Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.27.4 (ribonuclease)
6,621 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Purkinje cell toxicity is one of the characteristic features of the Gordon phenomenon, a syndrome manifested by ataxia, muscular rigidity, paralysis, and tremor that may lead to death (Gordon, 1933). Two members of the RNase superfamily found in humans, EDN (eosinophil-derived neurotoxin) and ECP (eosinophil cationic protein), cause the Gordon phenomenon when injected intraventricularly into guinea pigs or rabbits. We have found that another member of the RNase superfamily, an antitumor protein called onconase, isolated from Rana pipiens oocytes and early embryos, will also cause the Gordon phenomenon when injected into the cerebrospinal fluid of guinea pigs at a dose similar to that of EDN (LD50, 3-4 micrograms). Neurologic abnormalities of onconase-treated animals were indistinguishable from those of EDN-treated animals, and histology showed dramatic Purkinje cell loss in the brains of onconase-treated animals. The neurotoxic activity of onconase correlates with ribonuclease activity. Onconase modified by iodoacetic acid to eliminate 70% and 98% of the ribonuclease activity of the native enzyme displays a similar decrease in ability to cause the Gordon phenomenon. In contrast, the homologous bovine pancreatic RNase A injected intraventricularly at a dose 5000 times greater than the LD50 dose of EDN or onconase is not toxic and does not cause the Gordon phenomenon. A comparison of the RNase activities of EDN, onconase, and bovine pancreatic RNase A using three pancreatic RNA substrates demonstrates that onconase is orders of magnitude less active enzymatically than EDN and RNase A. Thus, another member of the RNase superfamily in addition to EDN and ECP can cause the Gordon phenomenon.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Toxicity of an antitumor ribonuclease to Purkinje neurons. 830 53

Onconase, or P-30, is a protein initially purified from extracts of Rana pipiens oocytes and early embryos based upon its anticancer activity both in vitro and in vivo. It is a basic single-chain protein with an apparent molecular mass of 12,000 daltons and is homologous to RNase A. In cultured 9L glioma cells, onconase inhibits protein synthesis with an IC50 of about 10(-7) M. The inhibition of protein synthesis correlates with cell death determined by clonogenic assays. 125I-Labeled onconase binds to specific sites on cultured 9L glioma cells. Scatchard analysis of the binding data shows that onconase appears to bind to cells with two different affinities, one with a Kd of 6.2 x 10(-8) and another of 2.5 x 10(-7) M. Each cell could bind about 3 x 10(5) molecules of onconase at each of the two affinity sites. The low affinity Kd is similar to the IC50 for onconase toxicity. Onconase also demonstrates a saturability of cytotoxicity at a concentration that would saturate the low affinity binding site. Incubation at 4 degrees C increased the binding of onconase to cells relative to 37 degrees C binding and also increased the sensitivity of cells to onconase toxicity, indicating that receptor binding may be an initial step in cell toxicity. Onconase cytotoxicity can be blocked by metabolic inhibitors, NaN3 and 2-deoxyglucose, and cytotoxicity is potentiated 10-fold by monensin. Ribonuclease activity appears necessary for onconase toxicity because alkylated onconase, which only retains 2% of the ribonuclease activity, was at least 100-fold less potent in inhibiting protein synthesis in cells. Onconase inhibition of protein synthesis in 9L cells coincides with the degradation of cellular 28 S and 18 S rRNA. In contrast to RNase A, onconase is resistant to two RNase inhibitors, placental ribonuclease inhibitor and Inhibit-Ace. Northern hybridization with placental ribonuclease inhibitor cDNA probe indicates that 9L glioma cells contain endogenous placental ribonuclease inhibitor mRNA. Based on these results, we propose that onconase toxicity results from onconase binding to cell surface receptors, internalization to the cell cytosol where it degrades ribosomal RNA, inhibiting protein synthesis and causing cell death.
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PMID:A cytotoxic ribonuclease. Study of the mechanism of onconase cytotoxicity. 848 18

