Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.4.2.8 (hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase)
2,527 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The uptake of purine nucleosides (guanosine and hypoxanthine) and bases (guanine, hypoxanthine and adenine) and their incorporation into nucleotides were studied in enterocytes isolated from fed and 3-day fasted guinea pig jejunum. Both total uptake and synthesis of nucleotides were greater for these purines in the fasted, as compared to the fed state for the first 5 min, when the initial substrate concentration in the medium was 10 microM. Increased uptake did not result from a change in the relative distribution of synthesized nucleotides between the fed and fasted states. Reduced catabolism was observed in the medium by enterocytes from fasted as compared to fed animals after 1 min of incubation with both inosine and guanosine. Preincubation of enterocytes with allopurinol (a xanthine oxidase inhibitor) decreased total uptake but increased the formation of IMP from hypoxanthine. Xanthine oxidase activity measured in mucosa from fasted guinea pigs was lower than that from fed animals (6.29 vs. 9.30 nmol/min per mg protein, respectively). However, activities of the salvage enzymes adenine phosphoribosyltransferase and hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase were not significantly different between the fed and fasted states. These data show that allopurinol treatment, and mucosal atrophy resulting from fasting, decrease xanthine oxidase activity and increase nucleotide synthesis from exogenous substrates in enterocytes from the guinea-pig small intestine, suggesting a regulatory function of mucosal xanthine oxidase in purine salvage by the small intestine.
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PMID:The effect of nutritional state and allopurinol on nucleotide formation in enterocytes from the guinea pig small intestine. 200 79

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 reactions catalyzed by orotate phosphoribosyltransferase (OPRTase) and hypoxanthine/guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRTase) from yeast differ in the kinetic mechanisms by which they are activated by divalent metal ions. Moreover, whereas OPRTase is activated specifically by Mg(II) or Mn(II), the reactions catalyzed by HGPRTase can utilize a wider range of divalent metal ions, including Mg(II), Mn(II), Co(II), and Zn(II). In this report we describe the results of a kinetic analysis of the effects of the addition of Cr(III) pyrophosphate (Cr-PPi) to the OPRTase and HGPRTase assay solutions, which delineates further the differences between these enzyme activations by metal ions. (1) Cr-PPi is an effective competitive inhibitor of the OPRTase catalysis, when the steady-state forward velocity of orotidine monophosphate (OMP) formation is examined over a range of phosphoribosyl alpha-pyrophosphate (PRibPP) concentrations, whereas pyrophosphate (PPi) has been reaffirmed to be a noncompetitive product inhibitor under the same conditions. (2) Cr-PPi itself serves as a substrate for the OPRTase-catalyzed reverse pyrophosphorolysis of OMP and does not inhibit the utilization of PPi as substrate during this reaction. (3) In contrast, Cr-PPi, at concentrations as high as 6 mM, has no effect on the HGPRTase-catalyzed formation of inosine monophosphate, whereas the inhibition exhibited by PPi during this reaction is noncompetitive but defined by two sets of lines in the double reciprocal plot of the initial velocity versus 1/PRibPP. (4) Cr-PPi is not a substrate for the HGPRTase-catalyzed pyrophosphorolysis of IMP under the conditions of these assay procedures.
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PMID:Orotate phosphoribosyltransferase and hypoxanthine/guanine phosphoribosyltransferase from yeast: kinetic analysis with chromium (III) pyrophosphate. 215 11

The Authors present a procedure for the determination of adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (APRT) and hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) in lymphocytes which exhibits high sensitivity and requires low quantities of lymphocytes. 5 normal subjects and 4 patients affected by chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) were considered. Human lymphocytes were prepared and treated as previously reported. To the incubation mixtures buffered with 50 mM TRIS-HCl pH 7.4 either 14C-adenine or 14C-hypoxanthine was added: after deproteinization and neutralization we followed the formation of either 14C-adenylic acid (AMP) or 14C-inosinic acid (IMP) by HPLC. A Supelcosil C18 5 microns (250 X 4.5 mm) column was used: IMP was eluted with 20 mM KH2PO4 pH 5.5 while AMP with a linear gradient to 40% B in 20 min., where A was 20 mM KH2PO4 pH 5.5 and B methanol/water 60:40. Evaluation of AMP and IMP formed was carried out by determination of the radioactivity of the collected peaks. The values of APRT in leukemic patients were enhanced when referred to the proteins and those of HGPRT decreased: the Authors propose to complete the study evaluating the intracellular content of adenine and hypoxanthine.
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PMID:[Behavior of the enzymes of the salvage pathway of purine bases in leukemia lymphocytes]. 239 7

