Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0025202 (melanoma)
69,561 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Glutathione (GSH) plays an essential role in the metabolism of melanoma. As changes in intracellular GSH content can modify the processes of cell proliferation and detoxification, this could determine the therapeutic response to some cancer treatment strategies. The purpose of this study was to test the effects of treatment with interleukin-2 (IL-2), alone and in combination with cyclophosphamide (CY), on survival of mice bearing B16 melanoma liver metastases, and to determine the influence of these therapeutic agents on the GSH metabolism of B16 cells. In the in vivo test system, B16 melanoma liver metastases were induced in C57BL/6 mice which were subsequently treated with IL-2, CY and CY plus IL-2. Survival time was used to determine the response to treatment. In the in vitro system, we evaluated the effects of IL-2, acrolein (an active metabolite of CY responsible for GSH depletion) and acrolein plus IL-2 on GSH levels and proliferation of B16 melanoma cells. Results indicated that, in vivo, all treatments increased mouse survival times with respect to control mice. However, the addition of IL-2 to CY therapy decreased survival time compared with treatment with CY alone. In vitro, whereas acrolein produced a GSH depletion and inhibited B16 cell proliferation, IL-2 increased GSH content and cell proliferation rate compared with untreated cells. Moreover, addition of IL-2 to cells preincubated with acrolein increased GSH levels and proliferation with respect to acrolein alone. In summary, the data suggest that GSH plays a critical role in the growth-promoting effects of IL-2 on B16F10 melanoma cells and in the antagonistic effect of IL-2 on CY inhibitory activity on these tumor cells.
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PMID:Interleukin-2 increases intracellular glutathione levels and reverses the growth inhibiting effects of cyclophosphamide on B16 melanoma cells. 917 32

Glutathione (GSH) levels were measured in 13 human tumor cell lines derived from carcinomas of the bladder, ovary, and colon and from melanoma and glioblastoma. High levels were found in four of five bladder cell lines. The average GSH concentration in the bladder cell lines was approximately 6-fold higher than in the non-bladder cell lines. Because this difference suggested the possibility of elevation of GSH in urothelial neoplasia, we measured GSH in bladder tumor tissue from patients with transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) of the bladder (Group I, n = 17). GSH was also measured in two types of control tissues: (a) nontumor bladder tissue from patients with TCC or a history of TCC of the bladder (Group II, n = 23); and (b) bladder tissue from patients without bladder cancer (Group III, n = 14). Thirteen sets of paired specimens of tumor and nontumor bladder tissue from the same patient were evaluated. The tissues were flash-frozen, and GSH was measured after histological assessment of the same samples. Free and total GSH (free + mixed disulfides) were measured by a high-performance liquid chromatography assay with fluorescence detection and expressed as nanomoles/mg protein. The mean free GSH (+/- SD) for groups I, II, and III was 32.0 +/-18.7, 17.3 +/- 11.4, and 9.3 +/- 4.0, respectively, and the mean total GSH was 45.9 +/- 32.5, 23.7 +/- 17.1, and 12.2 +/- 6.7. The respective differences between groups (I and II, I and III, and II and III) were statistically significant for both free and total GSH (Ps ranging from <0.0001 to </=0.05). Free and total GSH were higher in tumor than in nontumor tissue in 11 of 13 paired specimens (free, 29.5 +/- 20.4 versus 18.7 +/- 11.7, P = 0.017; total, 41.7 +/- 33.8 versus 24.9 +/- 18.4, P = 0.005). No correlation was found between GSH levels and the proportion of tumor cells in the tissue. Influence of smoking on GSH expression could not be assessed because 81% of the patients with TCC had a smoking history. Similarly, because only 11% had prior cytotoxic chemotherapy, the influence of prior cytotoxic exposure on GSH could not be assessed. The results indicate: (a) significantly higher levels of GSH in TCC compared to tumor-free bladder tissue; and (b) higher GSH levels in nontumor bladder tissue from patients with bladder cancer than from patients without TCC. The clinical implications of this work include the possibility that GSH may play a role in the resistance of bladder cancer to chemotherapy and may be associated with bladder carcinogenesis.
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PMID:Translational studies of glutathione in bladder cancer cell lines and human specimens. 981 51

