T cell line (
RPMI
8402) selected with irinotecan (CPT-11) is transformed to a multidrug resistant (MDR) phenotype (
CPT
-K5) with cross-resistance to mitoxantrone (MX). Since MX is a well-documented substrate for the efflux transporter breast cancer resistant protein (BCRP/ABCG2), we assessed the contribution of drug efflux to MX resistance in
CPT
-K5 cells. Our results demonstrate that
CPT
-K5 cells had markedly higher expression levels of BCRP, negligible expression of MRP2 and P-gp, and lower intracellular retention of MX as compared to
RPMI
8402 cells. Surprisingly, MX resistance in
CPT
-K5 cells was not reversed by the BCRP chemical inhibitor, novobiocin (NOV), or gene-specific siRNA, although intracellular MX concentrations were significantly increased when BCRP was functionally knocked down. These results suggest that up-regulation of BCRP plays a minimal role in conferring MX resistance to
CPT
-K5 cells, highlighting the existence of multiple, redundant mechanisms of drug resistance. The current results support the concept of "multifactorial multidrug resistance", a recently-described phenomenon that ascribes multidrug resistance to many possible cellular mechanisms, not only by efflux drug transporters.
...
PMID:Inhibition of efflux transporter ABCG2/BCRP does not restore mitoxantrone sensitivity in irinotecan-selected human leukemia CPT-K5 cells: evidence for multifactorial multidrug resistance. 1684 60
We examined the benefit of gene expression analysis on peripheral blood cellular subsets of different radiosensitivity to elucidate their utility as biodosimeters for estimation of dose in irradiated individuals. Peripheral mononucleated cells were isolated from 18 healthy volunteers employing density separation in a
CPT
-NH tube. Peripheral mononucleated cells were cultured in
RPMI
1640 medium containing 10% autologous serum and were irradiated with 0.1-1 Gy (240 kV, 13 mA, X rays at 1 Gy/min). A low-dose study was performed with isolated peripheral mononucleated cells from one healthy donor in three independent experiments. Peripheral mononucleated cells were irradiated at 0 (sham), 1, 2.5 and 5 cGy (70 kV, 13 mA X rays at 1 cGy/min) and gene expression was measured 24 and 48 h after irradiation. After irradiation, CD4(+) or CD8(+) cells were isolated by magnetic beads in independent experiments. RNA from lymphocyte subsets and peripheral mononucleated cells was isolated after 24 and 48 h and converted into cDNA. Gene expression of GADD45, CDKN1A, DDB2, PCNA, BAX and ATF3 were determined using RTQ-PCR. Data were analyzed employing linear and logistic regression analysis. The same examinations were performed in 5 individuals either diagnosed using CT scans (up to 4.3 cGy) or by administering (F-18)-fluoro-2-deoxy-d-glucose (F-18 FDG, 0.6 cGy). Methodological, intra- and inter-individual variability in 90-95% of measurements did not exceed the introduced twofold change over sham-irradiated control values in peripheral mononucleated cells and CD4(+) cells, and therefore no false positive results were observed. Dose reconstruction in peripheral mononucleated cells in opposite to CD4(+) lymphocytes required fewer genes and appeared more efficient (R-square = 84.8% compared to 51.8%). In vitro samples exposed to 10 cGy could be completely discriminated from sham-irradiated samples without individual pre-exposure controls, which coincided with our preliminary in vivo results. However, in vitro differential gene expression was measured relative to control values and did not differ significantly at 24 and 48 h after irradiation in contrast to our preliminary in vivo data. In addition, below 5 cGy in vitro data did not show reproducible significant changes in gene expression, which was opposite to our preliminary in vivo data. Therefore a twofold change in gene expression over control sufficiently controls for different sources of variance, and measuring gene expression in peripheral mononucleated cell for biological dosimetry purposes appears superior over measurements in lymphocyte subsets. The increased gene expression measured after low absorbed doses in vivo and in vitro might indicate a particular applicability of this method for a low-level radiation scenario in the absence of individual pre-exposure controls. However, the constant gene expression values measured up to 48 h in our in vitro model at doses >10 cGy, and the absence of reproducible and statistically significant gene expression changes below 5 cGy contrast to the preliminary in vivo results performed at similar doses. Therefore, measurements with our in vitro models should be interpreted cautiously.
...
PMID:Gene expression comparisons performed for biodosimetry purposes on in vitro peripheral blood cellular subsets and irradiated individuals. 2276 26