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Query: EC:2.4.2.7 (
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
)
692
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Purine metabolism and reutilization pathways were studied as they applied to normal and leukemic leukocytes. The enzyme activities were expressed in terms of the quantity of protein extracted and per 10(10) cells. Whereas the protein extracted and the enzyme activities from normal lymphocytes were relatively constant, considerable variation was noted in cases of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). This variability in the properties of the leukemic cells suggests that the difference may be useful in the subclassification of the leukemias. The studies of the complete enzyme system were done with 300 million cells. The extraction of 350,000 normal lymphocytes/mul gave a soluble protein concentration of 1.46+/-0.16 mg protein per ml, and the yield from the same number of CLL lymphocytes varied between 0.72 and 8.32 mg protein per ml. The 5'-nucleotidase activity gave an inverse correlation with the amount of extractable protein. In individual cases of CLL, the protein concentrations and the 5'-nucleotidase activities were found on either side of the normal values. In most cases, the adenosine deaminase of CLL lymphocytic cell extracts was lower than normal, and the adenosine kinase was higher; in the CLL cells, these two enzymes gave a positive correlation with one another. Little or no difference was observed in the activities of the purine nucleoside phosphorylases in extracts of normal or leukemic lymphocytes and granulocytes. The hypoxanthine-guanine and
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
activities increased in the leukemic granulocytes but almost always showed a decrease in the CLL lymphocytes when compared with the normal cells. Most of the leukemic cells had greater than normal activities of the enzymes synthesizing phosphoribosyl pyrophosphate when tested with the purines. The total nucleotide produced from adenine and guanine with adenine- and hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase was about equal in normal and leukemic lymphocytes, but the proportion of the adenosine 5'-triphosphate in the product was much greater with the leukemic cells. This suggested that the ribosyltransferase activities were the same in both types of cells, but the nucleoside kinases and the nucleoside diphosphate kinases were more active in the leukemic cells. Inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase was less active than normal in the CLL cell extracts and was not directly related to the amount of inosine monophosphate generated from hypoxanthine.
Cancer
Res 1977 Feb
PMID:Purine metabolic cycle in normal and leukemic leukocytes. 18 45
The metabolic and growth inhibitory effects of adenosine toward the human lymphoblast line WI-L2 were potentiated by the adenosine deaminase inhibitors erythro-9-(2-hydroxy-3-nonyl) adenine (EHNA) and coformycin. EHNA, 5 micron, or coformycin, 3.5 micron, at concentrations that inhibited adenosine deaminase activity more than 90% had little effect on cell growth or the metabolic parameters studied. Adenosine, 50 micron, plus EHNA, 5 micron, arrested cell growth in both parent and adenosine kinase-deficient lymphoblasts, implicating the nucleoside as the mediator of the cytostatic effect. Adenosine, 50 micron, in combination with the adenosine deaminase inhibitors reduced 14CO2 generation from [1-14C]glucose by 38%, depleted 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate by more than 90%, and reduced pyrimidine ribonucleotide concentrations. Uridine, 10 or 100 micron, reversed adenosine plus EHNA growth inhibition in WI-L2 but not in adenosine kinase mutants. Adenine, 500 micron, which may be converted to the same intracellular nucleotides as adenosine, reduced the growth rate by 50% in both parent and
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
-deficient lymphoblasts. Although adenine also depleted cells of 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate and reduced pyrimidine ribonucleotide by 50%, the mechanisms of adenine and adenosine toxicity differ. In contrast to the ability of uridine to reverse adenosine cytostasis, growth inhibition by adenine was not reversed by uridine, indicating that pyrimidine ribonucleotide depletion is not the primary mechanisms of adenine toxicity.
