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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)
Fostriecin, a novel anticancer antibiotic produced by Streptomyces pulveraecus, is believed to act via inhibition of
topoisomerase
II. Single-dose intravenous administration to rats at dose levels of 8.8 to 48 mg/kg resulted in lethality at dose levels of 35 mg/kg and higher. Major toxic effects were observed primarily at 17.5 mg/kg and higher, were reversible, and consisted of bone marrow hypocellularity, leukopenia, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and diffuse necrosis of various lymphoid tissues. The kidney was also identified as a target organ. Renal effects were observed primarily at 20 mg/kg, were reversible, and included increases in serum BUN, creatinine, and 24-hr
glucose
excretion. Twenty-four-hour excretion of Na+, K+ and urine osmolality were decreased postdosing at 10 and 20 mg/kg. Renal lesions, observed primarily at 20 mg/kg, consisted of vacuolization and necrosis of proximal and distal tubular epithelium at the corticomedullary junction extending into the medulla. Repeated daily intravenous administration of fostriecin for 5 days to rats at dose levels of 2.5 to 26.5 mg/kg resulted in death at 10 mg/kg and above and similar hematologic, bone marrow, lymphoid tissue, and renal changes as observed in the single-dose study. Hematological, bone marrow, lymphoid, and renal changes observed in rats were consistent with the cytotoxic mechanism of action of the compound.
...
PMID:Preclinical toxicological evaluation of fostriecin, a novel anticancer antibiotic, in rats. 222 54
The induction of
glucose
-regulated proteins by a variety of specific inducers leads to an increase in resistance to Adriamycin (Shen et al., Proc. Natl., Acad. Sci. USA, 84: 3278, 1987). In this study we examine several additional agents for cross-resistance induced during a
glucose
-regulated response in an attempt to better define the mechanism through which this phenomenon occurs. When anoxia, calcium ionophore A23187, or 2-deoxyglucose are used, a substantial resistance is obtained against the
topoisomerase
II-targeted agent, etoposide. Partial resistance is induced against vincristine and actinomycin D.
Glucose
-regulated protein inducers do not substantially alter cellular response to either bleomycin or radiation. In the case of mitomycin C there is a cellular sensitization with anoxia and 2-deoxyglucose while calcium ionophore A23187 had no effect on survival. This study suggests that the resistance obtained during a
glucose
-regulated response against etoposide and Adriamycin may involve
topoisomerase
II.
...
PMID:Resistance to etoposide induced by three glucose-regulated stresses in Chinese hamster ovary cells. 250 Oct 25
Conditions, such as anoxia or
glucose
starvation, which induce the
glucose
-regulated set of stress proteins also lead to resistance to adriamycin (J. Shen, C. Hughes, C. Chao, J. Cai, C. Bartels, T. Gessner, and J. Subjeck, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 84:3278-3282, 1987) and etoposide. We report here that chronic anoxia,
glucose
starvation, 2-deoxyglucose, the calcium ionophore A23187, glucosamine, ethylene glycol-bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA), and tunicamycin (all specific inducers of the
glucose
regulated system) lead to a rapid and selective depletion of
topoisomerase
II from isolated nuclei of Chinese hamster ovary cells. This effect precedes a decline in tritiated thymidine incorporation and a redistribution of cells from S into G1/G0. The depletion of the enzyme is not accompanied by a decline in mRNA levels. We have also examined the mutant Chinese hamster K12 cell line which is temperature sensitive for expression of
glucose
-regulated proteins. When nuclei were isolated from K12 cells incubated at the nonpermissive temperature, a loss of
topoisomerase
II was again observed in congruence with the expression of stress proteins and cellular resistance to etoposide. These changes were not obtained in parental Wg1A cells incubated at the same temperature. These studies indicate that
topoisomerase
II is highly sensitive to
glucose
-regulated stresses and that its depletion from the nucleus, with the associated changes in cell cycle parameters, may represent general characteristics of the
glucose
-regulated state. Since anoxia and
glucose
starvation can occur during tumor development, this pathway for expression of drug resistance may have clinical ramifications.
...
