Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:5.99.1.2 (topoisomerase)
9,166 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Human DNA topoisomerase IIalpha (topo II), a ubiquitous nuclear enzyme, is essential for normal and neoplastic cellular proliferation and survival. Several common anticancer drugs exert their cytotoxic effects through interaction with topo II. In experimental systems, altered topo II expression has been associated with the appearance of drug resistance. This mechanism, however, does not adequately account for clinical cases of resistance to topo II-directed drugs. Modulation by protein-protein interactions represents one mechanism of topo II regulation that has not been extensively defined. Our laboratory has identified 14-3-3epsilon as a topo II-interacting protein. In this study, glutathione S-transferase co-precipitation, affinity column chromatography, and immunoprecipitations confirm the authenticity of these interactions. Three assays evaluate the impact of 14-3-3epsilon on distinct topo II functional properties. Using both a modified alkaline comet assay and a DNA cleavage assay, we demonstrate that 14-3-3epsilon negatively affects the ability of the chemotherapeutic, etoposide, to trap topo II in cleavable complexes with DNA, thereby preventing DNA strand breaks. By electrophoretic mobility shift assay, this appears to be due to reduced DNA binding activity. The association of topo II with 14-3-3 proteins does not extend to all 14-3-3 isoforms. No protein interaction or disruption of topo II function was observed with 14-3-3final sigma.
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PMID:Modulation of human DNA topoisomerase IIalpha function by interaction with 14-3-3epsilon. 1078 21

Combined modalities are currently used for cancer therapy, although their mechanisms of activity remain incompletely deciphered. The design of new drug combinations suffers from our inability to anticipate accurately their efficacy or toxicity. They can be evaluated in vivo, using human tumors grafted into immunodeficient mice, as we did here with combined protocols used in the clinical setting. Xenografts of small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) from eight patients were used to test the tumor sensitivity to etoposide (VP16; 12-16 mg/kg/days, days 1, 2, and 3), cisplatin (CDDP; 6-9 mg/kg/day, day 1) and ifosfamide (IFO; 90-210 mg/kg/day, days 1, 2, and 3) as single agents and to evaluate the efficacy of the two-drug or three-drug combinations. Five xenografts came from untreated patients (SCLC-61, SCLC-6, SCLC-10, SCLC-41, and SCLC-96) and three after treatment (SCLC-74, SCLC-101, and SCLC-108). p53 was inactivated in all of them. Tumor growth inhibition, growth delay, and the survival rate of tumor-bearing mice reflected individual SCLC chemosensitivity. As single agents, IFO inhibited tumor growth in a dose-dependent manner, whereas CDDP and VP16 had little or no effect. Both CDDP and IFO potentiated VP16, inducing complete regressions in the most sensitive SCLCs; VP16-IFO was more effective than VP16-CDDP, with complete regressions in six versus three of the eight tumors tested, respectively. CDDP-IFO was less effective than VP16-IFO, with three of eight SCLCs giving complete regressions. The three-drug combination led to modest improvement over the best two-drug combination but only for sensitive SCLCs. Because drug-responses distinguished two classes of SCLCs, as sensitive or refractory, MDR1, glutathione S-transferase pi, lung-related multidrug resistance protein, multidrug resistance protein, and topoisomerase IIalpha mRNA expression was studied by semiquantitative reverse transcription. There was no correlation with SCLC sensitivity; topoisomerase IIalpha and multidrug resistance protein was expressed in all cases, lung-related multidrug resistance protein and glutathione S-transferase pie in seven of eight, and MDR1 gene in four of eight. In conclusion, these SCLC xenografts displayed a pattern of chemotherapy response close to that observed in patients. This model confirmed that in two-drug combinations, each component potentiated the effects of the other, with VP16-IFO tending to be the best two-drug combination, both of which were more effective than VP16-CDDP and better tolerated than CDDP-IFO. The addition of a third agent gave a modest, if any, therapeutic benefit in the responders but none in refractory SCLCs. There was no correlation between the extent of response and resistance markers.
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PMID:Distinctive potentiating effects of cisplatin and/or ifosfamide combined with etoposide in human small cell lung carcinoma xenografts. 1081 35