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

HeLA H23 cells are a mutant female human tumor cell line harboring defective hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT; IMP-pyrophosphate phosphoribosyltransferase, EC 2.4.2.8) as a result of a mutation that alters the isoelectric point of the enzyme (G. Milman, E. Lee, G. S. Changas, J. R. McLaughlin, and J. George, Jr., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 73:4589-4592, 1976). As shown by Milman et al. and confirmed by us here, rare HAT+ revertants arise spontaneously at 1.9 X 10(-8) frequency and express both mutant and wild-type polypeptides. Thus, the H23 mutant also carries a silent wild-type HPRT allele that is activated in revertants. To test whether the silent allele was activated via hypomethylation of genomic DNA, H23 cells were treated with inhibitors of DNA methylation, and revertants were scored by HAT or azaserine selection. At an optimal dose of 5 microM 5-azacytidine, the reversion frequency was increased about 50-fold when assayed by HAT selection and over 1,000-fold when assayed by azaserine selection. HAT+ and azaserine revertants were heterozygous for HPRT, expressing both wild-type and mutant HPRT polypeptides. Like spontaneous revertants, they contained active HPRT enzyme and were genetically unstable, reverting at about 10(-4) frequency. Similar results were found after treatment with N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine, a DNA-alkylating agent and potent inhibitor of mammalian DNA methylation. By contrast, the DNA-ethylating agent, ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS), did not increase the HAT+ reversion frequency; it did, however, increase the frequency by which H23 revertants heterozygous for HPRT reverted to 6-thioguanine resistance. Of nine EMS revertants, seven lacked HPRT activity and had a substantially reduced expression of the wild-type polypeptide. These observations support the hypothesis that DNA methylation plays an important role in human X-chromosome inactivation and that EMS can inactivate gene expression by promoting enzymatic methylation of genomic DNA as found previously for the prolactin gene in GH3 rat pituitary tumor cells (R. D. Ivarie and J. A. Morris, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 79:2967-2970, 1982; R. D. Ivarie, J. A. Morris, and J. A. Martial, Mol. Cell. Biol. 2:179-189, 1982).
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PMID:Activation of a nonexpressed hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase allele in mutant H23 HeLa cells by agents that inhibit DNA methylation. 243 Dec 68

A variant clone of cultured chinese hamster lung fibroblasts (V79), selected for resistance to 8-azaguanine (V79 azagrst), although lacking hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.8), is able to convert hypoxanthine into IMP via purine-nucleoside phosphorylase (EC 2.4.2.1) and nucleoside kinase. In addition to the phosphoribosylation pathway, we also present evidence for the occurrence of a kinase-mediated pathway of recovery of hypoxanthine in the wild-type cells. The lower rate of formation of IMP in the V79 azagrst cells, apparently correlated with the phosphorylation of the nucleoside, suggests possible differences in the catalytic and/or regulatory properties of nucleoside kinase in the two cell lines. This fact might be of particular relevance in evaluating the mechanisms of resistance to purine analogs displayed by several cell types.
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PMID:Alpha-5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate-independent salvage of purines in cultured Chinese hamster lung fibroblasts. 245 98

Human DNA was used to transform adenosine kinase (AK)-deficient BHK cells followed by selection of AK+ cells in medium containing alanosine, adenosine, and uridine (AAU medium). Twenty AAUr isolates were analyzed, and none of them contained AK activity. Several purine salvage enzymes were, however, found to be affected in these cells. The levels of hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase and adenylosuccinate synthetase activities were elevated, while the adenylosuccinase activity was reduced. AAU-resistance may be explained by elevated activity of adenylosuccinate synthetase to overcome the alanosine block; thus AAUr cells were able to convert exogenous adenosine----inosine----hypoxanthine----IMP----AMPS----AMP. Moreover, these AAUr cells required exogenous purines for growth. HPLC analyses of endogenous nucleotide pools of AAUr cells showed that the levels of adenine nucleotides have diminished to less than 10% of the parental levels. These results suggest that the AAU-resistant mutation, which elicits pleiotropic phenotypes in BHK cells, affects an important component in the regulation of adenine nucleotide synthesis. By including erthyro-9-(2-hydroxy-3-nonyl)adenine in the AAU medium (renamed as AAUE medium) to block deamination of adenosine, AK+ BHK cells were isolated.
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PMID:Imbalance of purine nucleotides in alanosine-resistant baby hamster kidney cells. 253 26

Mycophenolic acid (MA) was demonstrated to be an effective inhibitor of the growth of the intracellular parasitic protozoan Eimeria tenella in tissue culture and guanine was shown to reverse this inhibition as expected for an inhibitor of IMP dehydrogenase (IMP:NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.205). A high performance liquid chromatography study of the intracellular nucleotide pools labeled with [3H]hypoxanthine was carried out in host cells lacking hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase, and the depletion of guanine nucleotides demonstrated that the intracellular parasite enzyme was being inhibited by the drug. Kinetic studies carried out on the enzyme derived from E. tenella oocysts demonstrated substrate inhibition by NAD and mycophenolic acid inhibition similar to that found for mammalian enzymes, but different from that for bacterial enzymes. The inhibition by mycophenolic acid was not time-dependent and was immediately reversed upon dilution. As found previously for other IMP dehydrogenases, an Ordered Bi-Bi mechanism prevails with IMP on first followed by NAD, NADH off first, and then XMP. The kinetic patterns are consistent with substrate inhibition at high concentrations of NAD due to the formation of an E X XMP X NAD complex. Uncompetitive inhibition by MA versus IMP, NAD, and K+ was found and this was interpreted as evidence for the formation of an E X XMP X MA complex. A speculative mechanism for the inhibition of the enzyme is offered which is consistent with the fact that E X XMP X MA readily forms, whereas E X IMP X MA does not.
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PMID:IMP dehydrogenase from the intracellular parasitic protozoan Eimeria tenella and its inhibition by mycophenolic acid. 287 41

Hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT; IMP: pyrophosphate phosphoribosyltransferase, EC 2.4.2.8) functions in the purine-metabolic salvage pathway. Two clinical syndromes are associated with a deficiency in HPRT enzyme activity. Virtually complete deficiency leads to the Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, whereas partial deficiency results in hyperuricemia and severe gouty arthritis. Marked heterogeneity in the mutations leading to HPRT deficiency has been found. Mutant enzymes vary with respect to levels of HPRT immunoreactive protein, electrophoretic migration, kinetic properties and amino acid sequence. Analysis of DNA and RNA from patients with HPRT deficiency has revealed point mutations, an internal gene duplication and partial as well as complete gene deletions accounting for the various HPRT mutant enzymes.
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PMID:Genetic analysis of human hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase deficiency. 289 5


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