PMID:Depletion of topoisomerase II in isolated nuclei during a glucose-regulated stress response. 255 89
Since DNA topoisomerase II (EC 5.99.1.3) is an essential enzyme in yeast, heterologous
topoisomerase
II gene expression in yeast cells can provide a system for analyzing the structure and function of
topoisomerase
II genes from other species. A series of yeast expression plasmids was constructed in which segments of the cDNA sequences encoding Drosophila DNA topoisomerase II were inserted under the transcriptional control of yeast GAL1 promoter. Expression of the functional form of Drosophila
topoisomerase
II cDNA can complement conditionally lethal, temperature-sensitive mutations in the yeast
topoisomerase
II gene (TOP2), as well as mutations in which the TOP2 locus was disrupted. The survival of these yeast cells depends upon the continuous expression of Drosophila
topoisomerase
II. Repression of Drosophila gene expression by
glucose
causes these yeast cells to cease dividing after a few generations. In addition to these genetic complementation data, the expression of the Drosophila
topoisomerase
II gene in yeast cells with a disruption in TOP2 can also be detected by immunochemical methods with an antibody specific for Drosophila
topoisomerase
II.
...
PMID:Functional expression of a Drosophila gene in yeast: genetic complementation of DNA topoisomerase II. 284 62
We have previously constructed a yeast strain (UKY403) whose sole histone H4 gene is under control of the GAL1 promoter. This yeast arrests in G2 upon
glucose
treatment as a result of histone H4 depletion. The yeast PHO5 gene contains phase nucleosomes covering promoter (UAS) sequences in the PHO5 repressed state and it has been suggested that nucleosomes prevent the binding of positively acting factors to these UAS sequences. Using UKY403 we examined the length of polynucleosomes and nucleosome phasing in the PHO5 upstream region by the use of micrococcal nuclease and indirect end-labeling. It was found that
glucose
arrest led to a severe disruption in PHO5 chromatin structure and that most nucleosomes had their position altered or were lost from the PHO5 promoter region. Cell undergoing nucleosome depletion synthesized large quantities of accurate PHO5 transcripts even under repressive, high inorganic phosphate conditions. Histone H4 depletion did not appear to affect the repression or activation of another inducible yeast gene, CUP1. Arrest with landmarks in early G1 (in the cell division cycle mutant cdc28) or in various stages of G2 (in cdc15, cdc17 and cdc20) does not activate PHO5; nor does arrest due to chromosome topology changes (in top2 or the top1top2
topoisomerase
mutants). cdc14, which has its arrest landmark at a similar point in the cell cycle as cdc15, does derepress PHO5. However, since it also leads to derepression of CUP1 it is probably functioning through an independent mechanism. Therefore, our data suggest that nucleosomes regulate PHO5 transcription.
...
PMID:Depletion of histone H4 and nucleosomes activates the PHO5 gene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 304 34
The site specificity of bacteriophage T4-induced type II DNA topoisomerase action on double-stranded DNA has been explored by studying the sites where DNA cleavages are induced by the enzyme. Oxolinic acid addition increases the frequency at which phi X174 duplex DNA is cut by the enzyme by about 100-fold, to the point where nearly every
topoisomerase
molecule causes a double-stranded DNA cleavage event. The effect of oxolinic acid on the enzyme is very similar to its effect on another type II DNA topoisomerase, the Escherichia coli DNA gyrase. A filter-binding method was developed that allows efficient purification of
topoisomerase
-cleaved DNA fragments by selecting for the covalent attachment of this DNA to the enzyme. Using this method, T4
topoisomerase
recognition of mutant cytosine-containing T4 DNA was found to be relatively nonspecific, whereas quite specific recognition sites were observed on native T4 DNA, which contains glucosylated hydroxymethylcytosine residues. The increased specificity of native T4 DNA recognition seems to be due entirely to the
glucose
modification. In contrast, E. coli DNA gyrase shows a high level of specificity for both the mutant cytosine-containing DNA and native T4 DNA, recognizing about five strong cleavage sites on both substrates. An unexpected feature of DNA recognition by the T4
topoisomerase
is that the addition of the cofactor ATP strongly stimulates the
topoisomerase
-induced cleavage of native T4 DNA, but has only a slight effect on cleavage of cytosine-containing T4 DNA.
