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)

The effect of dopa, cysteine, and glutathione on 5-S-cysteinyldopa (5-S-CD) genesis in melanoma cells cultured in normal and tyrosine- and cysteine-free media has been studied. In normal media only melanotic melanoma cells have been found to secrete 5-S-CD into the medium. In the presence of dopa and cysteine, both, media incubated with and without cells have been found to produce 5-S-CD. In the presence of dopa and glutathione, however, cell-free media did not show the presence of 5-S-CD. In contrast melanoma cell-cultured media has been found to contain large quantities of this amino acid. The optimum condition for maximum production of 5-S-CD via glutathione-dependent pathway has been found to be at the dopa concentration of 10(-5) M when glutathione is present at the concentration of 10(-5) M in the culture medium. Thus dopa concentration with regards to glutathione is 1:1 on the molar basis which is twice the dopa concentration required in in vitro noncellular tyrosinase system. It is suggested that higher dopa requirement in our melanoma cell culture system reflects the co-existence of eu- and pheomelanin synthesis taking place according to their genetically predetermined proportions.
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PMID:Effect of DOPA-loading on glutathione-dependent 5-S-cysteinyldopa genesis in melanoma cells in vitro. 679 83

6-Ethynyluracil (3) was prepared by two different synthetic procedures. In one approach, 6-formyluracil was reacted with (dibromomethylene)triphenylphosphorane to give 6-(2,2-dibromovinyl)uracil (2), which was silylated and treated with phenyllithium to yield 3. Alternatively, silylated 6-iodouracil was reacted with trimethylsilylacetylene in dry triethylamine in the presence of a palladium/copper catalyst to give 6-[(trimethylsilyl)ethynyl]uracil (5). Compound 5 was converted to 3 in refluxing methanol. At neutral pH, 3 reacted with thiols, such as glutathione, 2-mercaptoethanol, and L-cysteine, but did not react with glycine or L-lysine. This reaction was accompanied by a shift in the UV maximum of 3 from 286 nm to 321-325 nm. The reaction of 3 with 2-mercaptoethanol gave cis-6-[2[(2-hydroxyethyl)-thio]vinyl]uracil as the predominant product. Compounds 2 and 3 inhibited the growth of leukemia L1210, B-16 melanoma, and lewis lung carcinoma cells at concentrations ranging from 1 x 10(-6) to 2 x 10(-5) M. As determined with L1210 cells, the inhibition of growth caused by 2 and 3 was not prevented by the natural pyrimidines, indicating that the agents do not act as antimetabolites.
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PMID:Synthesis and biological evaluation of 6-ethynyluracil, a thiol-specific alkylating pyrimidine. 714 68

Deficiency of cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) is a genetic disorder of transsulfuration resulting in elevated plasma homocyst(e)ine and methionine and decreased cysteine. Affected patients have multisystem involvement, which may include light skin and hair. Reversible hypopigmentation in treated homocystinuric patients has been infrequently reported, and the mechanism is undefined. Two CBS-deficient homocystinuric patients manifested darkening of their hypopigmented hair following treatment that decreased plasma homocyst(e)ine. We hypothesized that homocyst(e)ine inhibits tyrosinase, the major pigment enzyme. The activity of tyrosinase extracted from pigmented human melanoma cells (MNT-1) that were grown in the presence of homocysteine was reduced in comparison to that extracted from cells grown without homocysteine. Copper sulfate restored homocyst(e)ine-inhibited tyrosinase activity when added to the culture cell media at a proportion of 1.25 mol of copper sulfate per 1 mol of DL-homocysteine. Holo-tyrosinase activity was inhibited by adding DL-homocysteine to the assay reaction mixture, and the addition of copper sulfate to the reaction mixture prevented this inhibition. Other tested compounds, L-cystine and betaine did not affect tyrosinase activity. Our data suggest that reversible hypopigmentation in homocystinuria is the result of tyrosinase inhibition by homocyst(e)ine and that the probable mechanism of this inhibition is the interaction of homocyst(e)ine with copper at the active site of tyrosinase.
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PMID:Tyrosinase inhibition due to interaction of homocyst(e)ine with copper: the mechanism for reversible hypopigmentation in homocystinuria due to cystathionine beta-synthase deficiency. 761 Dec 81

