Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.5.1.4 (deaminase)
5,113 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The activity of cobalt-activated acylase was determined in the serum of mice with transplantable leukemia (P 388, L 1210 standard, L 1210/ara-C, L 1210/CH3-G, plasmocytoma ADJPC-5, lymphoma AKSL-4 and natural leukemia in mice NZB). A statistically significant increase in enzyme activity in all leukemias except lymphatic leukemia has been demonstrated. The results suggest possibility of using the enzymatic measurement as a marker of transplantable leukemia in mice.
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PMID:Serum cobalt-activated acylase as a marker of transplantable leukemia in mice. 327 96

The in vivo development of an ara-C-resistant leukemic cell line is reported in a rat leukemia model (BNML) that is generally accepted as a relevant model for human acute myelocytic leukemia. It took 32 continuous leukemia transplant generations, performed over 20 months, and a total dose of 28.5 g ara-C/kg to induce complete resistance. Preliminary data indicate that the development of ara-C resistance is related with decreased intracellular levels of deoxycytidine kinase. Deoxycytidine deaminase levels were not increased. Thus this enzyme does not seem to be involved with induction of resistance. This preclinical rat model for human AML provides a solid basis for studies in depth on the mechanism(s) and possible prevention and effective treatment of resistance to ara-C.
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PMID:In vivo development of cytosine arabinoside resistance in the BN acute myelocytic leukemia. 347 77

Cytotoxicity of arabinofuranosylcytosine (ara-C) has been related in vitro to the inhibition of the DNA polymerase activities by arabinosylcytosine triphosphate (ara-CTP) and the incorporation of ara-C into the DNA where, acting as a chain terminator, it slows the chain elongation. Induced in vitro cellular resistance to ara-C was shown to be secondary to altered deoxycytidine (dCyd) kinase activity, dCyd deaminase activity, or deoxynucleotides triphosphates (dNTP) pools. Recent studies reported no differences of ara-C metabolism in cells obtained from leukemic patients at diagnosis and at relapse after ara-C therapy, suggesting that unknown cellular biochemical determinants may be involved in acquisition of ara-C resistance. Using dialysed crude extracts of leukemic cells obtained from patients at diagnosis, we observed variable inhibition of their DNA polymerase activities by arabinosylcytosine monophosphate (ara-CMP) at 2 mmol/L (0% to 50% inhibition). In similar conditions, ara-CMP reduced the polymerase activities of human thymus extract by 35% and 55% in extract of HL-60 cells (cultured human promyelocytic cells). The ara-CMP factor responsible for inhibition of DNA polymerase activity was nondialysable, heat labile, proteinase K sensitive, and has an estimated molecular mass of 30 kilodalton by gel filtration. After partial purification, this protein had no DNA polymerase RNA polymerase activities. In presence of the regulator and ara-CMP at 2 mmol/L, we observed no inhibition of the HL-60 3'----5' and 5'----3' exonucleases activities, suggesting the regulator interaction being mainly with the DNA polymerases in presence of ara-CMP. The relevance of the presence or absence of this protein regarding the cell sensitivity to ara-C is under investigation.
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PMID:Inhibition of DNA polymerase-alpha by ara-CMP in the presence of a regulatory protein extracted from human promyelocytic leukemic cells (HL-60). 347 78

1-beta-D-Arabinofuranosyl-2-amino-1,4(2H)-4-iminopyrimidine (ara-AIPy), a new deaminase-resistant analog of cytarabine, exhibited extremely potent antitumor activity against P388 leukemia [400 mg/kg on Days 1-5; increase in life span (ILS), 211%] and significant inhibition against Lewis lung carcinoma (inhibition of tumor weight, 68%) and mammary adenocarcinoma 755 (inhibition of tumor weight, 82%). Schedule-dependency studies indicate that this drug, unlike cytarabine, was effective irrespective of its treatment schedules. The drug exhibited therapeutic efficacy against established P388 tumor transplants (400 mg/kg on Days 3-7; ILS, 131%) and inhibited the tumor growth effectively even when administered as a single dose on Day 1 by both ip (2000 mg/kg; ILS, 150%) and iv (500 mg/kg; ILS, 68%) routes. Ara-AIPy was most effective when administered on Days 1, 3, 5, 7, and 9 after tumor transplantation (400 mg/kg; ILS, 210%, with 50% of animals 60-day survivors). Ara-AIPy inhibited the growth of L1210 leukemia when both the tumor transplantation and the drug treatment were administered by iv route (500 mg/kg on Days 1, 5, and 9; ILS, 181%). The routes of administration of ara-AIPy experiments showed that the drug was effective by both ip and iv routes of administration; however, better therapeutic values were obtained by ip schedules. These studies demonstrate that ara-AIPy exhibits highly significant and broad-spectrum antitumor activity against a variety of experimental animal tumor models and suggest a possible future role for this drug in the treatment of human neoplasia.
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PMID:Evaluation of antitumor activity of 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosyl-2-amino-1,4(2H)-4-iminopyrimidine in murine tumors. 356 67

