Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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)

Hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.8) from rat brain or human erytherocytes can be irreversibly inactivated by incubation with periodate-oxidized analogues of the enzyme products GMP or IMP. This inhibition is specific and directed against the product binding site of the enzyme. Inactivation is not produced by periodate-oxidized AMP or other aldehydes, for example periodate-oxidized glycerol. The inactivation is concomitant with the binding of the inhibitor to the enzyme protein. The bound inhibitor cannot be removed from the protein by dialysis, Sephadex chromatography or polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. Adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.7), on the other hand, is not influenced by any of the inhibitors mentioned above.
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PMID:Irreversible inactivation of hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase by periodate oxidized nucleotides. 16 42

Erythrocytes, obtained from a normal adult male and from a patient with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, were incubated with [8-14C]adenine and [8-14C]hypoxanthine (Table 1). The labeled adenine was utilized to about the same extent for the synthesis of AMP by the normal subject's and the patient's erythrocytes. Deamination of AMP to IMP occurred to about the same extent in both samples. In contrast, hypoxanthine was utilized extensively for IMP synthesis in the normal erythrocyte only. The amount of total label in the IMP was about 100 times that of the Lesch-Nyhan erythrocyte, a consequence of the deficiency of hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT) activity in the syndrome. No significant labeling of the AMP occurred. When aliquots of erythrocytes from both sources were incubated with 4-amino-5-imidazolecarboxamide (AICA) and sodium [14C]formate, extensive labeling of the IMP occurred in normal and in Lesch-Nyhan erythrocytes. The data suggest that AICA serves as a substrate for the adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (APRT) of the Lesch-Nyhan erythrocyte and that the ribotide of AICA, 5'-phosphoribosyl-5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide (AICAR), undergoes formylation by labeled N10-formyl tetrahydrofolic acid formed from the reaction of sodium [14C]formate with the tetrahydrofolic acid of the cell. The formyl-AICAR undergoes ring closure to IMP by a series of reactions comparable to those described for the normal erythrocyte. When 5-amino-1-ribosyl-4-imidazolecarboxamide (rAICA) and sodium [14C]formate were incubated with erythrocyte suspensions, extensive utilization for IMP synthesis was also observed in normal erythrocytes and in erythrocytes from Lesch-Nyhan patients (Table 2). The reaction sequence is somewhat different from that of AICA. AICA is not a substrate for the purine nucleoside phosphorylase of rabbit or human erythrocytes. The mechanism of rAICA utilization is visualized as a direct phosphorylation of the ribosyl compound, possibly by the adenosine kinase of the human cell. The ribotide, AICAR, formed by this mechanism, undergoes formylation and ring closure, yielding IMP. The glutamine antagonist, diazooxonorleucine (DON), was added to aliquots of patients' cells incubated with rAICA and sodium [14C]formate. DON is an effective inhibitor of the conversion of IMP to GMP and its presence in an incubation suspension resulted in a somewhat greater radioactivity of the total cellular IMP. The extension of the current studies to Lesch-Nyhan cells in culture may serve to assist in the direct evaluation of the regulatory role of IMP in the de novo pathway of purine nucleotide biosynthesis. Because of the substrate requirements of the reactions, the metabolism of AICA and rAICA may also serve to differentiate the roles of purine nucleotides and of phosphoribosylpyrophosphate (PRPP) in the pathway regulation. The findings presented also offer a possible therapeutic approach to the early treatment of the disease in the afflicted neonate...
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PMID:Lesch-Nyhan syndrome: the synthesis of inosine 5'-phosphate in the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase-deficient erythrocyte by alternate biochemical pathways. 87 Aug 76

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.
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PMID:Metabolism and metabolic effects of 8-azainosine and 8-azaadenosine. 97 40

The mutation in a young gouty male with a partial deficiency of hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase has been evaluated. The serum uric acid was 11.8 mg/100 ml, and the urinary uric acid excretion was 1,279 mg/24 h. Erythrocyte hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase was 34.2 nmol/h/mg, adenine phosphoribosyltransferase was 36.5 nmol/h/mg and phosphoribosylpyrophosphate was 2.6 muM. Hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase from peripheral leukocytes and cultured diploid skin fibroblasts was within the normal range, but enzyme activity in rectal mucosa was below the normal range. Initial velocity studies of the normal enzyme and the mutant enzyme from erythrocytes with the substrates hypoxanthine, guanine, or phosphoribosylpyrophosphate showed that the Michaelis constants were similar. Product inhibition studies distinguished the mutant enzyme from the normal enzyme. Hyperbolic kinetics with increasing phosphoribosylpyrophosphate were converted to sigmoid kinetics by 0.2 mM GMP with the mutant enzyme but not with the normal enzyme. The mutant erythrocyte hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase was inactivated normally at 80 degrees C and had a normal half-life in the peripheral circulation. The mol wt of 48,000 was similar to the normal enzyme mol wt of 47,000. With isoelectric focusing, the mutant erythrocyte enzyme had two major peaks with isoelectric pH's of 5.50 and 5.70, in contrast to the isoelectric pH's of 5.76, 5.82, and 6.02 of the normal isozymes. Isoelectric focusing of leukocyte extracts from the patient revealed the presence of the mutant enzyme. Cultured diploid fibroblasts from the propositus appeared to function normally, as shown by the inability to grow in 50-100 muM azaguanine and by the normal incorporation of [14C]hypoxanthine into nucleic acid. In contrast, erythrocytes from the patient displayed abnormal properties, including the increased synthesis of phosphoribosylphyrophosphate and elevated functional activity of orotate phosphoribosyltransferase and orotidylic decarboxylase. These unique kinetic, physical, and functional properties provide support for heterogeneous structural gene mutations in partial deficiencies of hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase.
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PMID:Hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase. Characterization of a mutant in a patient with gout. 118 48