A mutated cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (CDK4) was identified as a tumor-specific antigen recognized by HLA-A2. 1-restricted autologous cytolytic T lymphocytes (CTLs) in a human melanoma. The mutated CDK4 allele was present in autologous cultured melanoma cells and metastasis tissue, but not in the patient's lymphocytes. The mutation, an arginine-to-cysteine exchange at residue 24, was part of the CDK4 peptide recognized by CTLs and prevented binding of the CDK4 inhibitor p16INK4a, but not of p21 or of p27KIP1. The same mutation was found in one additional melanoma among 28 melanomas analyzed. These results suggest that mutation of CDK4 can create a tumor-specific antigen and can disrupt the cell-cycle regulation exerted by the tumor suppressor p16INK4a.
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PMID:A p16INK4a-insensitive CDK4 mutant targeted by cytolytic T lymphocytes in a human melanoma. 765 77

S-trans,trans-Farnesylthiosalicylic acid (FTS) is a novel farnesylated rigid carboxylic acid derivative. In cell-free systems, it acts as a potent competitive inhibitor (Ki = 2.6 microM) of the enzyme prenylated protein methyltransferase (PPMTase), which methylates the carboxyl-terminal S-prenylcysteine in a large number of prenylated proteins including Ras. In such systems, FTS inhibits Ras methylation but not Ras farnesylation. Inhibition of the PPMTase by FTS in homogenates or membranes of a variety of tissues and cell lines is inferred from a block in the methylation of exogenously added substrates such as N-acetyl-S-trans,trans-farnesyl-L-cysteine and of endogenous substrates including small GTP-binding proteins. FTS can also inhibit methylation of these proteins in intact cells (e.g. in Rat-1 fibroblasts, Ras-transformed Rat-1, and B16 melanoma cells). Unlike in cell-free systems, however, relatively high concentrations of FTS (50-100 microM) are required for partial blocking (10-40%) of protein methylation in the intact cells. Thus, FTS is a weak inhibitor of methylation in intact cells. Because methylation is the last step in the processing of Ras and related proteins, FTS is not likely to affect steps that precede it, e.g. protein prenylation. This may explain why the growth and gross morphology of a variety of cultured cell types (including Chinese hamster ovary, NIH3T3, Rat1, B16 melanoma, and PC12) is not affected by up to 25 microM FTS and is consistent with the observed lack of FTS-induced cytotoxicity. Nevertheless, FTS reduces the levels of Ras in cell membranes and can inhibit Ras-dependent cell growth in vitro, independently of methylation. It inhibits the growth of human Ha-ras-transformed cells (EJ cells) and reverses their transformed morphology in a dose-dependent manner (0.1-10 microM). The drug does not interfere with the growth of cells transformed by v-Raf or T-antigen but inhibits the growth of ErbB2-transformed cells and blocks the mitogenic effects of epidermal and basic fibroblast growth factors, thus implying its selectivity toward Ras growth signaling, possibly via modulation of Ras-Raf communication. Taken together, the results raise the possibility that FTS may specifically interfere with the interaction of Ras with a farnesylcysteine recognition domain in the cell membrane.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Selective inhibition of Ras-dependent cell growth by farnesylthiosalisylic acid. 767 6

Streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxin B (SPE B), a conserved extracellular cysteine protease expressed by the human pathogenic bacterium Streptococcus pyogenes, was purified and shown to cleave inactive human interleukin 1 beta precursor (pIL-1 beta) to produce biologically active IL-1 beta. SPE B cleaves pIL-1 beta one residue amino-terminal to the site where a recently characterized endogenous human cysteine protease acts. IL-1 beta resulting from cleavage of pIL-1 beta by SPE B induced nitric oxide synthase activity in vascular smooth muscle cells and killed of the human melanoma A375 line. Two additional naturally occurring SPE B variants cleaved pIL-1 beta in a similar fashion. By demonstrating that SPE B catalyzes the formation of biologically active IL-1 beta from inactive pIL-1 beta, our data add a further dimension to an emerging theme in microbial pathogenesis that bacterial and viral virulence factors act directly on host cytokine pathways. The data also contribute to an enlarging literature demonstrating that microbial extracellular cysteine proteases are important in host-parasite interactions.
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PMID:Cleavage of interleukin 1 beta (IL-1 beta) precursor to produce active IL-1 beta by a conserved extracellular cysteine protease from Streptococcus pyogenes. 768 26