From the current studies it can be concluded that comparing the ara-C catabolism to ara-U in leukemic rats and leukemic patients, this process is about 100 times more pronounced in human leukemic cells. The low deaminase activity in leukemic rats probably explains the slow plasma ara-C disappearance curve in the BNML. No cytotoxic effect of ara-U with respect to LCFU-S reduction could be observed, nor did ara-U enhance the cytotoxic effect ara-C in the BNML. These studies have increased the understanding of the relation between ara-C, ara-U plasma levels and deaminase activity.
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PMID:In vivo studies on high-dose 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine (HDara-C) and 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosyluracil (ara-U) with respect to pharmacokinetics, cell kinetics, and cytotoxicity in a rat myelocytic leukemia model (BNML). 385 32

The complement-fixing tumor (T) antigen induced by simian virus 40 (SV40) has been prepared from SV40-infected cell cultures, from infected cell cultures treated at the time of infection with 1-beta-d-arabinofuranosylcytosine (ara-C), and from SV40-transformed cells. Upon partial purification, the T antigen exhibited the following properties: it was tightly adsorbed by calcium phosphate gel, it was precipitated by acetic acid at pH 5 or by ammonium sulfate at about 20 to 32% saturation, and it had a molecular weight greater than 250,000, as estimated by Sephadex G-200 gel chromatography. In contrast, deoxycytidylate (dCMP) deaminase, thymidylate (dTMP) kinase, and thymidine (dT) kinase were less strongly bound to calcium phosphate and were not precipitated at pH 5; these enzymes also had much lower molecular weights than the T antigen, as did dihydrofolic (FH(2)) reductase. Furthermore, higher ammonium sulfate concentrations were required to precipitate dCMP deaminase, dTMP kinase, and FH(2) reductase activities than to precipitate the T antigen. Another difference was that the T antigen was not stabilized, but dCMP deaminase, dTMP kinase, and dT kinase, were stabilized, respectively, by dCTP, dTMP, and dT or dTTP. Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) polymerase activity resembled the T antigen in adsorption to calcium phosphate, in precipitation by ammonium sulfate or at pH 5, and in the rate of inactivation when incubated at 38 C. However, the polymerase activity could be partly separated from the T antigen by Sephadex G-200 gel chromatography. The cell fraction containing partially purified T antigen also contained a soluble complement-fixing antigen (presumably a subunit of the viral capsid) which reacted with hyperimmune monkey sera. The latter antigen was present in very low titers or absent from cell extracts prepared from SV40-infected monkey kidney cell cultures which had been treated with ara-C at the time of infection, or from SV40-transformed mouse kidney (mKS) or hamster tumor (H-50) cells. The T antigen, however, was present in usual amounts in SV40-transformed cells or ara-C treated, infected cells.
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PMID:Nonidentiy of some simian virus 40-induced enzymes with tumor antigen. 431 27

Cytidine deaminase, an enzyme that catalyses the deamination of both cytidine and its nucleoside analogues including the antineoplastic agents cytosine arabinoside (ara-C) and 5-azacytidine (5-azaC), has been partially purified from normal and leukemic human granulocytes. The purification procedure included heat precipitation at 70 degrees C, ammonium sulfate precipitation, calcium phosphate gel ion exchange, and Sephadex G-150 gel filtration. The enzyme has mol wt 51,000, isoelectric pH of 4.8, and maximum activity over a broad pH range of 5-9.5. The enzyme is stabilized by the presence of the sulfhydryl reagent, dithiothreitol. Cytidine deaminase from normal human granulocytes has a greater affinity for its physiologic substrate cytidine (K(m) = 1.1 x 10(-5) M) than for ara-C (8.8 x 10(-5) M) or 5-azaC (4.3 x 10(-4) M). Halogenated analogues such as 5-fluorocytidine and 5-bromo-2'-deoxycytidine also exhibited substrate activity, with maximum velocities greater than that of the physiologic substrates cytidine and deoxycytidine. No activity was observed with nucleotides or deoxynucleotides. The relative maximum velocity of the enzyme for cytidine and its nucleoside analogues remained constant during purification, indicating that a single enzyme was responsible for deamination of these substrates. Tetrahydrouridine (THU) was found to be a strong competitive inhibitor of partially purified deaminase with a K(i) of 5.4 x 10(-8) M. The biochemical properties of partially purified preparations of cytidine deaminase from normal and leukemic cells were compared with respect to isoelectric pH, molecular weight, and substrate and inhibitor kinetic parameters, and no differences were observed. However, normal circulating granulocytes contained a significantly greater concentration of cytidine deaminase (3.52+/-1.86 x 10(3)/mg protein) than chronic myelocytic leukemia (CML) cells (1.40+/-0.70 x 10(3) U/mg protein) or acute myelocytic leukemia (AML) cells (0.19+/-0.17 x 10(3) U/mg protein). To explain these differences in enzyme levels in leukemic versus normal cells, the changes in cytidine deaminase levels associated with maturation of normal granulocytes were studied in normal human bone marrow. Myeloid precursors obtained from bone marrow aspirates were separated into mature and immature fractions by Ficoll density centrifugation. Deaminase activity in lysates of mature granulocytes was 3.55-14.2 times greater than the activity found in the lysates of immature cells. Decreased enzyme activity was also found in immature myeloid cells from a patient with CML as compared to mature granulocytes from the same patient. These observations support the conclusion that the greater specific activity of cytidine deaminase in normal mature granulocytes as compared to leukemic cells is related to the process of granulocyte maturation rather than a specific enzymatic defect in leukemic cells.
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PMID:Purification and properties of cytidine deaminase from normal and leukemic granulocytes. 452 17