Five purine auxotrophic mutants of Lactococcus lactis were isolated. L. lactis was capable of converting adenine, guanine and hypoxanthine to AMP, GMP and IMP, respectively, indicating the existence of adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (APRT) and hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT) activities. A 1.3 kb DNA fragment from L. lactis was cloned by complementation of the hpt mutation in Escherichia coli. Introduction of this fragment into L. lactis resulted in an increase in HGPRT activity. In vitro transcription and translation analysis showed that the fragment coded for a polypeptide with M(r) of 22,000. The nucleotide sequence of this hpt gene was determined.
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PMID:Isolation of purine auxotrophic mutants of Lactococcus lactis and characterization of the gene hpt encoding hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyltransferase. 146 8

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.
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PMID:Purine metabolism of human glioblastoma in vivo. 215 28

The proliferative effect of insulin on de novo purine synthesis and on the expression of various enzymes of purine metabolism were studied in primary cultured rat hepatocytes. Insulin greater than 1.5 x 10(-8) M increased DNA and de novo purine synthesis to 260-390 and 270-420%, respectively, 24 and 8 h after the administration. Insulin at 1.5 x 10(-7) M increased the specific activity of amidophosphoribosyltransferase (ATase) to 154-180%, hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase to 129%, and adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (APRT) to 205%, in contrast to unchanged xanthine dehydrogenase at 80%. Enzyme induction was supported by the results of kinetic analysis and the inhibition of the insulin-induced increase in enzyme activities by protein synthesis inhibitors. Insulin increased ATP to 127% and decreased AMP, ADP, 5'-guanylic acid (GMP), and guanosine 5'-diphosphate (GDP), respectively, to 73, 69, 73, and 69%. Insulin increased adenylate energy charge from 0.83 to 0.90 without changing total feedback inhibitory potential on ATase. No obvious increase of 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate supply was suggested, although its apparent availability for purine ribonucleotide synthesis was increased to 208-245%, reflecting mainly induced APRT activity to 205%. It is concluded that hepatocyte proliferation by insulin, as evidenced by purine metabolism, is mediated by the selective gene activation of anabolic enzymes and increased ATP as the basis to activate multiple metabolic pathways without remarkable changes of substrate availability or feedback inhibition.
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PMID:Increased de novo purine synthesis by insulin through selective enzyme induction in primary cultured rat hepatocytes. 218 59

The activities (Vmax) of several enzymes of purine nucleotide metabolism were assayed in premature and mature primary rat neuronal cultures and in whole rat brains. In the neuronal cultures, representing 90% pure neurons, maturation (up to 14 days in culture) resulted in an increase in the activities of guanine deaminase (guanase), purine-nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP), IMP 5'-nucleotidase, adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (APRT), and AMP deaminase, but in no change in the activities of hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT), adenosine deaminase, adenosine kinase, and AMP 5'-nucleotidase. In whole brains in vivo, maturation (from 18 days of gestation to 14 days post partum) was associated with an increase in the activities of guanase, PNP, IMP 5'-nucleotidase, AMP deaminase, and HGPRT, a decrease in the activities of adenosine deaminase and IMP dehydrogenase, and no change in the activities of APRT, AMP 5'-nucleotidase, and adenosine kinase. The profound changes in purine metabolism, which occur with maturation of the neuronal cells in primary cultures in vitro and in whole brains in vivo, create an advantage for AMP degradation by deamination, rather than by dephosphorylation, and for guanine degradation to xanthine over its reutilization for synthesis of GMP. The physiological meaning of the maturational increase in these two ammonia-producing enzymes in the brain is not yet clear. The striking similarity in the alterations of enzyme activities in the two systems indicates that the primary culture system may serve as an appropriate model for the study of purine metabolism in brain.
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PMID:Developmental changes in the activity of enzymes of purine metabolism in rat neuronal cells in culture and in whole brain. 232 47

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)
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PMID:Targets and markers of selective action of tiazofurin. 242 86

Three brothers who developed acute gouty arthritis at ages 16, 20 and 26 years were found to have increased plasma urate. Erythrocyte hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) activity was less than 1% of normal and adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (APRT) activity was increased 2-3-fold. This variant, HPRTEdinburgh, was further studied using lymphoblast lines established from these patients and the following observations are consistent with a mutation involving a single amino acid substitution. Lymphoblasts from these patients had 0.9-1.6% of control HPRT activity which was 8-fold more labile than control activity at 75 degrees C. Isoelectric focusing of the variant protein in polyacrylamide gels indicated a pI of 6.5-6.7 which is more basic than normal HPRT, pI 6.0-6.3. The Michaelis constants were increased: 10-fold for hypoxanthine from 1.3 to 13 mumol/L, and 5-fold for PP-ribose-P from 6 to 30 mumol/L, for control and variant respectively. The Ki for product inhibition by GMP was marginally increased in the variant. Northern blot analysis of variant lymphoblast RNA indicated normal amounts of the expected 1.6 kilobase messenger RNA.
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PMID:Hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase deficiency in three brothers with gout: characterization of a variant, HPRTEdinburgh, having altered isoelectric point, increased thermal lability and normal levels of messenger RNA. 251 72


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