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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 enzyme inosinic acid dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1 [14]) was measured and partially purified (10- to 15-fold) from normal and leukemic leukocytes. From the normal blood cells, the highest activities could be detected in lymphocytes and bone marrow cells. Dependent on the blast cell count, the leukemic IMP dehydrogenase had a higher mean specific activity than the enzymes of fractionated, immature bone marrow cells, or normal granulocytes. The partially purified enzymes from the various blood cells were apparently identical; they exhibited hyperbolic substrate saturation kinetics and were inhibited by a number of purine nucleotides. For the leukemic blast cell enzyme, the Km values for the substrates, IMP and NAD+, were 28 +/- 11; 227 +/- 98 microM, and 34 +/- 10; 240 +/- 67 microM for the partially purified enzyme from normal, immature bone marrow cells. The hypoxanthine-guanine and
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
activities increased in the leukemic cells when compared with mature granulocytes, but nearly always showed similar activities when compared with fractionated bone marrow cells. Only one of the 30 investigated leukemic patients exhibited a marked decrease in
hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase
activity of 0.5 nmol/mg/h. The phosphoribosyltransferase-specific activities of the leukemic cells are more variable than for the normal ones and no correlation of enzyme activities and blast cell count was apparent.
...
PMID:Inosine 5'-phosphate dehydrogenase activity in normal and leukemic blood cells. 29 19
During the preparation of spheroplasts,
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
EC 2.4.2.7
) and
hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
EC 2.4.2.8
) were released in parallel with cytidine deaminase (EC 3.5.4.5) and uridine phosphorylase (EC 2.4.2.3), which, on other evidence, are considered to be located intracellularly. The two phosphoribosyltransferases and uridine phosphorylase were not significantly associated with purified membrane fractions as was purine nucleoside phosphorylase (EC 2.4.2.1). The effects of the poorly permeable enzyme-inactivating reagents, 4-diazoniumbenzenesulphonate, 7-diazonium-1,3-naphthalene-disulphonate and 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulphonate, on Escherichia coli indicate that all the above-mentioned enzymes and also the xanthine-
guanine phosphoribosyltransferase
[Miller, Ramsey, Krenitsky & Elion (1972) Biochemistry 11, 4723--4731] are located intracellularly.
...
PMID:The location of purine phosphoribosyltransferase activities in Escherichia coli. 36 72
Uptake of adenine, hypoxanthine and uracil by an uncA strain of Escherichia coli is inhibited by uncouplers or when phosphate in the medium is replaced by less than 1 mM-arsenate, indicating a need for both a protonmotive force and phosphorylated metabolites. The rate of uptake of adenine or hypoxanthine was not markedly affected by a genetic deficiency of purine nucleoside phosphorylase. In two mutants with undetected
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
, the rate of adenine uptake was about 30% of that in their parent strain, and evidence was obtained to confirm that adenine had then been utilized via purine nucleoside phosphorylase. In a strain deficient in both enzymes adenine uptake was about 1% of that shown by wild-type strains. Uptake of hypoxanthine was similarly limited in a strain lacking purine nucleoside phosphorylase,
hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase
and
guanine phosphoribosyltransferase
. Deficiency of uracil phosphoribosyltransferase severely limits uracil uptake, but the defect can be circumvented by addition of inosine, which presumably provides ribose 1-phosphate for reversal of uridine phosphorylase. The results indicate that there are porter systems for adenine, hypoxanthine and uracil dependent on a protonmotive force and facilitated by intracellular metabolism of the free bases.
...
PMID:Transport of adenine, hypoxanthine and uracil into Escherichia coli. 41 44
A family is reported where four males have developed hyperuricemia, renal damage and, except for the youngest person affected, gout at an early age. The disease appears to be inherited as an X-linked recessive metabolic error. Clinically the patients have developed classical, tophaceous gout before the age of 25 and have suffered repeated attacks of renal colic. Renal tubular damage with decreased ability to concentrate and acidify urine was seen in a family member of only 16 years of age. Progressive renal failure seems to develop slowly. None in the family has shown neurologic symptoms, and two of the four affected men are apparently of at least average intelligence, two slightly below average. One female carrier has repeatedly passed uric acid stones. Studies of the red blood cell lysate have shown a normal activity of enzyme
hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase
, and an increased level of
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
. Skin fibroblasts from affected family members grew normally in the presence of 8-azaguanine. Administration of azathioprine to the patients did not decrease their serum uric acid levels. This is the first family described with this type of disorder of the purine metabolism.
...
PMID:Recessive X-linked hyperuricemia with gout and renal damage, normal activity of hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase and resistance to azaguanine. 42 44
Chinese hamster ovary cells were treated with the DNA-crosslinking chemicals, mitomycin C (MMC) and porfiromycin (POR), and their monofunctional derivative decarbamoyl mitomycin C (DCMMC). After exposure, the cells were studied for the induction of sister-chromatid exchanges (SCEs) and mutations at the
hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase
and
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
loci. The frequency of SCEs varied significantly in successive sampling intervals, requiring the weighting of each interval by the percentage of second-division mitosis in that interval to obtain the mean SCE frequency for each dose. All 3 compounds were potent inducers of SCEs but weakly mutagenic. All 3 chemicals by concentration were approximately equally effective in inducing SCEs or mutations. When the induced SCEs and mutations were compared at equal levels of survival, DCMMC was slightly more effective than MMC or POR in inducing SCEs and somewhat less mutagenic. These results indicate that the DNA interstrand crosslink is not the major lesion responsible for the induction of SCE or mutation by these compounds.