Cancer
Res 1978 Aug
PMID:Cytotoxic and metabolic effects of adenosine and adenine on human lymphoblasts. 66 33
8-Azainosine (8-aza-HR) is of interest because of its activity against experimental tumors. Metabolic studies in cell cultures were performed with 8-aza-HR and with the structurally related nucleoside, 8-azaadenosine (9-beta-D-ribofuranosyl-8-azaadenine) (8-aza-AR), which has a lower degree of antitumor activity than does 8-aza-HR. In H. Ep. 2 cells and in Ca755 cells, both 14C-labeled nucleosides were metabolized to nucleotides of 8-azaadenine (8-aza-A) and 8-azaguanine (8-aza-G) and incorporated into polynucleotides as 8-aza-A and 8-aza-G. 8-Aza HR was incorporated primarily as 8-aza-G, whereas 8-aza-AR was incorporated about equally as 8-aza-A and 8-aza-G. In H. Ep. 2 cells, the extent of incorporation of 8-aza-HR as 8-aza-G was about one-half that found when [14C]-8-aza-G was the precursor. In the H. Ep. 2/FA/FAR cell line, 8-aza-AR and 8-aza-HR were metabolized similarly, in that both were incorporated into polynucleotides principally as 8-aza-G; apparently, in this cell line which is deficient in adenosine kinase and
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
, 8-aza-AR is metabolized by conversion to 8-aza-HR. A cell line (H. Ep 2/8-aza HR), which was resistant to 8-aza-HR but sensitive to 8-aza-AR and which retained hypoxanthine (guanine)-phosphoribosyltransferase activity, metabolized 8-aza-HR to only a small extent. However, in this cell-line, 8-aza-AR was more extensively metabolized and was incorporated primarily as 8-aza-A. The failure of these cells to convert 8-aza-AR or 8-aza-HR to 8-aza-G indicates that the basis for resistance may be a change in the substrate specificities of the enzymes of guanosine monophosphate synthesis such that these cells no longer effectively convert 8-azainosine monophosphate to 8-azaguanosine monophosphate. 8-Aza-AR was a potent inhibitor of purine synthesis de novo, but 8-aza-HR, at concentrations much higher than the inhibitory concentration of 8-aza-AR, did not inhibit this process. In H. Ep. 2 cells, 8-aza-HR blocked the conversion of orotic acid to uridine nucleotides and caused an accumulation of orotidine. This inhibition of pyrimidine biosynthesis apparently does not contribute significantly to the cytotoxicity of 8-aza-HR because uridine provided no degree of reversal of its inhibition of the growth of cell cultures.
Cancer
Res 1976 Nov
PMID:Metabolism and metabolic effects of 8-azainosine and 8-azaadenosine. 97 40
Constitutional loss or inactivation of one copy of a tumor-suppressor gene, as exemplified by hereditary retinoblastoma, increases the propensity for
malignancies
by reducing the number of events necessary for the complete loss of the negative regulatory function. We developed a selectable mutation assay employing a human lymphoblastoid cell line (LCL) derived from a heterozygous carrier of 2,8-dihydroxyadenine urolithiasis,
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
APRT
) deficiency, for dissecting the second step in loss-of-function mutations and for determining the potential of physical and chemical agents for producing such mutations. The mode of mutational events arising in the wild-type allele of the functionally heterozygous
APRT
gene resembled that reported for tumor-suppressor genes in
malignancies
in that mitotic non-disjunctions or recombinations as well as deletions prevailed. Ultraviolet light (UV) was much less efficient in inducing these types of mutations than ionizing radiation. A group of autosomal recessive
cancer
-prone diseases, including xeroderma pigmentosum (XP), has been characterized as being more susceptible to genomic insults, owing to some defects in DNA processing, such as replication, repair, or recombination. This increased genomic instability may accelerate the gain-of-function mutation at a proto-oncogene and/or the loss-of-function mutation at a tumor-suppressor gene. XP complementation group A (XP-A) LCLs were extremely sensitive to UV-mutagenesis at the hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) locus even at equicytotoxic doses. Some unique mechanism may operate in UV-mutagenesis in XP-A. We have succeeded for the first time in rendering XP-A cells tumorigenic in athymic mice by applying multiple exposures to UV and subsequent treatment with TPA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Molecular bases for hereditary cancer-prone diseases. 129 55
We analyzed the nature of mutations at the autosomal locus coding for
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
aprt
) in human cells to elucidate the process(es) governing mutagenesis at autosomal loci. A human lymphoblastoid cell line, WR10, was found to be heterozygous for mutated allele at the
aprt
locus, and was used for mutation analyses. By the use of a restriction fragment length polymorphism associated with the
aprt
locus in WR10 cells, the molecular characteristics of mutations arising spontaneously or induced by gamma-rays were investigated. Eighty-five percent (22/26) of the spontaneous mutant clones and 93% (64/69) of the gamma-ray-induced mutant clones resulted from loss of one of the two
aprt
alleles. Determination of the dosage of
aprt
genes in those mutants with allelic losses revealed that approximately half of them retained two copies of the mutated allele. These data suggest that the mutational events leading to APRT deficiency are analogous to those reported for tumor suppressor genes in
malignancies
.
...