The X-ray crystallographic structure of recombinant eosinophil-derived neurotoxin (rEDN) has been determined by molecular replacement methods and refined at 1.83 A resolution to a conventional R-factor ( = sigma magnitute of (magnitute of F(zero)-magnitude of Fc)/ sigma magnitude of F(zero) of 0.152 with excellent stereochemistry. The molecular model of rEDN contains all 1081 non-hydrogen protein atoms, two non-covalently bound sulfate anions and 121 ordered solvent molecules. The polypeptide fold of rEDN is related to those observed in the homologous structures of RNase A, Onconase and angiogenin. rEDN is one of the largest members of the pyrimidine-specific ribonuclease superfamily of vertebrates and has small insertions in four of its seven loop structures and a large insertion from Asp115 to Tyr123. The non-covalently bound SO4(A) and SO4(B) anions occupy phosphate-binding subsites of rEDN. The active site SO4(A) anion makes contacts in rEDN that are similar to those in RNase A and involve the side-chain atoms of Gln14, His15 and His129, and the NH group of Leu130. The SO4(B) anion makes contacts with the side-chain atoms of Arg36 and Asn39 and the main-chain atoms of Asn39 and Gln40. The equivalent residues of RNase A cannot make contacts similar to those observed in rEDN. The SO4(B) binding site of rEDN likely corresponds to the P-1 subsite and may be representative of how other homologous RNases bind the P-1 phosphate.
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PMID:X-ray crystallographic structure of recombinant eosinophil-derived neurotoxin at 1.83 A resolution. 875 19

Onconase is a cytotoxic ribonuclease with antitumor properties. A semisynthetic gene encoding the entire protein sequence was constructed by fusing oligonucleotides coding for the first 15 and last six of the 104 amino acid residues to a genomic clone that encoded the remaining amino acid residues. Additionally, the 15 N-terminal amino acid residues of onconase were replaced with the first 21 amino acid residues of the homologous human RNase, eosinophil-derived neurotoxin, EDN. Two versions of the hybrid EDN-onconase protein were cloned, expressed and purified. The chimera that contained a glycine in lieu of the aspartic acid present in native onconase (position 26 in the chimera) exhibited enzymatic activity more characteristic of EDN than native onconase and was considerably more active with respect to both RNase activity and cellular cytotoxicity than recombinant onconase. In contrast to native or recombinant onconase, the EDN chimera was recognized by anti-EDN polyclonal antibodies, demonstrating that the chimera also shared structural antigenic determinants to the human enzyme. These results demonstrate that a chimeric ribonuclease has cytotoxicity comparable to onconase in two out of four cell lines tested. The implications with regard to cancer therapy are presented.
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PMID:Expression and characterization of a cytotoxic human-frog chimeric ribonuclease: potential for cancer therapy. 919 72

Onconase is a cytotoxic ribonuclease with antitumor properties. A semisynthetic gene encoding the entire protein sequence was constructed by fusing oligonucleotides coding for the first 15 and the last 6 of the 104 amino acids to a genomic clone that encoded the remaining amino acid residues [Newton, D. L., et al. (1997) Protein Eng. 10, 463-470]. The resulting protein product expressed in Escherichia coli exhibited little enzymatic or cytotoxic activity due to the unprocessed N-terminal Met amino acid residue. In this study, we demonstrate that modification of the 5'-region of the gene to encode [Met-(-1)]Ser or [Met-(-1)]Tyr instead of the native pyroglutamate results in recombinant onconase derivatives with restored activities. [Met-(-1)]rOnc(E1S) was more active than [Met-(-1)]rOnc(E1Y) in all assays tested. Consistent with the action of native onconase, [Met-(-1)]rOnc(E1S) was a potent inhibitor of protein synthesis in the cell-free rabbit reticulocyte lysate assay, degrading tRNA at concentrations that correlated with inhibition of protein synthesis. An interesting difference between the recombinant onconase derivatives and the native protein was their susceptibility to inhibition by the major intracellular RNase inhibitor, PRI (onconase is refractory to PRI inhibition). [Met-(-1)]rOnc(E1S) and [Met-(-1)]rOnc(E1Y) inhibited protein synthesis in intact SF539 neuroblastoma cells with IC50's very similar to that of onconase (IC50 3.5, 10, and 10 microg/mL after 1 day and 0.16, 0.35, and 2.5 microg/mL after 5 days for onconase, [Met-(-1)]rOnc(E1S), and [Met-(-1)]rOnc(E1Y), respectively). Similar to that of onconase, cytotoxic activity of the recombinant derivatives was potentiated by monensin, NH4Cl, and retinoic acid. Brefeldin A completely blocked the enhancement of cytotoxicity caused by retinoic acid with all three proteins. Thus, drug-induced alterations of the intracellular trafficking of the recombinant derivatives also resembles that of onconase. Stability studies as assessed in serum-containing medium in the presence or absence of cells at 37 degreesC showed that the recombinant proteins were as stable to temperature and cell culture conditions as the native protein. Therefore, exchanging the Glu amino acid residue at the amino terminus of onconase with an amino acid residue containing a hydroxyl group produces recombinant proteins with ribonuclease and cytotoxic properties similar to native onconase.
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PMID:Single amino acid substitutions at the N-terminus of a recombinant cytotoxic ribonuclease markedly influence biochemical and biological properties. 954 48

