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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)

Hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (IMP:pryophosphate phosphoribosyltransferase, EC 2.4.2.8) from human erythrocytes has been purified 13 000-fold to apparent homogeneity. The native enzyme has a sedimentation coefficient of 5.9 S, determined by analytical ultracentrifugation, and a molecular weight of 81 000-83 000, determined by sedimentation equilibrium centrifugation. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis indicates a subunit molecular weight of 26 000, suggesting that the enzyme is a trimer. Isoelectric focusing resolves three peaks of enzyme activity at pH 5.6, 5.7 and 5.9. The amino acid composition of hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltrasferase is 17 Lys, 5 His, 12 Arg, 0 Trp, 31 Asx, 12 Thr, 14 Ser, 16 Glx, 14 Pro, 19 Gly, 12 Ala, 5 Cys, 18 Val, 5 Met, 11 Ile, 20 Leu, 10 Tyr, and 9 Phe. The enzyme appears to have a blocked N terminus.
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PMID:Human hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase. Purification and properties. 86 Dec 17

A patient is reported with X-linked hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT) deficiency. He had gout but no neurological symptoms. The patient had negligible HGPRT activity as determined by thin layer chromatography and liquid scintillation counting. Autoradiography of fibroblast cultures revealed no uptake of -3H-hypoxanthine. His mother and two sisters were shown to be heterozygotes.
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PMID:X-linked hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase deficiency without neurological disorders. a report of a family. 113 86

Treatment of hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT)-deficient human promyelocytic leukemia (HL-60) cells with 6-thioguanine results in growth inhibition and cell differentiation. 6-Thioguanine is a substrate for the tRNA modification enzyme tRNA-guanine ribosyltransferase, which normally catalyzes the exchange of queuine for guanine in position 1 of the anticodon of tRNAs for asparagine, aspartic acid, histidine, and tyrosine. During the early stages of HGPRT-deficient HL-60 cell differentiation induced by 6-thioguanine, there was a transient decrease in the queuine content of tRNA, and changes in the isoacceptor profiles of tRNA(His) indicate that 6-thioguanine was incorporated into the tRNA in place of queuine. Reversing this structural change in the tRNA anticodon by addition of excess exogenous queuine reversed the 6-thioguanine-induced growth inhibition and differentiation. Similar results were obtained when 8-azaguanine (another inhibitor of queuine modification of tRNA that can be incorporated into the anticodon) replaced 6-thioguanine as the inducing agent. The data suggest a primary role for the change in queuine modification of tRNA in mediating the differentiation of HGPRT-deficient HL-60 cells induced by guanine analogs.
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PMID:Guanine analog-induced differentiation of human promyelocytic leukemia cells and changes in queuine modification of tRNA. 347 81

The mutagenic specificities of ethylnitrosourea (ENU), X-rays (+/-)7 beta,8 alpha-dihydroxy-9 alpha,10 alpha-epoxy-7, 8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo[a]pyrene (BPDE), ICR-191, and N-acetoxy-2-acetylaminofluorene (N-AcO-AAF) were analyzed and compared in diploid human fibroblasts and Salmonella typhimurium. In the human fibroblasts, we compared the frequency of diphtheria toxin (DT)-resistant mutants, presumably induced in the gene coding for elongation factor-2, with the frequency of 6-thioguanine (TG) resistance induced by mutations in the gene coding for hypoxanthine(guanine)phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT). Recovery of DT-resistant (DTr) cells requires that the mutant EF-2 retain the ability to carry on protein synthesis since the normal EF-2 will be inactivated by DT selection. Therefore, the DTr mutation cannot involve major changes in the gene. In contrast, cells can acquire TG resistance by any mechanism which eliminates HPRT activity, e.g., base substitution, frameshift, deletion, loss of chromosomes. Each agent was assessed by calculating the ratio of the slopes of the dose-response plots (induced variant frequency as a function of dose of the agent used) for the two markers (DTr/TGr variants.). In S. typhimurium we examined the reversion frequency in four histidine-requiring strains bearing forward mutations of the frameshift (TA1538, TA98) or missense (TA1535, TA100) type. ENU, which was predominantly a base substitution mutagen in the bacteria, gave a ratio of DTr to TGr variants of 1.5. As expected of an agent inducing gross chromosomal changes, X-rays induced no revertants in bacteria and in human cells gave a ratio of 0.1. ICR-191 which was predominantly a frameshift mutagen in bacteria gave a ratio of 0.15. In the set of bacterial strains containing the plasmid pKM101, BPDE reverted both frameshift and base substitution mutations. It did not cause reversions in the other set of strains. In human cells BPDE gave a response similar to ENU, i.e., a ratio of DTr/TGr variants of 1.5. As reported by others, N-AcO-AAF was predominantly a frameshift mutagen in bacteria. However, in the human cells it gave a ratio of DTr/TGr variants of 1.5, similar to ENU and BPDE. These results suggest that in human cells, BPDE and N-AcO-AAF, like ENU, yield predominantly base substitutions, while ICR-191 and X-rays largely produce mutations by mechanisms which result in more extensive alterations in the gene.
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PMID:Comparison of the frequency of diphtheria toxin and thioguanine resistance induced by a series of carcinogens to analyze their mutational specificities in diploid human fibroblasts. 636 45

Hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.8) from beef brain has been purified 3100-fold to apparent homogeneity using a purification procedure based on GMP-Sepharose affinity chromatography. The native enzyme has a molecular weight of 84,000 as determined by gel filtration studies. A subunit molecular weight of 26,000 was obtained by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, suggesting that the enzyme is a trimer. Two forms of the enzyme have been separated by nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and isoelectric focusing. Basic pI values of 7.85 and 8.10 were obtained for the two forms. These values are much higher than have been observed with any other purified phosphoribosyltransferase. The amino acid composition of the enzyme is 18 Lys, 6 His, 9 Arg, 1 Trp, 6 Cys, 28 Asx, 12 Thr, 16 Ser, 19 Glx, 10 Pro, 23 Gly, 16 Ala, 17 Val, 5 Met, 11 Ile, 19 Leu, 9 Tyr, and 8 Phe. An unusual basic amino acid, yet to be identified, was also present. The enzyme exhibits Km values of 0.42 microM for guanine, 0.99 microM for hypoxanthine, 18.6 microM for P-Rib-PP in the presence of guanine, and 2.9 microM for P-Rib-PP in the presence of hypoxanthine.
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PMID:Studies of an unusually basic hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase. 735 77

Electrophilic arylnitrenium ions are considered to be the ultimate reactive intermediates formed by metabolism of mutagenic and carcinogenic arylamines and nitroarenes; they can produce DNA damage by reaction with specific sites on DNA bases. We studied their formation, reactivity and the genotoxic sequelae of their reactions with cellular DNA to understand the mutagenic and carcinogenic activities of arylamines and nitroarenes as a function of their chemical structure. Arylnitrenium ions were generated by the convenient non-metabolic procedure, photolysis of arylazides, to study the reactivity of these ultimate intermediates with DNA, by means of 32P-postlabelling, and the induction of histidine reversions in Salmonella, HPRT mutations and sister chromatid exchange in mammalian (Chinese hamster V79) cells. Good correlations were observed between the DNA-binding potencies and the mutagenic and SCE-inducing potencies of the arylnitrenium ions, among these the nitrenium ions derived from the heterocyclic food mutagens/carcinogens MeIQ, IQ, and MeIQx. This suggests that the reactivity of the arylnitrenium ions and the quantity of adducts formed with DNA are the principal determinants of the final quantity of genetic alterations in Salmonella and in V79 cells. Conversely, the quality of the adducts, that is, the structure of the arylamine residue bound, appears to be of less significance.
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PMID:Reactivity and genotoxicity of arylnitrenium ions in bacterial and mammalian cells. 845 71

A 40-year-old normouricemic (5.5 mg/dl) male showed 46% hemolysate and 37% lymphoblast hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) activities but was otherwise completely free of symptoms. His genomic DNA and cDNA had a missense base substitution (CAT-to-CGT in codon 60) leading to the amino-acid substitution His-to-Arg. Western blot analysis revealed that the amount of HPRT protein in lymphoblasts from this individual was 25%-50% of normal cells, suggesting that the decrease in the amount of enzyme protein was responsible for the partial deficiency. This provides the first clear evidence that a genomic missense mutation at the HPRT locus leads to a decrease in the amount of the enzyme protein but that otherwise it has no evident adverse effects in the hemizygote (asymptomatic mutation).
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PMID:An asymptomatic germline missense base substitution in the hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) gene that reduces the amount of enzyme in humans. 900 84