PMID:Allelic losses in mutations at the aprt locus of human lymphoblastoid cells. 138 71
4-Nitroquinoline 1-oxide (4NQO) is a model chemical carcinogen that has often been referred to as a UV mimetic agent. Previous studies have indicated that UV-induced pyrimidine dimers are repaired preferentially and strand-specifically in actively transcribing genes. In the current study we have examined the gene-specific and strand-specific repair of 4NQO in Chinese hamster ovary B-11 cells treated with 2.5 microM 4NQO. The methodology used for detecting adducts involved the treatment of DNA from 4NQO-exposed cells with uvrABC excinuclease, which incises DNA at adduct sites, followed by denaturing gel electrophoresis of DNA, Southern hybridization, and probing for the sequence of interest. We examined the active and inactive coding regions of the DHFR gene, the active
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
gene, relatively inactive c-fos oncogene, and the mitochondrial genome for 4NQO adducts. Initial 4NQO adduct levels found in these genes varied from 1.10 to 1.52 adducts/10 kilobases. Little difference in repair was found between active coding and inactive regions of the DHFR gene, or between DHFR,
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
, and c-fos genes, which are transcribed at different levels. Approximately 71% of 4NQO adducts were repaired within 24 h in all gene sequences examined. During this same time period, approximately 51% of adducts were repaired from the genome overall, as determined by comparing the removal of bound radiolabeled 4NQO to total DNA. The results indicate that 4NQO adducts, unlike UV light-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (UV dimers), are not preferentially repaired in transcriptionally active genes. However, there may be regions of the genome that are not repaired with the same efficiency as the specific genes examined here. In addition, little to no difference was observed in the repair of 4NQO adducts in the transcribed and nontranscribed strands of the DHFR gene, a finding which is also in contrast to results with UV dimers. Interestingly, 4NQO adducts, unlike UV dimers, were removed from the mitochondrial genome, suggesting that repair of select lesions occurs in this organelle. Thus, there appear to be some differences in the repair pathways operating for 4NQO adducts and UV dimers, particularly with respect to gene- and strand-specific DNA repair.
Cancer
Res 1992 Aug 01
PMID:Gene- and strand-specific damage and repair in Chinese hamster ovary cells treated with 4-nitroquinoline 1-oxide. 163 32
5'-Methylthioadenosine (MTA) produced during the synthesis of polyamines is degraded to adenine by MTA phosphorylase. This pathway is considered to be the main source of endogenous adenine. We determined the concentrations of MTA and adenine in control subjects and in those with a pathological disorder. In patients with active leukemias, as well as with other types of
malignancies
, the concentrations of MTA and adenine in the urine were elevated. These changes seemed to be the result of an accelerated production of MTA due to an accelerated biosynthesis of polyamine. In patients with
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
APRT
) deficiency, the concentrations of adenine in the urine were elevated, presumably due to a disturbance in the catabolism of adenine. Although adenine is a potent inhibitor of MTA phosphorylase,
APRT
-deficient patients did not excrete MTA into urine in concentrations significantly larger than noted for control subjects. However, the amount of MTA excreted positively correlated with that of adenine in these patients, hence that accumulated adenine probably had a slight, but positive, inhibitory effect on the degradation of MTA.
...
PMID:Disturbance in the metabolism of 5'-methylthioadenosine and adenine in patients with neoplastic diseases, and in those with a deficiency in adenine phosphoribosyltransferase. 189 56
The aim of this study was to identify targets for rational chemotherapy of glioblastoma. In order to elucidate differences in the biochemistry of tumor and normal human brain, in vivo pool sizes of purine nucleotides, nucleosides, and nucleobases and of purine metabolizing enzymes in biopsy material from 14 grade IV astrocytomas and 4 normal temporal lobe samples were analyzed. Specimens were collected during surgery using the freeze-clamp sampling technique and analyzed by high pressure liquid chromatography. Total purine nucleotides, adenylates, and guanylates in the tumors were 2186, 1865, and 310 nmol/g (wet weight), respectively, which corresponds to 61, 60, and 71% of normal brain tissue concentrations. Relative to normal brain the tumors had significantly lower ATP and GTP levels, essentially normal pool sizes of purine nucleosides and bases, unchanged activities of the salvage enzymes hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase,
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
, and adenosine kinase (659, 456, and 98 nmol/h/mg protein, respectively) and 4-fold higher activities of IMP dehydrogenase (11.6 nmol/h/mg protein); the latter is the rate limiting enzyme for guanylate de novo synthesis. IMP pools in the tumors were 64% of values in normal brain. Modulation of the guanylate pathway in glioblastoma by inhibition of IMP dehydrogenase with tumor specific agents such as tiazofurin (2-beta-D-ribofuranosylthiazole-4-carboxamide) appears to be a rational therapeutic approach. Preliminary in vitro experiments with normal and malignant tissue specimens from 2 additional patients revealed that significant amounts of the active metabolite thiazole-4-carboxamide adenine dinucleotide are formed from tiazofurin. At a concentration of 200 microM this drug was able to deplete guanylate pools in the tumors to a median of 54% of phosphate buffered saline treated controls. Flux studies with [14C]formate showed that tiazofurin strongly inhibited de novo synthesis of guanylates in glioblastoma to an average of 10% of controls. This effect was more pronounced in the tumors as compared to normal brain. No inhibition of salvage of [14C]guanine by tiazofurin could be observed in normal and malignant tissues. Supportive measures have to be considered to inhibit the highly active salvage enzyme hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase that can partly antagonize a tiazofurin induced decrease in guanine nucleotides.
