Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Enzyme
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Query: EC:5.99.1.2 (
topoisomerase
)
9,166
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ninety quinolones were evaluated to determine whether their ability to induce mammalian
topoisomerase
II mediated DNA cleavage in vitro correlated with their antitumor activity in vivo. Ten quinolones generated linear DNA at a yield of more than 10% of substrate supercoiled DNA in the mammalian
topoisomerase
II mediated DNA cleavage assay. All of these compounds showed a significant increase in life span (greater than 20%) in the murine leukemia P388 model. These antitumor quinolones have closely related structures: two halogens at C-6 and C-8; and cyclopropyl at N-1 of quinolone skeleton. In contrast, many analogues of the above quinolones, as well as new quinolones used clinically as an antibacterial drug, did not induce the cleavable complex in vitro or show antitumor activity in vivo. These findings indicate that quinolone derivatives can be a promising new class of antitumor agent targeting mammalian
topoisomerase
II.
Cancer
Res 1992 May 15
PMID:Antitumor quinolones with mammalian topoisomerase II mediated DNA cleavage activity. 131 28
Amsacrine and demethylepipodophyllotoxins (etoposide and teniposide) are potent
topoisomerase
II inhibitors which have optimum activity in different cancers. To investigate whether these differences are due to different activity on cellular oncogenes, drug-induced
topoisomerase
II cleavage sites were mapped and sequenced in the human c-myc protooncogene. In the presence of purified murine L1210
topoisomerase
II, amsacrine induces prominent cleavage in the P2 promoter (site 2499/2502). Footprinting experiments indicate that
topoisomerase
II binds to the entire promoter region (approximately 20 base pairs on the sides of the P2 site). In the case of teniposide or etoposide, cleavage is more diffuse and markedly less at the P2 site. Mapping of cleavage sites in human small cell lung carcinoma cells (NCI N417) also shows that cleavage in the P2 promoter region is induced preferentially by amsacrine but not by demethylepipodophyllotoxins. Thus, selective gene damage among
topoisomerase
II inhibitors may contribute to differential anticancer activity.
Cancer
Res 1992 Jun 01
PMID:Differential effects of amsacrine and epipodophyllotoxins on topoisomerase II cleavage in the human c-myc protooncogene. 131 59
Centrifugal elutriation was used to obtain synchronized cell populations in various cell cycle phases without prior growth-perturbing manipulation. Treatment of these subpopulations with novobiocin (NOVO), a putative inhibitor of the mammalian
topoisomerase
II enzyme, revealed a unique cell cycle phase-dependent cytotoxicity for this agent. At a concentration of 0.3 mM, NOVO was cytotoxic only to a specific cell subpopulation in the G1-S phase boundary. Cells in other cell cycle phases were completely unaffected. Additionally, S and G2M phase cells progressed through the cell cycle relatively unaffected by NOVO but were blocked at the G1-S boundary. NOVO treatment protected tumor cells from Adriamycin (ADR)-induced lethality but sensitized them to the toxic action of 4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide, and alkylating agent. These opposing effects of NOVO were demonstrated in all of the four tumor cell lines investigated: A431 and HEp3 (derived from human squamous cell carcinomas); MLS, a human ovarian cancer cell line; and a Chinese hamster ovary cell line. The degree of protection against ADR was the greatest for S-phase cells, intermediate for cells in early G1 and M phases, and the least for late G1 cells. This cell cycle-dependent protection by NOVO, which is identical to the cell cycle-dependent cytotoxicity of ADR, was consistent with the idea that NOVO interfered directly with the cell-killing mechanism of ADR. In contrast, even though the cytotoxic activity of 4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide exhibited significant cell cycle dependency, NOVO enhanced 4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide lethality equally for all cell cycle phases.