Onconase (ONC) a ribonuclease from amphibian oocytes is cytostatic and cytotoxic to many human tumor lines, shows in vivo antitumor activity in mouse tumor models and is in Phase III clinical trials. The mechanism of antitumor activity of ONC is presumed to be due to its internalization, degradation of intracellular RNA and suppression of protein synthesis. Since apoptosis triggered by TNF-alpha is known to be potentiated by inhibitors of protein synthesis, we have hypothesized that it also may be potentiated by ONC. Indeed, preincubation of U-937 or HL-60 leukemic cells with 0.17 microM ONC rendered them more sensitive to induction of apoptosis by TNF-alpha or antibody to CD95 (Fas). The mechanism by which ONC amplifies the effect of TNF-alpha may involve suppression of induction of the survival genes whose expression is triggered by activation of NFkB by this factor.
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PMID:Potentiation of tumor necrosis factor induced apoptosis by onconase. 962 97

Select members of the bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A (RNase A) superfamily are potent cytotoxins. These cytotoxic ribonucleases enter the cytosol, where they degrade cellular RNA and cause cell death. Ribonuclease inhibitor (RI), a cytosolic protein, binds to members of the RNase A superfamily with inhibition constants that span 10 orders of magnitude. Here, we show that the affinity of a ribonuclease for RI plays an integral role in defining the potency of a cytotoxic ribonuclease. RNase A is not cytotoxic and binds RI with high affinity. Onconase, a cytotoxic RNase A homolog, binds RI with low affinity. To disrupt the RI-RNase A interaction, three RNase A residues (Asp-38, Gly-88, and Ala-109) that form multiple contacts with RI were replaced with arginine. Replacing Asp-38 and Ala-109 with an arginine residue has no effect on the RI-RNase interaction. In addition, these variants are not cytotoxic. In contrast, replacing Gly-88 with an arginine residue yields a ribonuclease (G88R RNase A) that retains catalytic activity in the presence of RI and is cytotoxic to a transformed cell line. Replacing Gly-88 with aspartate also yields a ribonuclease (G88D RNase A) with a decreased affinity for RI and cytotoxic activity. The cytotoxic potency of onconase, G88R RNase A, and G88D RNase A correlate with RI evasion. We conclude that ribonucleases that retain catalytic activity in the presence of RI are cytotoxins. This finding portends the development of a class of chemotherapeutic agents based on pancreatic ribonucleases.
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PMID:Ribonuclease A variants with potent cytotoxic activity. 972 16