The thiol N-acetylcysteine (NAC) is currently considered one of the most promising cancer chemopreventive agents by virtue of its multiple and coordinated mechanisms affecting the process of chemical carcinogenesis. Recent studies have shown that an unpaired cysteine residue in the propeptide plays a key role in inactivation of latent metastasis-associated metalloproteinases: the present study was designed to assess whether NAC could also affect tumor take, invasion and metastasis of malignant cells. As assessed by zymographic analysis, NAC completely inhibited the gelatinolytic activity of type-IV collagenases in the cells tested (gelatinases A and B). Moreover, NAC was efficient in inhibiting the chemotactic and invasive activities of tumor cells of human (A2058 melanoma) and murine origin (K1735 and B16-F10 melanoma cells as well as C87 Lewis lung carcinoma cells) in Boyden-chamber assays, which are predictive of the invasive and metastatic properties. Reduced glutathione (GSH) had a similar, although less effective activity. The number of lung metastases decreased sharply when B16-F10 murine melanoma cells, injected i.v. into nude mice, were pre-treated with NAC and resuspended in medium supplemented with 10 mM NAC. In other experiments NAC was given in drinking water, starting 48-72 hr before subcutaneous inoculation of either B16-F10 cells or of their highly metastatic variant B16-BL6, or intramuscular injection of LLC cells. In all experiments NAC treatment decreased the weight of the locally formed primary tumor and produced a dose-related delay in tumor formation. Spontaneous metastasis formation by B16-F10 and B16-BL6 tumors was slightly yet significantly reduced by oral administration of NAC. However, this was not observed for Lewis lung tumors. These data indicate that NAC affects the process of tumor-cell invasion and metastasis, probably due to inhibition of gelatinases by its sulfhydryl group, with the possible contribution of other mechanisms, including the potent antioxidant activity of this thiol.
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PMID:Inhibition of invasion, gelatinase activity, tumor take and metastasis of malignant cells by N-acetylcysteine. 770 24

Rate constants have been determined for reactions between biologically significant thiols, represented by cysteine and glutathione, and a series of 10 4-substituted o-quinones, and unsubstituted o-quinone itself, generated by rapid disproportionation of the semiquinones formed from the corresponding catechols by pulse radiolysis. The quantitative structure-reactivity relationships were investigated by examining the correlation between the rate constants and various Hammett and other parameters characterizing the electronic nature of the substituents. From these relationships, it can be concluded that the o-quinone reactivity with thiols increases with the electron-withdrawing capacity of the substituent groups and that this effect is principally due to resonance effects. Such relationships allow the prediction of likely reactivities with cellular thiols of further o-quinones whose 4-substituents have known electronic parameters. These reactivities are likely to be one of the critical factors determining overall cytotoxicity, assisting in the choice of improved melanogenesis-targeted anti-melanoma drugs.
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PMID:Tyrosinase-mediated cytotoxicity of 4-substituted phenols: quantitative structure-thiol-reactivity relationships of the derived o-quinones. 771 Jun 34

Nitric oxide (NO) and the NO generating agent nitroprusside (SNP), inhibit the binding of [125I] vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) to its receptor at the surface of IGR39 human melanoma cells. Cysteine (10 mM) increases the sensitivity of the system to SNP while N-acetylcysteine (10 mM) decreases it. The NO gas as well as SNP inhibits the [125I]VIP binding capacity. These observations sustain an effect of SNP-generated NO rather than an effect of the SNP molecule per se or the cyanoferrate portion of the molecule. The inhibitory effect of NO is time and concentration dependent and is fully reversible. Affinity constants of high and low affinity VIP receptors of SNP-treated IGR39 cells are not modified while maximal binding capacity (Bmax) of both receptor types are decreased to the same extent. Production of cGMP by SNP-treated cells is time and concentration dependent and the maximum amount of cGMP obtained reaches 13 times the basal level. The cAMP production is not affected by SNP. However, the SNP effects on the [125I]VIP binding are not mimicked by the membrane permeant cGMP analogs dibutyryl cGMP and 8-bromo cGMP even at concentrations as high as 0.5 mM. Taken altogether, these data demonstrate a regulatory action of NO on VIP binding capacity of IGR39 melanoma cells which is not cGMP mediated. They also evidence a new step which could be involved in the NO-VIP interaction.
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PMID:Inhibition of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) binding on human melanoma cells IGR39 by nitric oxide: cGMP is not involved. 795 15

To improve the effectiveness of boron neutron capture therapy, the possibility of stimulating boron uptake was investigated in an experimental model. B16F1 mouse melanoma cells were exposed to boronophenylalanine (BPA). The intracellular boron concentration followed Michaelis-Menten kinetics in the early incubation phase. In the late phase, cellular boron concentration was linearly related to the BPA concentration in the culture medium. Incubation with L-tyrosine before exposure to BPA (preloading) increased the intracellular boron concentration by a factor of three. It is concluded that in B16F1 cells BPA is transported by L and presumably ASC (alanine, serine, and cysteine) transport systems, and that boron uptake can be effectively stimulated by L-tyrosine preloading.
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PMID:Preloading with L-tyrosine increases the uptake of boronophenylalanine in mouse melanoma cells. 798 18


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