Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:5.99.1.3 (topoisomerase)
9,911 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have previously observed that the DNA topoisomerase I inhibitor camptothecin (CAM), or DNA topoisomerase II inhibitors teniposide (TEN) and amsacrine (m-AMSA) trigger endonucleolytic activity in myelogenous (HL-60 or KG1), but not lymphocytic (MOLT-4) leukaemic cell lines. DNA degradation and other signs of apoptotic death were seen as early as 2-4 h after cell exposure to these inhibitors. Cells replicating DNA (S phase) were selectively sensitive whereas cells in G1 were resistant; the sensitivity of G2 or M cells could not be assessed in these studies. The present studies were aimed at revealing whether DNA repair replication induced by ionizing radiation can sensitize the cells, and to probe the sensitivity of cells arrested in G2 or M, to these inhibitors. The data show that gamma-irradiation (0.5-15 Gy) of HL-60 cells does not alter their pattern of sensitivity, i.e. G1 cells, although engaged in DNA repair replication, still remain resistant to CAM compared with the S phase cells. Likewise, irradiation of MOLT-4 cells also does not render them sensitive to either CAM or TEN, regardless of their position in the cell cycle. Irradiation, however, by slowing the rate of cell progression through S, increased the proportion of S phase cells, and thus made the whole cell population more sensitive to CAM. HL-60 cells arrested in G2 either by irradiation or treatments with Hoechst 33342 or doxorubicin appear to be more resistant to CAM relative to S phase cells. Also resistant are cells arrested in M by vinblastine. The data suggest that some factor(s) exist exclusively in S phase cells, which precondition them to respond to the inhibitors of DNA topoisomerases by rapid activation of endogenous nuclease(s) and subsequent death by apoptosis. HL-60 cells in G1, G2 or M, or MOLT-4 cells, regardless of the phase of the cycle, appear to be protected from such a mechanism, and even induction of DNA repair replication cannot initiate DNA degradation in response to DNA topoisomerase inhibitors. These data, together with the evidence in the literature that topoisomerase I may be involved in DNA repair, suggest that a combination of these inhibitors with treatments that synchronize cells in the S phase and/or recruit quiescent cells to proliferation, including radiation, may be of value in the clinic.
...
PMID:Apoptotic cell death triggered by camptothecin or teniposide. The cell cycle specificity and effects of ionizing radiation. 133 22

The present review describes several methods to characterize and differentiate between two different mechanisms of cell death, apoptosis and necrosis. Most of these methods were applied to studies of apoptosis triggered in the human leukemic HL-60 cell line by DNA topoisomerase I or II inhibitors, and in rat thymocytes by either topoisomerase inhibitors or prednisolone. In most cases, apoptosis was selective to cells in a particular phase of the cell cycle: only S-phase HL-60 cells and G0 thymocytes were mainly affected. Necrosis was induced by excessively high concentrations of these drugs. The following cell features were found useful to characterize the mode of cell death: a) Activation of an endonuclease in apoptocic cells resulted in extraction of the low molecular weight DNA following cell permeabilization, which, in turn, led to their decreased stainability with DNA-specific fluorochromes. Measurements of DNA content made it possible to identify apoptotic cells and to recognize the cell cycle phase specificity of the apoptotic process. b) Plasma membrane integrity, which is lost in necrotic but not apoptotic cells, was probed by the exclusion of propidium iodide (PI). The combination of PI followed by Hoechst 33342 proved to be an excellent probe to distinguish live, necrotic, early- and late-apoptotic cells. c) Mitochondrial transmembrane potential, assayed by retention of rhodamine 123 was preserved in apoptotic but not necrotic cells. d) The ATP-dependent lysosomal proton pump, tested by the supravital uptake of acridine orange (AO) was also preserved in apoptotic but not necrotic cells. e) Bivariate analysis of cells stained for DNA and protein revealed markedly diminished protein content in apoptotic cells, most likely due to activation of endogenous proteases. Necrotic cells, having leaky membranes, had minimal protein content. f) Staining of RNA allowed for the discrimination of G0 from G1 cells and thus made it possible to reveal that apoptosis was selective to G0 thymocytes. g) The decrease in forward light scatter, paralleled either by no change (HL-60 cells) or an increase (thymocytes) of right angle scatter, were early changes during apoptosis. h) The sensitivity of DNA in situ to denaturation, was increased in apoptotic and necrotic cells. This feature, probed by staining with AO at low pH, provided a sensitive and early assay to discriminate between live, apoptotic and necrotic cells, and to evaluate the cell cycle phase specificity of these processes. i) The in situ nick translation assay employing labeled triphosphonucleotides can be used to reveal DNA strand breaks, to detect the very early stages of apoptosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Features of apoptotic cells measured by flow cytometry. 133 43