...
PMID:Site-specific recognition of bacteriophage T4 DNA by T4 type II DNA topoisomerase and Escherichia coli DNA gyrase. 632 31
WEHI-3B/NOVO is a cloned murine leukemia cell line selected for resistance to novobiocin that is cross-resistant to the cytotoxic action of etoposide (VP-16) and to a lesser extent to a variety of other
topoisomerase
II (topo II)-reactive drugs. We have reported previously (Cancer Res. 52: 2782-2790, 1992) that WEHI-3B/NOVO cells exhibit a pronounced decrease in VP-16 induced DNA-topo II cross-link formation compared to the parental WEHI-3B/S cell line in intact cells, in the absence of a significant difference in the P4 unknotting activity of topo II assayed in nuclear extracts. Because the pattern of cross-resistance was suggestive of a topo II-mediated mechanism, we have ascertained whether a change in topo II can account for the multidrug-resistant phenotype of WEHI-3B/NOVO cells. No differences existed between WEHI-3B/S and WEHI-3B/NOVO cells in topo II mRNA and protein levels, as well as in the amount of topo II associated with the nuclear matrix. Neither sensitive nor resistant cells expressed detectable levels of the MDR1 gene; however, VP-16 accumulation in WEHI-3B/NOVO cells was 3-4-fold less than that present in WEHI-3B/S cells, whereas doxorubicin accumulation was the same in both cell lines. Over the first 60 s, no difference existed in the rate of uptake of VP-16 between parental and resistant cells; however, beyond the first 60 s of incubation, [3H]VP-16 accumulated to a greater extent in parental sensitive cells. Thus, an increased rate of efflux of VP-16 was responsible for the lower steady-state concentration of the drug in resistant cells. The efflux Km for VP-16 in WEHI-3B/NOVO cells was 254.7 microM and the Vmax was 10.4 pmol/s/10(7) cells. In the presence of the inhibitors of energy metabolism, sodium azide and deoxyglucose, the efflux of VP-16 was markedly inhibited; readdition of
glucose
restored the original efflux rate. Northern blot analyses using the human 10.1 probe for the 3'-terminal region of the multidrug-resistance protein (MRP) cDNA revealed a mRNA species of approximately 6 kb in WEHI-3B/NOVO cells but not in WEHI-3B/S cells. Overexpression was associated with amplification of the cognate gene. To ascertain whether the overexpressed gene in WEHI-3B/NOVO cells was the murine MRP or a different member of the same superfamily of ATP-binding ABC cassette transporters, a 341-bp MRP cDNA probe was generated from a murine genomic library.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Increased rate of adenosine triphosphate-dependent etoposide (VP-16) efflux in a murine leukemia cell line overexpressing the multidrug resistance-associated protein (MRP) gene. 767 Dec 47
Cell lines deficient in poly(ADP-ribose) synthesis due to enzyme deficiency (ADPRT54 and ADPRT351) or substrate deficiency (N2, N3, and N4) are resistant to
topoisomerase
II-directed agents, including etoposide (VP-16), N-[4-(9-acridinylamino)-3-methoxyphenyl]methanesulfonamide, and Adriamycin, relative to the effect of these agents on parental V79 Chinese hamster cells. Resistance is stable in the ADPRT54 and ADPRT351 cell lines, whereas resistance in the N2, N3, and N4 cell lines occurs when the cells are grown in nicotinamide-deficient medium to produce a state of NAD deficiency. However, sensitivity to VP-16 reverts to normal when cellular NAD levels return to control levels during growth in nicotinamide-containing complete medium. Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-deficient cell lines show constitutively increased levels of a protein at M(r) 78,000 on Coomassie blue-stained, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels that was subsequently confirmed with monoclonal antibodies to be M(r) 78,000
glucose
-regulated stress protein (GRP78). Similarly, N2, N3, and N4 cells show induction of GRP78 under nicotinamide-deficient conditions. Induction of GRP78 is associated with elevated levels of GRP78 mRNA and appears to be regulated at the transcriptional level. When N3 cells with deficiency of poly(ADP-ribose) synthesis due to NAD deficiency are shifted to complete, nicotinamide-containing medium, they restore their NAD content, undergo a decrease in GRP78 levels, and regain sensitivity to VP-16. When V79 cells are shifted to nicotinamide-deficient medium they undergo a reduction in NAD content, followed by a progressive elevation in GRP78 levels, and they subsequently become increasingly resistant to VP-16. These studies demonstrate a clear association between deficiency of the NAD-poly(ADP-ribose) synthesis system, induction of GRP78 synthesis, and resistance to VP-16.