Using 1H NMR two diastereoisomers of the ethacrynic acid glutathione conjugate (EASG) as well as ethacrynic acid (EA) could be distinguished and quantified individually. Chemically prepared EASG consists of equal amounts of both diastereoisomers. GSTP1-1 stereospecifically catalyzes formation of one of the diastereoisomers (A). The GSTP1-1 mutant C47S and GSTA1-1 preferentially form the same diastereoisomer of EASG as GSTP1-1. Glutathione conjugation of EA by GSTA1-2 and GSTA2-2 is not stereoselective. When human melanoma cells, expressing GSTP1-1, were exposed to ethacrynic acid, diastereoisomer A was the principal conjugate formed, indicating that even at physiological pH the enzyme catalyzed reaction dominates over the chemical conjugation.
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PMID:GSTP1-1 stereospecifically catalyzes glutathione conjugation of ethacrynic acid. 987 84

Glutathione (GSH) and cysteine (CysH) have both been implicated in the biogenesis of the pheomelanin precursor 5-S-cysteinyldopa (5-S-CD). However, recent studies have shown that only CysH is transported across the membrane of isolated melanosomes, and that the positive regulation of CysH in pigment cells leads to an increased production of 5-S-CD. In the present study, the question was examined as to whether melanin precursors and tyrosinase could be coregulated by cellular thiols. To address this issue, the levels of CysH and GSH were varied in normal melanocytes and melanoma cells using buthionine sulfoximine (BSO), an inhibitor of GSH biosynthesis. Treatment with 50-100 microM BSO decreased GSH levels to less than 10% of control, and increased CysH levels between two- and five-fold in both cell types. Concomitant with this, an increase in the ratio of 5-S-CD to DOPA and a decrease in the pigment content of the cells were observed. The decrease in cell pigmentation was associated with strong decreases in tyrosine hydroxylase activity and 14C-melanin production. Only melanoma cells showed a modified tyrosinase isozyme pattern on Western immunoblots in response to BSO, while the mRNA expression of tyrosinase and TRP-1 were unchanged in both cell types. These results suggest that the balance between CysH and GSH, which is partly determined by the rate of utilization of CysH for GSH biosynthesis, regulates not only the levels of 5-S-CD and DOPA but also the melanogenic activity of pigment cells. Since DOPA functions as a cofactor in the monophenolase reaction of tyrosinase, it is proposed that the ratio of 5-S-CD to DOPA may be an important factor in the regulation of tyrosinase activity in situ.
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PMID:Co-regulation of melanin precursors and tyrosinase in human pigment cells: roles of cysteine and glutathione. 1064 2

Glutathione (GSH) is the major non-protein thiol in cells that plays a critical role against damage from electrophilic agents such as alkylating drugs. Selective therapeutic GSH elevation in normal but not in tumour cells has been suggested as a means of protecting host tissues against more intense doses of chemotherapy. The present study investigated the response of B16 melanoma to treatment with the cysteine pro-drug L-2-oxothiazolidine-4-carboxylate (OTZ), alone and in combination with cyclophosphamide (CY). We found that OTZ decreased the GSH levels and proliferation rate of B16 melanoma cells in vitro, sensitizing them to the cytotoxic action of the activated metabolite of CY, acrolein (AC). In contrast to OTZ, the cysteine deliverer N-acetylcysteine (NAC) enhanced B16 melanoma cell proliferation by increasing GSH levels, and markedly decreased the sensitivity of these tumour cells to AC. In vivo studies showed the antitumoral activity of OTZ in B16 melanoma liver metastasis-induced mice, increasing their life span. We also observed that, whereas with CY treatment the GSH levels in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were reduced and a dose-dependent leukopenia was produced, OTZ significantly increased PBMC GSH content, reducing toxicity and enhancing the survival of mice bearing established melanoma liver metastases treated with lethal dose CY. These results suggest a critical role for OTZ in protecting against alkylator agent-induced immunosuppression, which may allow the dose escalation of these cytostatic drugs to improve their therapeutic benefit in the treatment of malignant melanoma.
Melanoma Res 2000 Apr
PMID:Effects of L-2-oxothiazolidine-4-carboxylate on the cytotoxic activity and toxicity of cyclophosphamide in mice bearing B16F10 melanoma liver metastases. 1080 10