In a variety of adult and childhood leukaemia cell samples collected at different states of the disease, we analysed in a series of sequentially performed slot-blot or Northern-blot hybridisation experiments the expression of genes possibly involved in multiple drug resistance (MDR) (mdr1/P-glycoprotein, DNA topoisomerase II, glutathione-S-transferase pi), and the expression of the DNA topoisomerase I and histone 3.1 genes. Occasionally, P-glycoprotein gene expression was additionally examined by indirect immunocytofluorescence using the monoclonal antibody C219. No significant difference in mdr1/P-glycoprotein mRNA levels between primary and relapsed state acute lymphocytic leukaemias (ALL) was seen on average. Second or third relapses, however, showed a distinct tendency to an elevated expression of this multidrug transporter gene (up to 10-fold) in part well beyond the value seen in the moderately cross-resistant T-lymphoblastoid CCRF-CEM subline CCRF VCR 100. Increased mdr1/P-glycoprotein mRNA levels were also found in relapsed state acute myelogenous leukaemias (AML), and in chronic lymphocytic leukaemias (CLL) treated with chlorambucil and/or prednisone for several years. Topoisomerase I and topoisomerase II mRNA levels were found to be very variable. Whereas in all but one case of CLL topoisomerase II mRNA was not detected by slot-blot hybridizations, strong topoisomerase I and topoisomerase II gene expression levels, frequently exceeding the levels monitored in the CCRF-CEM cell line, were seen in many cell samples of acute leukaemia. If topoisomerase II mRNA was undetectable, expression of topoisomerase I was clearly visible throughout. These observations might be valuable considering the possible treatment with specific topoisomerase I or topoisomerase II inhibitors. Significant positive correlations were found (i) for topoisomerase I and histone 3.1 gene expression levels in general (P less than 0.001), and (ii) in the CLL samples additionally for the expression levels of the mdr1 gene, and the histone 3.1, topoisomerase I, and glutathione-S-transferase pi genes, respectively.
...
PMID:Mdr1/P-glycoprotein, topoisomerase, and glutathione-S-transferase pi gene expression in primary and relapsed state adult and childhood leukaemias. 135 60

Spontaneously nalidixic acid-resistant lines (NAr lines) were selected from a V79 Chinese hamster cell line and phenotypically characterized. NAr lines showed an increased doubling time, a higher number of spontaneous SCE, and more interestingly, decreased DNA topoisomerase II activity. These lines were also cross-resistant to the eukaryotic topoisomerase II inhibitors etoposide and adriamycin, but showed the same level of sensitivity as the parental line to the DNA topoisomerase I inhibitor camptothecin. NAr lines were cross-resistant to other drugs, such as PALA, MTX and MPA, resistance to which has been shown to arise by amplification of the target genes. This last feature, together with enhanced cross-resistance to PALA and MTX when employed simultaneously, suggests that NAr lines have an 'amplification prone' phenotype. From these results the decreased activity of topoisomerase II seems to be involved in the generation of amplified sequences possibly by affecting recombinational events underlying gene amplification.
...
PMID:Nalidixic acid-resistant V79 cells with reduced DNA topoisomerase II activity and amplification prone phenotype. 138 16

Patients with the autosomal recessive disorder Fanconi anemia (FA) present with progressive pancytopenia, skeletal abnormalities and a predisposition to leukemia. In addition to elevated rates of spontaneous chromosome aberrations occurring in cultured fibroblasts and lymphoblastoid cell lines, an increased susceptibility to DNA cross-linking agents and oxygen has been found. To explain this hypersensitivity to clastogenic agents a defective function of DNA topoisomerase I or II could be invoked, a suggestion which is supported by the co-localization of the DNA topoisomerase I gene and a putative FA gene to chromosome 20q. In order to investigate the function of DNA topoisomerases in FA, the sensitivity of lymphoid B-cell lines derived from FA patients and control cell lines to inhibitors of DNA topoisomerases I and II was compared using continuous bromodeoxyuridine labeling and bivariate Hoechst/ethidium bromide flow cytometry. Both agents inhibited cell proliferation mainly by arresting cells in the G2 phase of the cell cycle. However, no difference was found in sensitivity towards both DNA topoisomerase inhibitors between control and FA cell lines.
...
PMID:Cell cycle effects of the DNA topoisomerase inhibitors camptothecin and m-AMSA in lymphoblastoid cell lines from patients with Fanconi anemia. 138 35