...
PMID:Induction of M(r) 78,000 glucose-regulated stress protein in poly(adenosine diphosphate-ribose) polymerase- and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-deficient V79 cell lines and its relation to resistance to the topoisomerase II inhibitor etoposide. 804 89
The cytotoxicity of a class of compounds related to the
topoisomerase
-II poison amsacrine was investigated against plateau-phase murine Lewis lung carcinoma cells (LLTC), HCT-8 human colon carcinoma cells and other cell lines. Methyl N-[4-(9-acridinylamino)-2-methoxy-phenyl]carbamate hydrochloride and the corresponding demethoxy compound, which contain a methylcarbamate instead of the methylsulphonylamino group, manifested relatively high cytotoxic activity against plateau-phase cells as measured by clonogenic survival. The concentration of drug required for a given cytotoxic effect on plateau-phase cells was about 2 times higher than that required for an equitoxic effect on actively proliferating cells. In contrast, at least 5 times more amsacrine, doxorubicin or etoposide was needed for an equitoxic effect on plateau-phase cells. Cells taken directly from subcutaneous LLTC tumours and exposed to drugs displayed the same differential drug sensitivity to the carbamate compounds, suggesting that the plateau-phase cells provide an appropriate model for cells growing in vivo. The greater cytotoxicity of the carbamate drugs was shown to depend critically on the provision of an energy source such as
glucose
, suggesting that nutrient starvation both in plateau-phase cells and in tumours induced a
glucose
-sensitive resistance mechanism. It is suggested that the carbamate analogues of amsacrine recognize a form of
topoisomerase
II, possibly topoisomerase II beta, the activity of which increases relative to that of topoisomerase II alpha in non-cycling cells, and might be used to devise new strategies for the treatment of solid tumours.
...
PMID:Novel carbamate analogues of amsacrine with activity against non-cycling murine and human tumour cells. 819 67
Previous studies have shown that DNA cleavage by mammalian
topoisomerase
II is ATP dependent and can be inhibited by metabolic inhibitors. Furthermore, it has been shown that metabolic inhibitors also have a cytoprotective effect in vitro against
topoisomerase
II-targeting antitumor drugs. However, the nature of the ATP-dependent process is not known. We have previously shown that doxorubicin induces apoptosis (programmed cell death) in the murine small intestine which can be inhibited by the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide. In the present study, we have demonstrated that 2-deoxy-D-glucose reduces the incidence of doxorubicin-induced apoptosis in vivo if administered within 45 min of the doxorubicin. Maximum reduction was observed at 2 h after treatment (approximately 66%); however, significant reduction was still observable at 9 h after treatment (approximately 33%). Significant positive correlation was observed between protein synthesis inhibition and apoptosis inhibition. Other possible mechanisms of action of the inhibitor do not appear to be important in cytoprotection. The inhibitor did not reduce the uptake of doxorubicin into the intestinal epithelium; however, it caused a significant increase in retention of the drug. The kinetics of inhibition suggest that alteration of cell cycle kinetics, inhibition of formation of doxorubicin-
topoisomerase
II complex or induction of
glucose
-regulated proteins are not significant factors in cytoprotection. These studies indicate that at least in the mouse small intestinal epithelium, the ATP-dependent process in cell killing by doxorubicin may involve protein synthesis.
...
PMID:Inhibition of doxorubicin-induced apoptosis in vivo by 2-deoxy-D-glucose. 848 7
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