Many of the discoveries of multidrug resistance (MDR) have resulted from studies using drug-resistant cultured tumor cell lines as experimental models. To date, there has been no report on the detailed characterization of such a cell line from renal cell carcinoma (RCC). By long-term exposure of an established RCC (RCC8701) to increasing concentrations of adriamycin, we established a series of subcultures that were considerably more resistant to the cytotoxic effect of this drug. Biological morphology and cell cycles were analyzed by morphometry and flow cytometry. The chemoresistance index of cells were measured by methyl tetrazolium assay. For evaluation of the expression of MDR-related protein (MRP), mdr-1, glutathione transferase (GST-pi), and topoisomerase II mRNAs, the reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction was used. Membranous expression of mdr-1-related p-glycoprotein was analyzed by immunofluorescence cytometry. The intracellular content of both glutathione (GSH) and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G-6-PDH) were measured using a capillary electrophoresis method. Compared with parent cells, the resistant sublines had a slower growth rate and lower confluent density. They were smaller and mixed with giant cells in different sizes and with different numbers of nucleoli. Flow cytometric analyses showed that resistant cells had a greater percentage of cells in the G2/M phase. The resistant cells, RCC8701/ADR800, were 122 times more resistant to adriamycin and 238 times more resistant to epirubicin than the parent cells. The resistant cells also demonstrated cross-resistance to cisplatin and 5-fluorouracil. In addition to MRP, the contents of mRNA coding for mdr-1, GST-pi, and topoisomerase II in the MDR sublines were higher than in the native cell line. A higher content of cytoplasmic GSH and G-6-PDH were found in the resistant cells; however, the expression of the MDR-related membranous glycoprotein, p-glycoprotein, was not raised. The adriamycin-induced MDR sublines may be used as an experimental system for the search of a means to overcome drug resistance and elucidate possible mechanisms of acquired MDR involved in human renal cancer.
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PMID:Establishment and characterization of renal cell carcinoma cell lines with multidrug resistance. 1085 Jun 29

Inhibitors of topoisomerases, enzymes that produce an unusual type of DNA damage, are considered as antitumor agents. Recently it has been reported that the fernane-type triterpenoid EC-2 and its hydroxyl derivative, isolated from Euphorbia, are potent topoisomerase II inhibitors. In this study, the modifying effects of EC-2 and EC-4 on the development of putative preneoplastic lesions, glutathione S-transferase placental form (GST-P)-positive foci, in the liver of rats were investigated using a medium-term bioassay system. Fisher 344 male, 6-week-old rats were given a single intraperitoneal injection (200 mg/kg b.w.) of diethylnitrosamine or saline at the beginning of the experiment and subjected to 2/3 partial hepatectomy at the 3rd week. The test compounds were administered five times/week by i.g. gavage at a dose of 1 mg/kg b.w. from 2 to 8 weeks. Quantitation of the numbers and areas per cm(2) of induced GST-P positive foci did not demonstrated any significant differences among the groups and no variation in cell proliferation as indicated by 5-bromo- 2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU) labeling. Our results suggest that EC-2 and EC-4 have no modifying effects on rat hepatocarcinogenesis.
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PMID:Lack of modification of rat hepatocarcinogenesis by fernane-type triterpenoids, isolated from a Euphorbia genus. 1211 13