Purified vaccinia virus DNA topoisomerase I forms a cleavable complex with duplex DNA at a conserved sequence element 5'(C/T)CCTTdecreases in the incised DNA strand. DNase I footprint studies show that vaccinia topoisomerase protects the region around the site of covalent adduct formation from nuclease digestion. On the cleaved DNA strand, the protected region extends from +13 to -13 (+1 being the site of cleavage). On the noncleaved strand, the protected region extends from +13 to -9. Similar nuclease protection is observed for a mutant topoisomerase (containing a Tyr ---- Phe substitution at the active site amino acid 274) that is catalytically inert and does not form the covalent intermediate. Thus, vaccinia topoisomerase is a specific DNA binding protein independent of its competence in transesterification. By studying the cleavage of a series of 12-mer DNA duplexes in which the position of the CCCTTdecreases motif within the substrate is systematically phased, the "minimal" substrate for cleavage has been defined; cleavage requires six nucleotides upstream of the cleavage site and two nucleotides downstream of the site. An analysis of the cleavage of oligomer substrates mutated singly in the CCCTT sequence reveals a hierarchy of mutational effects based on position within the pentamer motif and the nature of the sequence alteration.
...
PMID:Site-specific interaction of vaccinia virus topoisomerase I with duplex DNA. Minimal DNA substrate for strand cleavage in vitro. 168 12

In this study, the effect of DNA single strand breaks (ssb) on the neutral (pH 9.6) filter elution of DNA from Chinese hamster ovary (CHO K1) cells containing DNA double strand breaks (dsb) was investigated. Protein associated ssb were induced by the inhibition of DNA topoisomerase I with camptothecin (cpt). Protein associated dsb were introduced by treating cells with the DNA topoisomerase II poison; etoposide (VP-16). Protein associated ssb and dsb were converted to ssb and dsb by proteinase K present in the lysis solution. In some experiments dsb were generated by the restriction endonuclease Pvu II. It was found that elution of DNA in the presence and absence of ssb was similar under neutral conditions. This finding is consistent with the view that the fast component of the bi-phasic repair kinetics observed in irradiated mammalian cells with the neutral filter elution technique is not attributable to the interference of ssb with the measurement of dsb, and thus suggests that the two components of repair observed with the neutral filter elution elution technique may represent two different types of dsb or modes of repair of dsb.
...
PMID:Lack of interference of DNA single-strand breaks with the measurement of double-strand breaks in mammalian cells using the neutral filter elution assay. 164 64

Saintopin is an antitumor antibiotic recently discovered in mechanistically oriented screening using purified calf thymus DNA topoisomerases. Saintopin induced topoisomerase I mediated DNA cleavage comparable to that of camptothecin, and topoisomerase II mediated DNA cleavage equipotent to those of 4'-(9-acridinylamino)methanesulfon-m-anisidide (m-AMSA) or 4'-demethylepipodophyllotoxin 9-(4,6-O-ethylidene-beta-D-glucopyranoside) (VP-16). Treatment of a reaction mixture containing saintopin and topoisomerase I or II with either elevated temperature (65 degrees C) or higher salt concentration (0.5 M NaCl) resulted in a substantial reduction in DNA cleavage, suggesting that the topoisomerase I and II mediated DNA cleavage induced by saintopin is through the mechanism of stabilizing the reversible enzyme-DNA "cleavable complex". Consistent with the cleavable complex formation with both topoisomerases, saintopin inhibited catalytic activities of both topoisomerase I and topoisomerase II. The DNA cleavage intensity pattern induced by saintopin with topoisomerase I was different from that by camptothecin. A difference in cleavage pattern was also detected between saintopin and m-AMSA or VP-16 in topoisomerase II mediated DNA cleavage. DNA unwinding assay using T4 DNA ligase showed that saintopin is a weak DNA intercalator like m-AMSA. Thus, saintopin represents a new class of antitumor agent that can induce both mammalian DNA topoisomerase I and mammalian DNA topisomerase II mediated DNA cleavage.
...
PMID:Induction of mammalian DNA topoisomerase I and II mediated DNA cleavage by saintopin, a new antitumor agent from fungus. 164 1

