Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (glioma)
30,880 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Mouse neuroblastoma (NB) cells in culture were more sensitive to sodium L-ascorbate than were rat glioma cells by the criterion of growth inhibition (due to cell death and reduction in cell division). Sodium L-ascorbate at nonlethal concentrations potentiated the effect of 5-fluorouracil (FUra), x-irradiation, bleomycin, RO20-1724, prostaglandin E1, and sodium butyrate on NB cells but did not produce such an effect on glioma cells. Sodium L-ascorbate did not enhance the effect of vincristine, 6-thioguanine, or 1-(2-chloroethyl)-3-cyclohexyl-1-nitrosourea (CCNU) except at higher drug doses and it reduced the cytotoxic effect of methotrexate and 5-(3,3-dimethyl-1-triazeno)-imidazole-4-carboxamide (DTIC) on NB cells. Sodium D-ascorbate produced effects similar to those produced by sodium L-ascorbate on NB cells. L-Ascorbic acid-2-sulfate (barium salt) affected neither the growth rate nor the effect of 5-FUra on NB cells. Glutathione, a reducing agent, was more toxic to NB cells in comparison to D- OR L-ascorbate; however, at a similar concentration it failed to potentiate the effect of 5-FUra on NB cells.
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PMID:Sodium ascorbate potentiates the growth inhibitory effect of certain agents on neuroblastoma cells in culture. 28 5

Glutathione (GSH) and Glutathione S-transferase (GST) plays an important role in the protection of cells against damage from free radicals and also influences cytotoxicity to some kinds of chemotherapeutic agents. GST comprises a group of abundant and widely distributed catalytic and binding proteins that facilitate the conjugation of GSH with the electrophilic center of a large spectrum of hydrophilic molecules. Multiple GST isozymes in mammalian tissues arise from dimeric combination of a number of distinct subunits grouped into three major classes: alpha (alpha), mu (mu), and pi (p). We report the total GST, GST-p activity and GSH content of human brain tumors, C6 rat glioma cells and drug resistant C6 cells. The values of total GST activity in 42 normal brain and brain tumors were quantitatively analyzed. Total GST activity was 92.6 +/- 25.1 units (mean +/- standard deviation) in 8 samples of normal brain tissues, 126 +/- 58.8 units in five grade II or III astrocytomas (154 +/- 63.3 units in grade II astrocytomas, 84.4 +/- 2.7 units in 2 grade III astrocytoma), 66.2 +/- 29.3 in 5 glioblastoma cases, 94.7 +/- 47.7 units in 3 metastatic tumors, 302 +/- 114 unit in 8 meningiomas and 213 +/- 90.4 units in 3 neurinomas. Differences of GST activity between glioblastomas and meningiomas, grade II or III astrocytomas and meningioma, in normal brain tissues and meningioma were statistically significant (p < 0.01). The difference between normal brain tissues and benign tumors (meningiomas and neurinomas), gliomas and benign tumors were also statistically significant (p < 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Quantitative analysis of glutathione and glutathione S-transferase in human brain tumors, C6 rat glioma cells and drug resistant C6 cells]. 140 41

Glutathione (GSH) depletion by buthioninine sulfoximine (BSO) is being explored clinically as a means of enhancing the efficacy of cancer chemotherapy. We investigated the kinetics of GSH depletion and altered gamma-L-glutamyl-L-cysteine synthetase (gamma-GC-S) gene expression in two human malignant glioma cell lines, HBT5 and HBT28, and examined how these relate to GSH resynthesis and changes in DNA interstrand cross-link induction and cytotoxicity of 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-nitrosourea (BCNU). GSH content was 54 and 126 nmol/mg/protein in HBT 5 and HBT 28, respectively, and after a 24-hr exposure to 100 microM BSO was decreased by 95% in HBT 5 and 91% in HBT 28. Basal gamma-GC-S enzyme activity in HBT 28 was twice that in HBT 5, and steady state gamma-GC-S gene transcripts were 2.6-fold higher in HBT 28 than in HBT 5, with no apparent amplification or rearrangement of the gene in either cell line. BSO exposure (100 microM) for 24 hr increased gamma-GC-S gene transcripts by 1.7-fold in HBT 5 and 2.8-fold in HBT 28. After BSO removal, the rate of GSH resynthesis in HBT 28 was twice that in HBT 5. Continuous BSO exposure increased the level of BCNU-induced DNA interstrand cross-links, and cytotoxicity was significantly higher in cells exposed continuously to BSO than in cells with only a 24-hr BSO preexposure. This increase was, however, greater in HBT 28 than in HBT 5. These findings indicate significant heterogeneity in the effects of BSO on gamma-GC-S gene expression and in the ability of BSO to sensitize tumors and cell lines to BCNU. The data also suggest that by preventing GSH resynthesis, a greater level of cytotoxicity is achieved with continuous BSO exposure than with BSO preexposure alone.
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PMID:Buthionine sulfoximine induction of gamma-L-glutamyl-L-cysteine synthetase gene expression, kinetics of glutathione depletion and resynthesis, and modulation of carmustine-induced DNA-DNA cross-linking and cytotoxicity in human glioma cells. 864 39