9-beta-d-Arabinofuranosyladenine (ara-A) was deaminated to 9-beta-d-arabinofuranosylhypoxanthine by adenosine deaminase present in fetal bovine serum, newborn calf serum, and calf serum used to supplement tissue culture media. Heating newborn calf serum or calf serum for 12 h at 56 C completely eliminated the enzymatic deamination of ara-A. The deaminase activity associated with fetal bovine serum was more refractory to heating, requiring 24 h for complete inactivation. The nutritive value of heat-inactivated calf serum did not differ significantly from that of unheated serum based on considerations of population doubling times, deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis, and relative cloning efficiencies of KB cells.
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PMID:Thermal inactivation as a means of inhibiting the serum-associated deamination of 9-beta-D Arabinofuranosyladenine in tissue culture media. 484 Apr 42

Leung, Hazel Barner (University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia), Alice McGovern Doering, and Seymour S. Cohen. Effect of 9-beta-d-arabinofuranosyladenine on polymer synthesis in a polyauxotrophic strain of Escherichia coli. J. Bacteriol. 92:558-564. 1966.-Adenine-requiring mutants have been obtained from Escherichia coli strain 15 TAU, which also needs thymine, arginine, and uracil for growth. Some of these are killed by 9-beta-d-arabinofuranosyladenine (ara-A) in the absence of exogenous adenine; a particular mutant of this type, designated TAUAd, has been used in our studies. The lethality of ara-A, d-arabinosylhypoxanthine, and the 1-n-oxide of ara-A has been compared; ara-A is equally toxic in the presence or absence of thymine. Although the absence of uracil reduces ara-A toxicity, the lack of arginine almost eliminates lethality. It was found that ara-A completely inhibits deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis without markedly affecting ribonucleic acid (RNA) synthesis. Some inhibition of protein synthesis can be detected. However, the interpretation of these results is complicated because (i) exogenous adenine must be excluded, (ii) endogenous adenine is made available from RNA turnover, and (iii) ara-A is being rapidly converted to only slightly less toxic arabinosylhypoxanthine by the adenosine deaminase of E. coli. A suitable inhibitor for the bacterial deaminase has not yet been found.
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PMID:Effect of 9-beta-D-arabinofuranosyladenine on polymer synthesis in a polyauxotrophic strain of Escherichia coli. 533 77

Ara-C should be converted to ara-CTP to inhibit DNA polymerase in the malignant cells but is rapidly inactivated to uracil arabinoside (ara-U) by cytidine deaminase in human tissue. Therefore, production as well as maintenance of ara-CTP in the cells is a function of both phosphorylation and deamination of ara-C, but is more dependent on the latter, because the deamination is several times superior to the former in terms of enzymatic activities. In chemotherapy with ara-C, the rate of the inactivation should be estimated for evaluating antitumor effect of the agent. Determination of serum or plasma deaminase activity can be a useful parameter of the inactivation. Attempts have been made to enhance the antitumor activity of ara-C by preventing deamination and a number of ara-C derivatives resistant to the deamination such as cyclocytidine, ara-C-5'-ester and acyl ara-C have been introduced. Cyclo-C gradually receives non-enzymatic hydrolysis to produce ara-C in neutral medium, which is useful for maintaining plasma ara-C level. Acyl ara-C such as behenoyl-ara-C (BHAC) is well incorporated into the cells and is highly distributed to lipophilic components such as membrane, microsome and mitochondria in the cells. The extremely gradual conversion of BHAC to ara-C in the cells is considered to be useful for maintaining effective intracellular concentration. A part of BHAC could be phosphorylated before deacylation. After intravenous administration of BHAC, the plasma drug concentrations are maintained significantly longer than those after the administration of the equivalent dose of ara-C. Therefore, BHAC is more resistant to the deamination than cyclo-C and the antitumor effect of the former is suspected to be milder but prolonged than that of ara-C or cyclo-C.
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PMID:[Chemotherapy of the malignancies from the viewpoint of pharmacology and biochemistry of cytosine arabinoside (ara-C) and its derivatives]. 619 11


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