Onconase, a homolog of ribonuclease A (RNase A) with low ribonucleolytic activity, is cytotoxic and has efficacy as a cancer chemotherapeutic. Here variants of RNase A were used to probe the interplay between ribonucleolytic activity and evasion of the cytosolic ribonuclease inhibitor protein (RI) in the cytotoxicity of ribonucleases. K41R/G88R RNase A is a less active catalyst than G88R RNase A but, surprisingly, is more cytotoxic. Like Onconase, the K41R/G88R variant has a low affinity for RI, which apparently compensates for its low ribonucleolytic activity. In contrast, K41A/G88R RNase A, which has the same affinity for RI as does the K41R/G88R variant, is not cytotoxic. The nontoxic K41A/G88R variant is a much less active catalyst than is the toxic K41R/G88R variant. These data indicate that maintaining sufficient ribonucleolytic activity in the presence of RI is a requirement for a homolog or variant of RNase A to be cytotoxic. This principle can guide the design of new chemotherapeutics based on homologs and variants of RNase A.
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PMID:A ribonuclease A variant with low catalytic activity but high cytotoxicity. 1074 60

Onconase (Onc) is a ribonuclease from amphibian oocytes that is cytostatic and cytotoxic to many tumour lines. It shows in vivo antitumour activity in mouse tumour models and is currently in Phase III clinical trials. The present study was designed to test whether cytotoxic effects of ONC can be modulated by differentiating agents. Human leukaemic HL-60 and prostate cancer LNCaP and JCA-1 cells were treated with Onc in the absence and presence of several inducers of differentiation and frequency of apoptosis was assessed using three different cytometric methods and confirmed by analysis of cell morphology. A moderate degree of apoptosis observed after 48-72 h incubation of HL-60 cells in the presence of 0.42 microM Onc alone was markedly potentiated by administration of retinoic acid (all trans), sodium butyrate or dimethylsulfoxide at concentrations known to induce differentiation but be minimally cytotoxic. Likewise, the frequency of apoptosis of LNCaP and JCA-1 cells treated with Onc was increased in the cultures to which phenylbutyrate was added. Although cell treatment with Onc alone, with each of the differentiating agents alone or with Onc in combination with the differentiating agents led to an increase in the proportion of G1 cells, no specific cell cycle phase preference in induction of apoptosis was observed. The data suggest that cells undergoing differentiation are particularly vulnerable to Onc; a combination of Onc and differentiating agents should be considered for further in vivo tests to assess its possible usefulness in the clinic.
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PMID:Induction of differentiation of leukaemic (HL-60) or prostate cancer (LNCaP, JCA-1) cells potentiates apoptosis triggered by onconase. 1110 Oct 12

Onconase, an anticancer ribonuclease, damages cellular tRNA and causes caspase-dependent apoptosis in targeted cells (M. S. Iordanov, O. P. Ryabinina, J. Wong, T. H. Dinh, D. L. Newton, S. M. Rybak, and B. E. Magun. Cancer Res. 60, 1983-1994, 2000). The proapoptotic action of onconase depends on its RNase activity, but the molecular mechanisms leading to RNA damage-induced caspase activation are completely unknown. In this study, we have investigated whether onconase activates two signal-transduction pathways commonly stimulated by conventional chemo- and radiotherapy, namely the stress-activated protein kinase (SAPK) cascade and the pathway leading to the activation of nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-kappaB). We found that, in all cell types tested, onconase is a potent activator of SAPK1 (JNK1 and JNK2) and SAPK2 (p38 MAP kinase), but that it is incapable of activating NF-kappaB. Inhibition of p38 MAP kinase activity with a pharmacological inhibitor, SB203580, demonstrated that p38 MAP kinase is not required for onconase cytotoxicity. Using explanted fibroblasts from mice that contain targeted disruption of both jnk1 and jnk2 alleles, we found that JNKs are important mediators of onconase-induced cytotoxicity. Surprisingly, following the immortalization of these same cells with human papilloma virus (HPV16) gene products E6 and E7, additional proapoptotic pathways (exclusive of JNK) were provoked by onconase. Our results demonstrate that onconase may activate proapoptotic pathways in tumor cells that are not able to be accessed in normal cells. These results present the possibility that the cytotoxic activity of onconase in normal cells may be reduced by blocking the activity of JNKs.
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PMID:Differential requirement for the stress-activated protein kinase/c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase in RNAdamage-induced apoptosis in primary and in immortalized fibroblasts. 1117 Aug 43


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