Malignant gliomas are often treated with cisplatin (cis-diamminedichloroplatinum(II), CDDP) and radiation but results remain unsatisfactory. To investigate whether CDDP induces radioresistance in glioma, T98G human glioblastoma cells were pretreated 5 times with 10(-6)M CDDP for 24 hours and then the sensitivity of wild type (wt) and pretreated cells towards radiation (9Gy 60Co) and CDDP was tested in a colorimetric assay (MIT). The growth rates of wt and pretreated cells were 1.8 +/-0.2 and 3.1 +/- 0.2 respectively (p = 0.000155) 216 hours post radiation. Pretreated cells also developed resistance to CDDP (resistance factor 2.35). Glutathione (GSH) which potentially mediates resistance to both treatments was measured. Incubation for 6 hours with 10(-5) M CDDP increased GSH levels by a factor of 2.28 (p < 0.0001). However, neither basal nor increased levels differed between wt and pretreated cells. These data show that CDDP pretreatment can induce resistance against radiation and CDDP independently of GSH.
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PMID:Cisplatin induces radioprotection in human T98G glioma cells. 913 60

Median survival of human malignant glioma patients is less than one year even with cytoreductive surgery and postoperative radiotherapy. Adjuvant chemotherapy has been rather ineffective. Here, we studied the potentiation by L-buthionine-[S,R]-sulfoximine (BSO), a glutathione-depleting agent, of anticancer drug actions on two human malignant glioma cell lines, LN-229 and T98G. LN-229 has wild-type p53 status, T98G is mutant for p53. Glutathione levels were depleted by BSO with similar kinetics in both cell lines. Only LN-229 cells were growth-inhibited by BSO. BSO had minor effects on the toxicity of doxorubicin, ACNU (1-[(4-amino-2-methyl-5-pyrimidinyl)methyl]-3-(2-chloroethyl)-3-nitrosou rea, nimustine) and vincristine. BSO failed to alter teniposide or cytarabine toxicity. BSO induced prominent sensitization to the alkylating agent, treosulfan, in both cell lines, as assessed by viability assays, in situ DNA end labeling and quantitative DNA fragmentation. Treosulfan is thought to mediate toxicity via formation of reactive epoxides. In the absence of BSO, treosulfan had little acute cytotoxic and moderate antiproliferative effects. Synergistic glioma cell cytotoxicity induced by treosulfan and BSO was not associated with reactive oxygen species formation. Ectopic expression of bcl-2 did not alter basal glutathione levels but attenuated glutathione depletion induced by BSO. Bcl-2 provided only moderate protection from synergistic induction of glioma cell death by treosulfan and BSO. Glutathione depletion may play a role in BSO-mediated chemosensitization, but other mechanisms are probably involved as well. BSO may be a useful agent for glioma cell sensitization to specific chemotherapeutic drugs such as treosulfan.
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PMID:Potentiation of treosulfan toxicity by the glutathione-depleting agent buthionine sulfoximine in human malignant glioma cells: the role of bcl-2. 948 2

Glutathione (GSH) depletion caused by l-buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine (BSO) induced apoptosis that was recognized by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP-biotin nick endo-labeling (TUNEL), nuclear DNA staining with fluorescence dye, and internucleosomal DNA fragmentation in C6 rat glioma cells. The BSO-induced cell death was associated with caspase-3 activation. Lipid peroxidation and protein kinase C (PK-C) activation were observed during the apoptosis of C6 cells, and these events were inhibited by antioxidants and iron chelators without affecting BSO-induced GSH depletion. Furthermore, approximately 2 Mbp giant DNA fragments were observed in the BSO-treated cells. The giant DNA fragmentation were followed by approximately 30-700 kbp and then less than 100 kbp, including internucleosomal DNA fragmentations. Such serial DNA degradation was prevented by the antioxidants, the iron chelators, and the PK-C inhibitors. These results suggest that during apoptosis induced by GSH-depletion caused by BSO, reactive oxygen species endogenously produced cause lipid peroxidation and that the lipid peroxidation induced PK-C activation, processes which are thought to be involved in the giant DNA, high-molecular-weight DNA, and the internucleosomal DNA fragmentations.
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PMID:Glutathione depletion induces giant DNA and high-molecular-weight DNA fragmentation associated with apoptosis through lipid peroxidation and protein kinase C activation in C6 glioma cells. 1004 97

