Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.1.26.9 (
ribonuclease
)
6,589
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Several newly synthesized boron betaine analogs had antitumor activity in Ehrlich ascites, Walker 256 ascites carcinosarcoma, and Lewis lung screens and marginal activity in the B-16 melanotic melanoma screen. In vivo testing demonstrated that trimethylamine-cyanoborane inhibied Ehrlich ascites cell DNA and protein syntheses as well as gene modulation by chromatin protein phosphorylation and methylation. Trimethylamine-cyanoborane increased cyclic-AMP levels. In vitro testing showed that nuclear DNA polymerase,
thymidylate synthetase
, S-adenosylmethyltransferase, nonhistone chromatin methylation, deoxyribonuclease,
ribonuclease
, and cathepsin were inhibited by the boron analogs. These compounds did not demonstrate high antitumor activity at the doses employed, but blockage of methyl transfer from S-adenosylmethionine was established as a feasible method for controlling cell proliferation.
...
PMID:Boron betaine analogs: antitumor activity and effects on Ehrlich ascites tumor cell metabolism. 22 87
Raney nickel (Ni(H)) catalyzes a specific reductive cleavage of carbon-sulfur bonds and, therefore, can be used to determine whether compounds are covalently bound to proteins through a sulfide linkage. When the covalent
thymidylate synthetase
-[3H]5-fluoro-2'-deoxyuridylic acid-[14C]-5,10-CH2H4-folate complex (Langenbach et al. (1972a), Biochem, Biophys. Res. Commun. 48, 1565) was denatured and then shaken with Ni(H) at 25 degrees C, both isotopes were rapidly cleaved from the protein, with identical reaction halftimes of less than 10 min. The liberated radioactivity was filterable through nitro-cellulose filters and comigrated with small molecules on Sephadex G-25. Both labels migrated identically upon paper chromatography. A [3H]5-fluoro-2'-deoxyuridylic acid-[35S]
thymidylate synthetase
complex was formed with enzyme isolated from Lactobacillus casei grown in the presence of [35S]cysteine. This complex, upon Ni(H) treatment, released both tritium and sulfur-35 at identical rates. Control experiments on amino acids showed that only the sulfur-containing amino acids are degraded by Ni(H). Cysteine was rapidly converted to alanine and methionine to alpha-aminobutyric acid. 5-Carboxymethylcysteine and 5-uracilylcysteine, simple models for the tenary enzyme-5-fluoro-2'-deoxyuridylic acid-5,10-CH2H4-folate complex, were converted to alanine at the same rate that 5-fluoro-2'-deoxyuridylic acid (FdUrd-5'-P) was cleaved from the enzyme. Native
ribonuclease
, which has a tightly coiled structure, was not affected by the reagent, but carboxymethylated
ribonuclease
was desulfurized. Amino acid analysis of Ni(H)-treated
thymidylate synthetase
showed that cysteine was the only amino acid degraded. Gel electrophoresis of the proteins after exposure to Ni(H) showed no breakage of polypeptide chains. These results support a sulfide linkage between FdUrd-5'-P and
thymidylate synthetase
in the covalent complex.
...
PMID:The effect of Raney nickel on the covalent thymidylate synthetase-5-fluoro-2'-deoxyuridylate-5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate complex. 125 51
Models describing the interaction of a small molecule with a protein are typically couched in terms of the stoichiometry, cooperativity, and binding free-energy change. These parameters are readily available from equilibrium dialysis experiments (or appropriate variations). With the recent advent of extremely sensitive calorimeters, it is possible to obtain thermal data for the binding reaction and, thus, the entire set of thermodynamic parameters, delta G', delta H', delta S', delta C', become readily available. This review is limited to the binding of nucleotides and nucleotide analogs to proteins for which complete thermal data are available. While the majority of such systems have been characterized by calorimetry, we have not excluded, per se, van't Hoff enthalpy determinations. The systems we have considered include, but are not limited to,
thymidylate synthetase
, phosphorylase, several dehydrogenases, aldolase, glutamine synthetase, hemoglobin, asparate transcarbamylase, and
ribonuclease
. A variety of forces contribute to the total free-energy change upon ligand binding. These forces include ionic, van der Waals, hydrogen bond, and hydrophobic. In several cases, properly designed experiments have allowed a partial resolution of the individual contributions of these various forces. Variation of easily accessible conditions such as temperature, pH, ionic strength, or solvent third component produce changes in the set of thermodynamic parameters which lead to the resolution of the forces. The generality of heat effects makes this method very useful for studying the involvement of protons in binding reactions. The variation in the magnitude and direction (release or uptake) of the proton flux is readily studied by determining the apparent heat of reaction at constant pH, ionic strength, and temperature in two or more buffers of differing heat of ionization. This application has been exploited in several cases and is examined in great detail. An overview of the results in these systems to date suggests that several trends observed in the thermodynamic parameters need to be confirmed by further experimentation and, if they hold, an appropriate theoretical basis must be developed to aid in their interpretation.
...
PMID:The thermodynamics of nucleotide binding to proteins. 610 94