To carry out biochemical characterizations of human tyrosinase and to provide an unlimited source of the enzyme for further study, an expression plasmid, pHis-Tyrosinase, which contains the entire coding sequence except the signal sequence of a human tyrosinase was constructed and expressed in Escherichia coli. The expressed enzyme was simply purified by an immobilized metal affinity chromatography. The recombinant enzyme had the same electrophoretic mobility as the native enzyme from human melanoma cell and cross-reacted with the polyclonal antibody raised against the native enzyme. The recombinant enzyme retained its catalytic function with both hydroxylating and oxidative activities. Km values for L-tyrosine and L-3,4-dihydroxy-phenylalanine of the recombinant enzyme were 0.17 and 0.36 mM, respectively. The activity of the recombinant enzyme was optimal at pH 7.5. Glutathione notably inhibited the enzymatic activity. This work is a further enzymatic characterization of human tyrosinase.
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PMID:Expression and characterization of human tyrosinase from a bacterial expression system. 1090 69

The efficacy of sequential chemoimmunotherapy involving interleukin-2 (IL2) in metastatic melanoma is limited, in part, by the severe toxicity associated with most therapeutic regimens. Glutathione (GSH), the most prevalent intracellular non-protein thiol, plays an important role in protecting against cellular injury caused by various anticancer agents. GSH is also involved in the IL2-induced proliferative activity of immune system cells and some melanoma cells expressing IL2 receptors, such as B16 melanoma cells. The present study investigated the effect of selective manipulation of GSH using the cysteine prodrug l-2-oxothiazolidine-4-carboxylate (OTZ) on the response of B16 melanoma to sequential biochemotherapy with cyclophosphamide (CY) and IL2. We found that OTZ, by depressing GSH levels, abrogates the in vitro growth-promoting effects of IL2 on B16 melanoma cells. The combination of OTZ plus IL2 in vivo also showed antitumour activity in mice bearing B16 melanoma liver metastases, significantly increasing their life span. Schedule dependency between both compounds was found; OTZ given intermittently in combination with daily IL2 administration was found to be the best therapeutic schedule. We also observed that whereas IL2 or OTZ alone added to CY resulted in a lower or non-significant improvement in the life span of the mice compared with tolerated doses of CY alone, the addition of both OTZ and IL2 to CY produced a significantly greater increase in survival than CY alone, and markedly protected mice against CY-induced toxicity, which allowed the administration of otherwise lethal doses of CY, with the CY activity/toxicity ratio being increased by four-fold.
Melanoma Res 2002 Feb
PMID:L-2-Oxothiazolidine-4-carboxylate reverses the tumour growth-promoting effect of interleukin-2 and improves the anti-tumour efficacy of biochemotherapy in mice bearing B16 melanoma liver metastases. 1182 54