Glutathione deficiency is commonly associated with mitochondrial complex I dysfunction and loss of viability in neurones, but not in glia. In order to address the possible mechanism responsible for this cellular difference, the regulation of mitochondrial complex I expression by glutathione depletion was investigated in glial cells. Incubation of rat-cultured astrocytes and C6 glioma cells with the specific gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase inhibitor L-buthionine-(S:,R:)-sulfoximine (L-BSO; 0.1-1 mM) decreased the total specific content of glutathione in a dose- and time-dependent fashion. Northern blot analyses revealed that glutathione deficiency caused by L-BSO (0.1 mM) was associated with a twofold enhancement in complex I regulatory subunit ND6 (mitochondrially encoded) mRNA expression after 24-72 h. This effect was accompanied by a twofold increase in complex-I activity at 72 h in L-BSO-treated cells, as compared with control cells, but complex II-III, complex IV and citrate synthase activities were unaltered. It is suggested that the oxidative stress caused by glutathione depletion in glial cells would up-regulate complex-I activity by enhancing the expression of the mitochondrially encoded regulatory subunit. These results could offer further insight into the different degree of cellular susceptibility observed in glial vs. neuronal cells against oxidative stress.
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PMID:Depletion of glutathione up-regulates mitochondrial complex I expression in glial cells. 1123 44

Glutathione S-transferases GSTM1, GSTT1, and GSTP1 are phase II biotransformation enzymes that function on detoxification of a wide range of exogenous agents including carcinogens. It has been shown that genetic variations in these genes play an important role in determining the response of an individual to environmental carcinogens. Some studies revealed a statistically significant association between the polymorphisms in the genes encoding GST enzymes and some cancers, although contrary reports exist. In this study, the association between polymorphisms in these genes and primary brain tumor incidence was investigated in 228 Turkish individuals (75 patients with primary brain tumor and 153 controls). The prevalence of GSTM1 null genotype in the case group was 43%, compared to 24% in the control group, giving an odds ratio (OR) of 2.33 (95% confidence interval CI=1.24-4.39). No association was observed between the GSTT1 or GSTP1 Ile105Val polymorphism and brain tumor incidence. Polymorphisms in GSTM1, GSTT1, and GSTP1 did not show association with histopathologic type of brain tumor (glioma or meningioma). Analysis of the polymorphisms in the studied genes and smoking status of the brain tumor patients revealed no statistically significant association. The presented data clearly suggest a relation between brain tumor incidence with GSTM1 null genotype but not with GSTT1 or GSTP1 gene variants.
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PMID:Genetic polymorphisms of GSTs and their association with primary brain tumor incidence. 1564 94

Glutathione (GSH) is a major antioxidant in the brain and ammonia neurotoxicity is associated with oxidative stress. In this study, we show that intracerebral administration of ammonium chloride ("ammonia", final concentration 5mM) via a microdialysis probe, increases by 80% the glutathione content in cerebral cortical microdialysates, and tends to increase its content in striatal microdialysates. Treatment with ammonia in vitro dose-dependently increased the glutathione content in cultured cerebral cortical astrocytes and a C6 glioma cell line. Significant effects have been observed after 1h (astrocytes) or 3h (C6 cells) of exposure and were sustained up to 72 h of incubation. A gradual decrease of the GSH/GSSG ratio noted during 3 h (astrocytes) or 24 h (C6 cells) of exposure, was followed by an partial recovery after 24 h of incubation, the latter phase possibly reflecting increased availability of de novo synthesized glutathione. In our hands, cystine, the precursor for astrocytic glutathione synthesis, was transported to astrocytes almost exclusively by system X(AG)-, while in C6 cells the transport engaged both system x(c)- (approximately 60% of uptake) and X(AG)- (approximately 40% of uptake). Ammonia in either cell type stimulated cystine uptake without changing the relative contribution of the uptake systems. The results are consistent with the concept of increased astrocytic glutathione synthesis as an adaptive response of the brain to ammonia challenge, and emphasize upregulation of cystine uptake as a factor contributing to this response.
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PMID:Upregulation of cerebral cortical glutathione synthesis by ammonia in vivo and in cultured glial cells: the role of cystine uptake. 1723 89

Cultured astrocytes and glioma cells in a confluent state do not have a constant cellular concentration of glutathione. After exposure of the cells to fresh culture medium, the glutathione content of both cell types rose sharply and after a few days, fell back. For the glioma cells, the glutathione rise was higher and earlier and the fall was sharper than that of the astrocytes. Glutathione added to the culture medium had little effect on the cellular content of glutathione of astrocytes except at the highest concentrations (1 mM). Exogenous glutathione did increase the glutathione content of glioma cells and appeared to have a toxic effect at the highest concentrations. Both cell types maintained a low, constant concentration of reduced glutathione in the medium and consumed the added excess.
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PMID:Fluctuations in the glutathione content of confluent cultured astrocytes and glioma cells. 2049 96


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