Diploid human fibroblast strains were treated for 10 min with inhibitors of type I and type II DNA topoisomerases, and after removal of the inhibitors, the rate of initiation of DNA synthesis at replicon origins was determined. By alkaline elution chromatography, 4'-(9-acridinylamino)methanesulfon-m-anisidide (amsacrine), an inhibitor of DNA topoisomerase II, was shown to produce DNA strand breaks. These strand breaks are thought to reflect drug-induced stabilization of topoisomerase-DNA cleavable complexes. Removal of the drug led to a rapid resealing of the strand breaks by dissociation of the complexes. Velocity sedimentation analysis was used to quantify the effects of amsacrine treatment on DNA replication. It was demonstrated that transient exposure to low concentrations of amsacrine inhibited replicon initiation but did not substantially affect DNA chainelongation within operating replicons. Maximal inhibition of replicon initiation occurred 20 to 30 min after drug treatment, and the initiation rate recovered 30 to 90 min later. Ataxia telangiectasia cells displayed normal levels of amsacrine-induced DNA strand breaks during stabilization of cleavable complexes but failed to downregulate replicon initiation after exposure to the topoisomerase inhibitor. Thus, inhibition of replicon initiation in response to DNA damage appears to be an active process which requires a gene product which is defective or missing in ataxia telangiectasia cells. In normal human fibroblasts, the inhibition of DNA topoisomerase I by camptothecin produced reversible DNA strand breaks. Transient exposure to this drug also inhibited replicon initiation. These results suggest that the cellular response pathway which downregulates replicon initiation following genotoxic damage may respond to perturbations of chromatin structure which accompany stabilization of topoisomerase-DNA cleavable complexes.
...
PMID:Inhibition of replicon initiation in human cells following stabilization of topoisomerase-DNA cleavable complexes. 164 93

Exposure of promyelocytic leukemic HL-60 cells to 3-60 nM of the DNA topoisomerase I inhibitor camptothecin (CAM) or to 30-450 nM and 0.12-1.5 microM of DNA topoisomerase II inhibitors teniposide (TN) and 4-(9-acridynylamino)-3-methanesulfon-m-anisidide (m-AMSA), respectively, resulted in two distinct kinetic effects: (1) the cells entered S phase but the rate of DNA replication was reduced in proportion to the inhibitor concentration; (2) the transition from G2 to M was impaired, approximately 1 h after addition of the inhibitor. As a consequence, the cells accumulated in the S (preferentially in early S) and in G2 phases of the cell cycle. Whereas CAM was more efficient in suppressing cell progression through S phase, TN and m-AMSA were more potent G2 blockers. At these low inhibitor concentrations no signs of immediate cytotoxicity or DNA degradation were apparent. However, above 145 nM of CAM, 900 nM of TN, or 2 microM of m-AMSA extensive DNA degradation in nuclei of S phase cells was evident within 6 h of addition of the inhibitor, resulting in the loss of S and G2 + M cells from these cultures. The data indicate that depending on concentration, mechanisms mediating the cytostatic/cytotoxic activity of both DNA topoisomerase I and II inhibitors may be quite different. Suppression of the DNA replication and the G2 to M transition, seen at low inhibitor concentrations, is compatible with the assumption that the inhibitor-induced stabilization of the topoisomerase-DNA cleavable complexes interferes with DNA replication and chromosome condensation/segregation, respectively. Above the threshold concentration for each inhibitor, an endonucleolytic activity is triggered, resulting in rapid DNA degradation in nuclei of S and G2 phase cells. The endonucleolytic effect is not only cell cycle phase-specific but is also modulated by tissue-specific factors because it cannot be observed, e.g., in the lymphocytic leukemic cell lines.
...
PMID:The concentration-dependent diversity of effects of DNA topoisomerase I and II inhibitors on the cell cycle of HL-60 cells. 164 59


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>