Glutathione (GSH) and its precursor cysteine (Cys) are both known to react within any cells with oxidative species and thus play an important role in cellular defense mechanisms against oxidative stress. In melanocytes, these are also important precursors of melanogenesis by reacting non-enzymatically with l-dopaquinone to form the sulfur-containing pheomelanin. Our aim was to assess pigment role in the cellular radioprotection mechanism using a human melanoma cell model of mixed-type melanin under GSH depletion to obtain a radiosensitizing effect. The latter has been achieved either by Cys deprivation or GSH specific depletion. We first compared cell survival of Cys-deprived and GSH-depleted cells vs. control cells. Cys deprivation was achieved by decreasing Cys concentration in the culture medium for 24 h. In this condition, no toxicity was observed, Cys and GSH levels decreased, melanogenesis switched to a higher eumelanin synthesis and cells were significantly more resistant to 10-Gy dose of ionizing radiations than untreated cells. Glutathione depletion was achieved with the gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase inhibitor buthionine-S-sulfoximine (BSO) for 24 h at 50 microM, a concentration yielding no toxicity. In this condition, intracellular GSH level decreased but no change in pigmentation was observed and cells were slightly but significantly more sensitive to radiation than the control. We then compared DNA radio-induced damages by Comet assay in control cells, cells treated as above and cells with stimulated pigmentation by increasing Tyr concentration in the medium. Our results showed that, when intracellular eumelanin content increased, DNA damage decreased. By contrast, DNA damage increased in cells treated with BSO alone. It is concluded that increasing the intracellular eumelanin content by the melanin precursor Tyr or by favoring the Pheo- to Eumelanin switch, compensates for the loss of the two intracellular radioprotectors that are GSH and Cys.
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PMID:Cysteine but not glutathione modulates the radiosensitivity of human melanoma cells by affecting both survival and DNA damage. 1514 73

Glutathione-S-transferase Pi1 (GSTP1) and multidrug resistance protein 1 (MRP1) are overexpressed in melanoma, a skin cancer notoriously resistant to all current modalities of cancer therapy. To investigate the involvement of these detoxifying enzymes in the drug resistance of melanoma, an inducible (Tet-On system) antisense (AS) RNA strategy was used to specifically inhibit GSTP1 expression in A375 cells, a human melanoma cell line expressing high levels of GSTP1 and MRP1. Stable transfectant clones were established and analysed for GSTP1 inhibition by AS RNA. The clone A375-ASPi1, presenting a specific 40% inhibition of GSTP1 expression in the presence of doxycycline, was selected. Lowering the GSTP1 level significantly increased (about 3.3-fold) the sensitivity of A375-ASPi1 cells to etoposide. Inhibitors of glutathione synthesis (BSO), GSTs (curcumin, ethacrynic acid), and also of MRPs (MK571, sulphinpyrazone) improved the sensitising effect of GSTP1 AS RNA. All these inhibitors had stronger sensitising effects in control cells expressing high GSTP1 level (A375-ASPi1 cells in the absence of doxycycline). In conclusion, GSTP1 can act in a combined fashion with MRP1 to protect melanoma cells from toxic effects of etoposide.
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PMID:Combined effects of GSTP1 and MRP1 in melanoma drug resistance. 1599 3

Glutathione (GSH), the most prevalent intracellular non-protein thiol, plays an important role in the interleukin-2 (IL-2)-induced proliferative activity of normal and tumour cells expressing IL-2 receptor (IL-2R). In the present study, we investigate the effect of IL-2 on proliferation of the human melanoma A375 cell line, and the possible selective cytomodulation effect of this cytokine by L-2-oxothiazolidine-4-carboxylate (OTZ) on these melanoma cells and on human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). We found that recombinant IL-2 (rIL-2) significantly increased the proliferation rate of A375 melanoma cells, which was associated with an increase in GSH levels, the enhancement of IL-2Ralpha expression and the endogenous production of IL-2 in these tumour cells. In contrast, OTZ decreased GSH content and the proliferation rate of A375 cells, and abrogated the growth-promoting effects of rIL-2. Thus, compared to cells treated with rIL-2, pre-treatment with OTZ reduced IL-2Ralpha expression, and also decreased the consumption of rIL-2 and the endogenous secretion of IL-2 by these tumour cells. With regard to PBMCs, the combination of OTZ plus rIL-2 resulted in a more rapid and greater increase of IL-2Ralpha expression than rIL-2 alone, with the proliferation rate being similar in the first 24 h, but with a lower PBMC' count found thereafter compared to rIL-2 treatment alone. These results suggest that OTZ plays a crucial role in obtaining a selective cytomodulation of rIL-2, enabling it to exert its growth-promoting effect on normal cells, but not on melanoma cells, thereby possibly improving biochemotherapy with rIL-2.
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PMID:Cytomodulation of interleukin-2 effect by L-2-oxothiazolidine-4-carboxylate on human malignant melanoma. 1622 Mar 24


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