Mitotic recombination is believed to play an important role in the development of many cancers. An improved system has been developed to detect reversion of an intragenic DNA duplication, as a model for intrachromosomal homologous recombination. The 'LNtd' strain of human fibroblasts, derived from a Lesch-Nyhan donor, produces no detectable hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) activity due to a 13.7-kilobase-pair DNA insertion duplicating exons 2 and 3 of the HPRT locus. These cells are therefore sensitive to selection in HAT medium, against cells lacking functional HPRT enzyme. Clonal reversion to HAT resistance occurs spontaneously at 1-3 x 10(-5)/cell/generation, and can be induced by brief exposure to a variety of carcinogenic agents. Six known carcinogens, including two (diethylstilbestrol and nickel chloride) which were non-mutagenic in Salmonella by Ames HIS-reversion tests, showed dose-dependent induction of LNtd reversion by a maximum of 2.4- to > 11-fold over controls (each p < 0.01). In contrast, 5 non-carcinogenic agents, including two 'Ames-positive' chemicals, sodium azide and 8-hydroxyquinoline, evoked no more than a 1.7-fold increase in reversion (not significant). The molecular events associated with reversion to HAT-resistance were characterized, relative to the parental strain, in HATR clones derived from either untreated or carcinogen-treated cells. Both the intron-3:intron-1 junction situated between the duplicated HPRT segments in LNtd cells (amplified by polymerase chain reaction), and a restriction fragment corresponding to the duplicated HPRT DNA (assessed by Southern-blot hybridization), were lost from the majority of HATR revertant clones, whether they arose spontaneously or following exposure to Cr(VI) or ultraviolet light. These results imply that HATR reversion is induced in LNtd cells by carcinogenic treatments, through a mechanism consistent with homologous recombination, and is highly concordant with induction of in vivo carcinogenesis by the same agents.
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PMID:Carcinogens stimulate intrachromosomal homologous recombination at an endogenous locus in human diploid fibroblasts. 950 87

Centchroman (CC), a non-steroidal oral contraceptive and a candidate drug for breast cancer, has been reported to exhibit partial to complete remission of lesions in 40.5% of breast cancer patients. The potent anti-oestrogenic activity, negligible side-effects and anti-breast cancer activity of CC prompted us to evaluate the antimutagenic effects of this compound in a bacterial mutagenicity assay and CHO/HPRT and AS52/GPT mutation assays in vitro and in vivo in female Swiss albino mice as measured by both sister chromatid exchange (SCE) and chromosome aberrations (CA) against three known positive mutagen compounds, dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA), cyclophosphamide (CP) and mitomycin C (MMC). Antimutagenicity assays in Salmonella strains TA97a, TA100, TA98 and TA102 were carried out against commonly used known positive mutagens, sodium azide, 4-nitro-o-phenylenediamine, cumine hydroperoxide, 2-aminofluorene and danthron. A significantly reduced number of bacterial histidine revertant colonies was observed in the plates treated with 0.1, 1, 5 and 10 microg/plate CC and a positive compound when compared with bacterial plates treated with the respective positive compound alone. Ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS), a commonly used positive mutagen for CHO/HPRT and AS52/GPT gene mutation assays, was used for antimutagenicity assay in these cells. CC exhibited protective effects against the mutagenicity of EMS in these two mammalian cell mutation assays, CHO/HPRT and AS52/GPT. In the in vivo studies, pretreatment with CC reduced DMBA-induced SCE and CA and CP- and MMC-induced CA when compared with the group treated only with the positive compounds. These results indicate that CC can reduce the mutagenic effects of known genotoxic compounds.
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PMID:Antimutagenic effects of centchroman--a contraceptive and a candidate drug for breast cancer in multiple mutational assays. 1056 37

A comprehensive approach to evaluate genotoxic effects induced by styrene exposure was employed in 44 hand-lamination workers in comparison with 18 unexposed controls. The acquired data on single-strand breaks in DNA (SSBs), frequency of chromosomal aberrations and HPRT mutant frequency in peripheral blood lymphocytes were compared to the results on genotyping of some of the xenobiotic-metabolising enzymes (CYP1A1, CYP2E1, epoxide hydrolase and GSTM1, GSTP1 and GSTT1). Multifactorial regression analysis indicated that SSB in DNA were significantly associated with styrene exposure and with heterozygosity in CYP2E1 (5'-flanking region and intron 6; r(2)=0.614). The frequency of chromosomal aberrations (CA), as analysed by linear multiple regression analysis, significantly correlated with years of employment (P=0.004) and with combinations of epoxide hydrolase (EPHX) genotypes (exon 3, Tyr/His and exon 4, His/Arg), where individuals with low and medium activity EPHX genotypes exhibited higher frequencies of CA than those with high activity genotypes (P=0.044, r(2)=0.563). Moderately higher HPRT mutant frequencies were detected in styrene-exposed individuals (20.2 +/- 25.8 x 10(-6)) as compared to controls (13.3 +/- 6.3 x 10(-6)), but this difference was not significant. ANOVA (in the whole set of data) revealed that mutant frequencies at the HPRT gene were significantly associated with years of employment (F=6.9, P=0.0001), styrene in blood (F=10.1, P=0.0001), and heterozygosity in CYP2E1 (intron 6; F=13.5, P=0.0008) and GSTP1 (exon 5; F=3.6, P=0.038). In conclusion, our present data suggest that analysed biomarkers of DNA damage may be modulated by polymorphic CYP2E1, EPHX and GSTP1. In our study, styrene-specific DNA and haemoglobin adducts are under investigation. Completing these data with the results of genotyping of metabolising enzymes may provide a useful tool for individual genotoxic risk assessment.
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PMID:Association between genetic polymorphisms and biomarkers in styrene-exposed workers. 1153 53


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