The development of new anticancer agents with lower toxicity, higher therapeutic index, and weaker tendency to induce resistant phenotypes in tumor cells is a continuous challenge for the scientific community. Toward that end, we showed previously that a new class of soft alkylating agents designed as phenyl-3-(2-chloroethyl)ureas (CEUs) inhibits tumor cell growth in vitro and that their efficiency is not altered by clinically relevant mechanisms of resistance such as overexpression of multidrug resistance proteins, increase in intracellular concentration of glutathione and/or glutathione S-transferase activity, alteration of topoisomerase II, and increased DNA repair. Mechanistic studies have showed recently that the cytotoxic activity of several CEUs was mainly related to the disruption of microtubules. Here, we present results supporting our assumption that 4-tert-butyl-[3-(2-chloroethyl)ureido]phenyl (tBCEU) (and its bioisosteric derivative 4-iodo-[3-(2-chloroethyl)ureido]phenyl (ICEU) are potent antimicrotubule agents both in vitro and in vivo. They covalently bind to beta-tubulin, leading to a microtubule depolymerization phenotype, consequently disrupting the actin cytoskeleton and altering the nuclear morphology. Accordingly, tBCEU and ICEU also inhibited the migration and proliferation of endothelial and tumor cells in vitro in a dose-dependent manner. It is noteworthy that ICEU efficiently blocked angiogenesis and tumor growth in three distinct animal models: (a) the Matrigel plug angiogenesis assay; (b) the CT-26 tumor growth assay in mice; and (c) the chick chorioallantoic membrane tumor assay. In addition, we present evidence that CEU cytotoxicity is unaffected by additional resistance mechanisms impeding tumor response to DNA alkylating agents such as cisplatin, namely the cell adhesion mediated-drug resistance mechanism, which failed to influence the cytocidal activity of CEUs. On the basis of the apparent innocuousness of CEUs, on their ability to circumvent many classical and recently described tumor cell resistance mechanisms, and on their specific biodistribution to organs of the gastrointestinal tract, our results suggest that CEUs represent a promising new class of anticancer agents.
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PMID:Antiangiogenic and antitumoral activity of phenyl-3-(2-chloroethyl)ureas: a class of soft alkylating agents disrupting microtubules that are unaffected by cell adhesion-mediated drug resistance. 1523 78

Although conventional alkylating drugs have proven efficacy in the treatment of malignancies, the agents themselves are not selective. Therefore, non-specific alkylation of cellular nucleophilic targets may contribute to many of the observed toxic effects. Novel approaches to drug discovery have resulted in candidate agents that are focused on 'soft alkylation'--alkylators with greater target selectivity. This review highlights the discovery of small molecule drugs that bind to DNA with higher selectivity, act in a unique hypoxic tumor environment, or covalently bind specific protein targets overexpressed in cancer, such as topoisomerase II, glutathione transferase pi1, beta-tubulin and histone deacetylase.
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PMID:Development of novel alkylating drugs as anticancer agents. 1524 45

DNA topoisomerase-IIalpha (topo-IIalpha) is a target enzyme of adriamycin (ADM). Glutathione-S-transferase-pi is known to be correlated with the resistance of various anticancer drugs including mitomycin C (MMC) and ADM. Expression levels of topo-IIalpha and GST-pi mRNA of primary colorectal lesions were semi-quantitatively determined by the RT-PCR method in 22 patients with colorectal cancer, who underwent hepatic arterial infusion of ADM and MMC mixed with degradable starch microspheres for synchronous (n=17) or metachronous (n=5) liver metastasis. Expression of topo-IIalpha mRNA/beta-actin mRNA was 0.872+/-0.564 (mean+/-SD) in responders (PR, n=10) and 0.369+/-0.133 in non-responders (SD+PD, n=12) (p=0.047). The relative expression of GST-pi was 0.638+/-0.593 in responders and 1.014+/-0.682 in non-responders (p=0.22). These results suggest that determining the mRNA expression of topo-IIalpha is useful for predicting the efficacy for this regimen, whereas determining the mRNA expression of GST-pi is not.
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PMID:[Efficacy of hepatic arterial infusion of adriamycin and mitomycin C mixed with degradable starch microspheres for liver metastasis of colorectal cancer--correlation with the mRNA expression of DNA topoisomerase-IIalpha and glutathione-S transferase-pi in primary lesions]. 1555 21