Cancer
Res 1990 Mar 01
PMID:Purine metabolism of human glioblastoma in vivo. 215 28
The molecular correlation concept proposed that IMP dehydrogenase activity should be a sensitive target of chemotherapy. This hypothesis received support from an array of evidence. IMP dehydrogenase has the lowest activity in purine biosynthesis; it is the rate-limiting enzyme in GTP production; the enzymic activity is transformation-and progression-linked; it is elevated in all examined animal and human neoplastic cells. The activity of GMP synthetase and the concentrations of GMP and dGTP were increased in
cancer
cells. Whereas guanine salvage has a high potential activity, the low guanine content may well curtail actual salvage capacity. Ribonucleotide reductase activity was two orders of magnitude lower than that of IMP dehydrogenase. Tiazofurin, a C-nucleoside, had marked cytotoxicity on hepatoma cells in vitro and was the first drug that as a single agent profoundly inhibited the proliferation of the subcutaneously inoculated solid hepatoma 3924A in the rat. The impact of tiazofurin administration in hepatoma cells was revealed in a cascade of biochemical alterations involving primary, secondary and tertiary targets and markers of this drug action. The primary target was IMP dehydrogenase where the active metabolite of tiazofurin, TAD, was thought to be absorbed to the NADH site of the enzyme. As a consequence, the enzymic activity declined rapidly to about 30-40% and returned to normal range by 36 to 48 hr after injection. The secondary targets and markers are the profoundly decreased pools of guanylates (GMP, GDP, GTP). Concurrently, the concentrations of IMP and PRPP were increased 8- to 15-fold. The elevated IMP pools were attributed to the de-inhibition of the AMP deaminase activity subsequent to the decline in GTP concentration. The rise in PRPP pools was attributed to the selective inhibition of GPRT and HPRT activities by the high IMP pool which did not affect
APRT
activity. This interpretation is supported by the 6- to 8-fold increase in the concentrations of guanine and hypoxanthine and the lack of change in the adenine pools inthe hepatomas after tiazofurin administration. The marked drop in NAD concentration which was drug dose- and time-dependent is attributed to the competition for NAD pyrophosphorylase activity by the precursors of NAD and tiazofurin monophosphate. The tertiary targets were dominated by the profound alterations in the concentrations of the dNTPs. This was characterized by a rapid and persistent drop (for 3 days) of the dGTP pool. The concentrations of dATP and dCTP also declined, but these alterations were less pronounced and the pools returned to normal after 2 days.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Targets and markers of selective action of tiazofurin. 242 86
A variety of purine analogs inhibit the growth and induce the differentiation of human promyelocytic leukemia (HL-60) cells that lack the purine salvage enzyme hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT). Mechanisms by which purine analogs induce differentiation offer unique potential for
cancer
chemotherapy. The guanine analogs, 6-thioguanine and 8-azaguanine, induce granulocytic differentiation of HGPRT-deficient HL-60 promyelocytes. Although these compounds are useful as model purine analogs that induce differentiation in HGPRT-deficient HL-60 cells, they suffer the disadvantage that they are highly cytotoxic to wild-type cells. We studied the effect of the hypoxanthine analog 6-ethylmercaptopurine on wild-type and HGPRT-deficient HL-60 cells. 6-Ethylmercaptopurine inhibits growth and produces a specific terminal end-cell in both types of HL-60 cells. The mechanism appears to be independent of the normal modes of cytotoxic activation through HGPRT or
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
APRT
), since no new peaks were seen in HPLC chromatograms of the nucleotide pools. Furthermore, hypoxanthine and adenine failed to prevent growth inhibition by 6-ethylmercaptopurine, and inhibition of IMP dehydrogenase and the consequential alteration of the guanine nucleotide pools does not appear to be involved. The mechanism differs from that of guanine analog-induced differentiation in HGPRT-deficient HL-60 cells.
Cancer
Chemother Pharmacol 1989
PMID:6-ethylmercaptopurine-mediated growth inhibition of HL-60 cells in vitro irrespective of purine salvage. 259 10
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