Cancer
Res 1992 Jul 01
PMID:Modulation of the cell cycle-dependent cytotoxicity of adriamycin and 4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide by novobiocin, an inhibitor of mammalian topoisomerase II. 131 22
DNA topoisomerase II is an enzyme that affects nuclear structure and function and is the target of a number of anticancer drugs in clinical use, including teniposide (VM-26). We have used our polyclonal antisera that recognize both the M(r) 170,000 and 180,000 forms of
topoisomerase
II to examine the nuclear distribution of
topoisomerase
II in cytospin preparations of drug-sensitive (CEM) and VM-26-resistant (CEM/VM-1 and CEM/VM-1-5) human leukemic lymphoblasts. We have also examined the nuclear distribution of
topoisomerase
II in monolayer cultures of a human rhabdomyosarcoma (Rh30) cell line. In the absence of drug, we observed a focal "patchy" staining of nuclear
topoisomerase
II in all cell lines, that was especially notable in the lymphoblastic cells. Treatment of CEM and Rh30 cells with VM-26 under conditions that increase the number of covalent
topoisomerase
II-DNA complexes increased both the intensity and the homogeneity of nuclear
topoisomerase
II staining in a subpopulation of cells; focal staining was less evident after treatment with drug. These responses were roughly proportional to the concentration of VM-26 used and required only brief (approximately 25-min) incubation with drug. We also found that treatment of CEM cells with 4'-(9-acridinylamino)methanesulfon-m-anisidide similarly increased the intensity and homogeneity of nuclear
topoisomerase
II immunostaining. In contrast, 4'-(9-acridinylamino)methanesulfon-o-anisidide and 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine, agents that do not inhibit
topoisomerase
II, did not produce this effect. Finally, the VM-26-mediated alteration in
topoisomerase
II staining intensity and distribution was attenuated in proportion to the degree of VM-26 resistance in the CEM/VM-1 and CEM/VM-1-5 sublines. These results appear to be related to the ability of the drug to stabilize DNA-
topoisomerase
covalent ("cleavable") complexes in intact cells. Our findings indicate that anti-
topoisomerase
II drugs, such as VM-26, have profound effects on the ability to detect
topoisomerase
II in the nucleus and provide a novel way of examining drug-stabilized DNA topoisomerase II complexes in intact single tumor cells.
Cancer
Res 1992 Aug 01
PMID:DNA topoisomerase II immunostaining in human leukemia and rhabdomyosarcoma cell lines and their responses to topoisomerase II inhibitors. 132 39
Azatoxin [NSC 640737-M; 5.R,11aS-1H,6H,3-one-5,4,11,11a-tetrahydro-5-(3,5-dimethoxy-4-hydr oxyphenyl) oxazolo (3',4':1,6)pyrido-(3,4-b)indole] was rationally designed from a model for the pharmacophore of drugs with
topoisomerase
II inhibition activity. This pharmacophore has at least 2 domains: a quasiplanar polycyclic ring system proposed to bind between the DNA base pairs and a pendant substituent proposed to interact with the enzyme and/or to the DNA grooves. The present study shows that, in cell free systems, azatoxin induces a large number of double strand-breaks in linear Simian virus 40 and human c-myc DNA. These breaks yield cleavage patterns that are different from those of well established
topoisomerase
II inhibitors (epipodophyllotoxins, amsacrine, mitoxantrone). Azatoxin also inhibits the catalytic activity of purified
topoisomerase
II, and is a nonintercalator. The structure-activity relationship of 3 isomers and 6 derivatives of azatoxin shows a stringent stereochemical requirement for activity. The effects of azatoxin pendant ring substitution on
topoisomerase
II mediated DNA cleavage activity were similar to the relationship observed for etoposide.
Cancer
Res 1992 Aug 15
PMID:Rational design and molecular effects of a new topoisomerase II inhibitor, azatoxin. 132 92
This article describes the current approach to the systematic management of both small cell and non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). The treatment of stages I, II, and IIIa NSCLC is surgical resection. Although adjuvant chemotherapy in stage I disease offers no survival benefit, the role of adjuvant chemotherapy in stage II and IIIa NSCLC remains controversial. Results of pilot studies using neoadjuvant chemotherapy in stage IIIa NSCLC are encouraging and data from ongoing randomized trials are awaited with interest. For locally advanced NSCLC, chest irradiation remains the standard of care. However, the addition of systemic chemotherapy holds promise. The impact of cisplatin-based regimens on overall survival in stage IV NSCLC remains disappointing. The introduction of newer agents, such as 7-ethyl-10-[4-(1-piperidino)-1-piperidino] carbonyloxycamptothecin (CPT-11), a
topoisomerase
-I inhibitor, has shown early favorable results. Chemotherapy is the most important therapeutic modality in the management of small cell lung cancer because of this
cancer
's propensity for early dissemination. In limited stage small cell lung cancer, chest radiotherapy, particularly if used early and concurrently with chemotherapy, may improve survival, but at the expense of increased toxicity. The role of prophylactic brain irradiation remains controversial in limited-stage disease. Chemotherapy is also the most important treatment modality in extensive-stage disease, but its role is only palliative. Radiotherapy is reserved primarily for disease-related complications in patients in whom chemotherapy has failed.
...