Leishmania donovani topoisomerase I is an unusual bisubunit enzyme. We have demonstrated earlier that the large and small subunit could be reconstituted in vitro to show topoisomerase I activity. We extend our biochemical study to evaluate the role of the large subunit in topoisomerase activity. The large subunit (LdTOP1L) shows a substantial degree of homology with the core DNA binding domain of the topoisomerase IB family. Two N-terminal truncation constructs, LdTOP1Delta39L (lacking amino acids 1-39) and LdTOP1Delta99L (lacking amino acids 1-99) of the large subunit were generated and mixed with intact small subunit (LdTOP1S). Our observations reveal that residues within amino acids 1-39 of the large subunit have significant roles in modulating topoisomerase I activity (i.e. in vitro DNA relaxation, camptothecin sensitivity, cleavage activity, and DNA binding affinity). Interestingly, the mutant LdTOP1Delta99LS was unable to show topoisomerase I activity. Investigation of the loss of activity indicates that LdTOP1Delta99L was unable to pull down glutathione S-transferase-LdTOP1S in an Ni(2+)-nitrilotriacetic acid co-immobilization experiment. For further analysis, we co-expressed LdTOP1L and LdTOP1S in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3)pLysS cells. The lysate shows topoisomerase I activity. Immunoprecipitation revealed that LdTOP1L could interact with LdTOP1S, indicating the subunit interaction in bacterial cells, whereas immunoprecipitation of bacterial lysate co-expressing LdTOP1Delta99L and LdTOP1S reveals that LdTOP1Delta99L was significantly deficient at interacting with LdTOP1S to reconstitute topoisomerase I activity. This study demonstrates that heterodimerization between the large and small subunits of the bisubunit enzyme appears to be an absolute requirement for topoisomerase activity. The residue within amino acids 1-39 from the N-terminal end of the large subunit regulates DNA topology during relaxation by controlling noncovalent DNA binding or by coordinating DNA contacts by other parts of the enzyme.
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PMID:N-terminal region of the large subunit of Leishmania donovani bisubunit topoisomerase I is involved in DNA relaxation and interaction with the smaller subunit. 1571 Oct 17

The infected-cell protein 22 (ICP22), a regulatory protein encoded by the alpha22 gene of herpes simplex virus 1, is required for the optimal expression of a set of late viral proteins that includes the products of the U(S)11, U(L)38, and U(L)41 genes. ICP22 has two activities. Thus, ICP22 and the U(L)13 protein kinase mediate the activation of cdc2 and degradation of its partners, cyclins A and B. cdc2 and its new partner, the DNA polymerase accessory factor (U(L)42), bind topoisomerase IIalpha in an ICP22-dependent manner. In addition, ICP22 and U(L)13 mediate an intermediate phosphorylation of the carboxyl terminus of RNA polymerase II (RNA POL II). Here we report another function of ICP22. Thus, ICP22 physically interacts with cdk9, a constitutively active cyclin-dependent kinase involved in transcriptional regulation. A protein complex containing ICP22 and cdk9 phosphorylates in vitro the carboxyl-terminal domain of RNA POL II in a viral U(S)3 protein kinase-dependent fashion. Finally, the carboxyl-terminal domain of RNA POL II fused to glutathione S-transferase is phosphorylated in reaction mixtures containing complexes pulled down with ICP22 or cdk9 immune precipitated from lysates of wild-type parent virus or deltaU(L)13 but not deltaU(S)3 mutant-infected cells. The experiments described here place ICP22 and cdk9 in a complex with the carboxyl-terminal domain of RNA POL II. At the same time we confirm the requirement of ICP22 and the U(L)13 protein kinase in the posttranslational modification of RNA POL II that alters its electrophoretic mobility, although U(S)3 kinase appears to play a role in a cell-type-dependent fashion.
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PMID:The carboxyl-terminal domain of RNA polymerase II is phosphorylated by a complex containing cdk9 and infected-cell protein 22 of herpes simplex virus 1. 1589 Sep 14

Expression of BCR-ABL is the leading cause of chronic myelogenous leukemia. In chronic myelogenous leukemia cells, c-Abl expression is silenced by promoter methylation. In addition, the level of c-Abl needs to be tightly and constantly regulated due to its cytotoxicity and its rapid degradation after activation. Yet the regulation of c-Abl expression remains unclear. In an effort to gain better understanding of c-Abl function, we performed a glutathione S-transferase-Abl pull-down screen and identified TopBP1, a topoisomerase IIbeta-binding protein that contains Brca1 C-terminal motifs and has been implicated in DNA damage response. Their physical interaction was verified by in vitro and in vivo assays with TopBP1 found as a substrate of Abl proteins. TopBP1 could repress the expression of c-Abl at both mRNA and protein levels. Reporter assays indicate that TopBP1 directly repressed the promoter activity of c-Abl. Furthermore, TopBP1 repressed expression of c-Abl through a novel mechanism that involved histone deacetylation and DNA methylation. This transcriptional repression was inhibited by c-Abl in a kinase-dependent manner. The dual antagonistic interplay between c-Abl and TopBP1 may also provide a mechanism for fine-tuning of c-Abl levels.
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PMID:Identification of TopBP1 as a c-Abl-interacting protein and a repressor for c-Abl expression. 1596 88


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