...
PMID:DNA crosslinking, sister-chromatid exchange and specific-locus mutations. 52 65
Clonal lines, with either partial or total deficiency of
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
APRT
) were derived from the WI-L2 long-term human lymphocyte line by selection for resistance to the adenine analogs 8-azaadenine or 2,6-diaminopurine. Resistance to 8-azaadenine also conferred resistance to 2,6 diaminopurine and vice versa. Cells with 30--40% of wild-type
APRT
activity were selected by resistance to 0.01 mM 2,6-diaminopurine or 1.40 mM 8-azaadenine. The
APRT
in the 8-azaadinine-resistant cells exhibited a four- to sevenfold increase in the apparent Km for adenine. Activities of three other purine reutilization and interconversion enzymes in the resistant cells, including
hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
HPRT
), adenosine kinase, and adenosine deaminase, were within the range of wild-type activities. The doubling times of the
APRT
-deficient cells in purine-free medium was not different from wild-type cells. The
APRT
in the 8-azaadenine-resistant cells did not have an altered mobility in glycerol gradients as compared to wild-type cells. The rate of purine synthesis de novo and intracellular levels of 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate were unchanged in the
APRT
-deficient cells as compared to WI-L2. The ability of the cells to reutilize exogenous adenine, however, was severely impaired.
...
PMID:Purine reutilization and synthesis de novo in long-term human lymphocyte cell lines deficient in adenine phosphoribosyltransferase activity. 69 20
A medium is described which can be used for the selection of somatic cell hybrids between
HPRT
- and
APRT
- mutant cells. This medium, called GAMA, contains as its relevant constituents the following: the purines guanine and adenine and the purine biosynthetic pathway inhibitors mycophenolic adic, which blocks conversion of adenine ribonucleotides to guanine ribonucleotides, and azaserine, which blocks de novo purine synthesis.
...
PMID:A selective medium (GAMA) for the isolation of somatic cell hybrids from HPRT- and APRT- mutant cells. 76 86
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...
...
PMID:Lesch-Nyhan syndrome: the synthesis of inosine 5'-phosphate in the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase-deficient erythrocyte by alternate biochemical pathways. 87 Aug 76
Adenine and adenosine metabolism has been studied in intact human erythrocytes in vitro using high performance liquid chromatography, isotopic labeling and electrophoresis. Their metabolism to nucleotides was controlled by phosphoribose diphosphate synthesis which was phosphate dependent. Adenosine formed hypoxanthine or IMP depending upon Pi concentration, but adenosine kinase and deaminase activities were not affected by P levels. Free [14C]adenine and [14C]hypoxanthine were found in cellular extracts. Rapid interconversions occurred to give a distribution for ATP : ADP : AMP of 10 : 1 : 0.1. Marked decomposition of ATP to ADP and AMP occurred during incubations in plasma and Earle's media in air on nitrogen, but ATP levels remained stable in phosphate buffers and in the presence of oxygen. At physiological Pi (1 mM) adenosine kinase activity grossly exceeded
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
activity. The latter was approximately 7 fold that of
hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase
activity. These differences decreased with increasing Pi levels. No significant increase in corresponding nucleotides was obtained by incubation with high levels (0.5 mM) of adenine, guanine or guanosine at physiological Ii, ATP increased by 10% independently of the substrate employed and significant amounts of IMP and GTP were formed adenosine and guanosine, respectively. The existence of a bound intracellular pool of ATP is suggested.
...
PMID:Studies on adenine and adenosine metabolism by intact human erythrocytes using high performance liquid chromatography. 94 98
1. The hypoxanthine/guanine and
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
activities in a wide variety of human tissues were studied during their growth and development from foetal life onward. A wide range of activities develop after birth, with especially high values in the central nervous system and testes. 2. Postnatal development of hypoxanthine/
guanine phosphoribosyltransferase
was also defined in the rat. Although there were increases in the central nervous system and testes, there was also a rise in activity in the liver, which was less marked in man. 3. A sensitive radiochemical assay method, using dTTP to inhibit 5'-nucleotidase activity, suitable for tissue extracts, was developed. 4. No definite evidence of the existence of tissue-specific isoenzymes of hypoxanthine/guanine or
adenine phosphoribosyltransferase
was found. Hypoxanthine/
guanine phosphoribosyltransferase
in testes, however, had a significantly different thermal-denaturation rate constant. 5. The findings are discussed in an attempt to relate activity of hypoxanthine/
guanine phosphoribosyltransferase
to biological function. Growth as well as some developmental changes appear to be related to increase in the activity of this enzyme.
...
PMID:Developmental changes in purine phosphoribosyltransferases in human and rat tissues. 101 39
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