PMID:Lung cancer: a review of current therapeutic modalities. 132 79
We investigated the interaction between human lung cancer cells, laminin, and several differentiating agents. When grown on laminin coated substrate eight out of 11 small cell lung cancer (SCLC) cell lines exhibited attachment to laminin and three had extensive outgrowth of long neurite-like processes. Of seven non-small cell lung cancer cell lines, selected for their in vitro anchorage-independent growth, attachment was observed in only three cell lines, and process formation was far less extensive than in SCLC cell lines. Among several differentiating agents, only dcAMP, which alone induced attachment and some process formation, increased laminin-mediated attachment and process formation of two SCLC cell lines, NCI-N417 a variant cell line, and NCI-H345, a classic cell line. The expression of several neuroendocrine and neuronal markers was investigated in these two SCLC cell lines. The expression of the light subunit of neurofilaments increased in NCI-N417 within 3 to 4 days of seeding, while NCI-H345 exhibited approximately 5 fold increase in expression of the GRP gene and a 3 fold increase expression of the beta-actin gene. The expression of a number of other neuroendocrine and neuronal markers did not change following growth on laminin. The doubling times remained unchanged independent of the presence of and attachment to laminin while
topoisomerase
II gene expression levels in NCI-N417 cells decreased approximately 5 fold when cells were growing on laminin.
Br J
Cancer
1992 Sep
PMID:Increased expression of differentiation markers can accompany laminin-induced attachment of small cell lung cancer cells. 132 26
Most of the cytotoxic anticancer drugs in current use have been shown to induce apoptosis in susceptible cells. The fact that disparate agents, which interact with different targets, induce cell death with some common features (endonucleolytic cleavage of DNA, changes in chromatin condensation) suggests that cytotoxicity is determined by the ability of the cell to engage this so-called 'programmed' cell death. The mechanism of the coupling of a stimulus (drug-target interaction) to a response (cell death) is not known, but modulation of this coupling may affect the outcome of drug treatment. This review surveys the recent evidence which supports the idea that the drug-target interaction per se is not the sole determinant of cellular sensitivity of cytotoxic drugs. Studies of the signals which might engage apoptosis, the genes which modulate it and the biochemical process of drug-induced apoptosis itself are described, where possible, for glucocorticoids,
topoisomerase
inhibitors, alkylating agents, antimetabolites and antihormones. It is suggested that identification of the gene products which couple the stimulus to the response, and so determine intrinsic cellular sensitivity (and resistance), will be important targets for new types of drugs. These might then allow responses to occur in the major cancers of man, which are chemoresistant.
Cancer
Metastasis Rev 1992 Sep
PMID:Apoptosis induced by anticancer drugs. 132 66
Teniposide is the result of extensive, long-term efforts to refine and improve on the cytotoxic activity of naturally occurring compounds extracted from podophyllin resins and purified. Isolation of an extremely potent though minor component of one of the early podophyllin derivatives led in turn to the synthesis and evaluation of several aldehyde condensation products. Two of these, teniposide and etoposide, were further investigated when their considerable antitumor activity in animals became apparent. Recognition of transient DNA breaks induced by teniposide, etoposide, and other podophyllotoxin analogues established not only that their site of activity was DNA but also that their cytotoxic effect was dose-dependent. Extensive investigation has further indicated that a primary mechanism of action of these agents involves inhibition of the catalytic activity of eukaryote
topoisomerase
II and, more important, the consequent stabilization of the normally transient covalent intermediate formed between the DNA substrate and the enzyme. As a result of elevated enzyme levels or enzyme activity, or both, in transformed cells,
topoisomerase
II inhibitors are highly selective for
cancer
cells versus normal cells. Although teniposide is not substantially more potent than etoposide in terms of catalytic inhibition or stabilization of the DNA-enzyme intermediate, it is more readily taken up by cells, which results in greater teniposide accumulation within the cells and, thus, a greater capacity for cytotoxicity.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of action of teniposide (VM-26) and comparison with etoposide (VP-16). 132 25
Nuclei from K21 murine mastocytoma cells do not form
topoisomerase
II-DNA adducts in response to amsacrine in the absence of a cytoplasmic factor tentatively identified as a type of casein kinase (Darkin, S.J. and Ralph, R.K. (1991) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1088, 285-291). The stimulatory activity was present in extracts from cells grown in horse serum but not in calf serum. Activity was lost following growth arrest by serum deprivation. In contrast,
topoisomerase
II activity in isolated nuclei did not decline during growth arrest. These results suggest that the resistance of some non-cycling tumour cells to anti-
cancer
drugs may result from decreased activation of
topoisomerase
II.
...
PMID:Regulation of topoisomerase II by murine mastocytoma cells. 132 75
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