Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (neuroblastoma)
27,800 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A two-year-old boy with a malignant tumor of the brain (medulloblastoma) excreted large amounts of thymine and uracil in his urine. The excretion was related to progress and regress of the disease, and reached a maximum of 3.0 mol of thymine per mole of creatinine and 2.6 mol of uracil per mole of creatinine. The excretion by 20 apparently normal children was less than 0.01 mol/mol of creatinine for each of the two pyrimidines. Three children with brain tumors, two with leukemias, and one with neuroblastoma were also studied; two of them had a moderate increase in urinary pyrimidine excretion, but only up to 0.07 mol/mol of creatinine. The activity of dihydrouracil dehydrogenase (NADP+) (EC 1.3.1.2) in cultured fibroblasts from the patient was somewhat lower than in control fibroblasts. The tumor was considered to be the likely cause of the increased excretion of pyrimidines, but an impaired degradation of pyrimidines in the liver could not be ruled out.
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PMID:Urinary excretion of thymine and uracil in a two-year-old child with a malignant tumor of the brain. 28 71

Wiedemann-Beckwith syndrome (WBS) may be associated with abdominal tumors, including Wilms tumor, adrenocortical carcinoma, hepatoblastoma, gonadoblastoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, and neuroblastoma. We report on a newborn infant with WBS and a congenital teratoma of the stomach. This is the sole report of any teratoma being associated with WBS and also the first report of a tumor present at birth and visible prenatally in WBS. At birth this infant boy had the diagnostic findings of WBS with macroglossia, ear lobule creases and pits, nevus flammeus, and omphalocele, and an abdominal mass. Abnormalities were detected prenatally when ultrasound examination showed placental overgrowth, polyhydramnios, omphalocele, and posterior abdominal calcifications. Resection of the mass and partial gastrectomy were performed at age 10 days; histologic study showed an immature grade-II teratoma containing a mixture of mature and immature tissues from all germ layers. Results of cytogenetic studies of blood and teratoma were normal (46,XY). This congenital gastric teratoma in a newborn boy with classical WBS may represent either a tumor or an included twin. We discuss its implications for the association of WBS with neoplasia and monozygotic (MZ) twinning, review various neoplasias associated with WBS, and consider pathogenetic mechanisms.
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PMID:Congenital gastric teratoma in Wiedemann-Beckwith syndrome. 201 33

A comparison was made of ethanol's effects on the order of plasma membranes in intact cells and some isolated membrane preparations. Order was assessed by steady-state fluorescence polarization techniques using the non-permeant probe, TMA-DPH. The data show that two cultured cells, rat neonatal astroglial and N2A neuroblastoma, were sensitive to significant ethanol-induced disordering within the anesthetically relevant range (100 - 200 mM). Human erythrocytes, cultured fibroblasts and homogenized astroglial cells required higher ethanol concentrations (greater than 250 mM) to produce a similar effect. Intact erythrocytes were approximately twice as sensitive as erythrocyte ghost membranes to ethanol-induced perturbation. The neonatal glial and N2A cells were approximately five times more sensitive than synaptic membranes to ethanol effects. DMPC and DMPC + cholesterol liposomes and myelin membranes were insensitive to ethanol's effects. The incorporation of 10 mole % ganglioside GM1 sensitized the liposomes to ethanol-induced perturbation.
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PMID:On the sensitivity of intact cells to perturbation by ethanol. 261 59

The iron chelator, deferoxamine, has demonstrated cytotoxicity against neuroblastoma cells. In this study we examined the in vitro antineuroblastoma activity of several potentially less expensive oral chelating agents. On a mole for mole basis, 1-hydroxypyridine-2-thionine (omadine) had 100 times the cytotoxicity of deferoxamine. 1,2-Dimethyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one also caused demonstrable cell death but at considerably higher molar concentrations than those required for deferoxamine. 2,3-Dihydroxybenzoic acid had no effect on neuroblastoma cell viability over a range of concentrations. In contrast to the effect of both deferoxamine and 1,2-Dimethyl-3-hydroxypyrid-4-one, those due to omadine were permanent within 24 hours of incubation, were not significantly altered by the presence of ionic iron, and correlated with an increase in the percentage of cells in the S-G2-M phases of the cell cycle. On the basis of these in vitro studies, we believe that the use of omadine in particular and iron chelators in general, by themselves or as cell cycle-recruiting agents together with standard cell cycle specific drugs, is an approach to the treatment of cancer worth further investigation.
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PMID:Comparison of activity of deferoxamine with that of oral iron chelators against human neuroblastoma cell lines. 272 Jun 51

The possibility that bilirubin can diffuse through lipid bilayers is investigated with liposomes prepared from dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC), egg phosphatidylcholine (egg PC) with 22 mole percent cholesterol, and a lipid extract preparation from N115 neuroblastoma cells. Liposomes were prepared with internalized bilirubin and bovine or human serum albumin, and bilirubin efflux into an exogenous solution of human serum albumin was measured. Efflux from DPPC liposomes was significantly higher above the phase transition temperature than below it. This change was dependent on the lipid undergoing a phase transition and could not be accounted for by 6 K change in temperature. Maximum bilirubin efflux from egg PC-cholesterol liposomes was found to depend on the relative internal and external albumin pools, suggesting an equilibrium distribution of bilirubin between them. These observations demonstrate that bilirubin can diffuse freely through these lipid membranes.
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PMID:Bilirubin diffusion through lipid membranes. 375 60

The mechanism of the previously reported cytotoxicity of liposomes containing plant phosphatidylinositol (PI) against numerous tumor cell lines was examined in detail by using liposomes containing synthetic PI specifically labeled either with radioactive myo-inositol, or in the sn-2 position with radioactive linoleic acid, oleic acid, or arachidonic acid. The uptake of liposomal PI by N4TG1 neuroblastoma cells increased with time and was dependent on the nature of the fatty acids. Uptake was highest with liposomal PI containing linoleic acid followed by arachidonic acid and then by oleic acid. The cellular fate of liposomal PI was determined by analysis of radioactive metabolites present in extracts of tumor cell lipids. Appearance of liposomal PI metabolic products in the tumor cells was correlated with thymidine uptake as a measure of viability. After 3 h incubation of cells with PI liposomes it was found that the release of both radioactive liposomal fatty acids (and probably also lyso-Pl) and radioactive diglycerides was correlated inversely with the cellular uptake of [methyl-3H]thymidine and uptake of [3H]myoinositol. An experiment in which liposomes were prepared both from animal Pl which contained predominantly saturated fatty acids in the sn-2 position and an increasing mole fraction of a synthetic Pl containing radioactive linoleic acid in the sn-2 position established that the amount of Pl containing linoleic acid in the sn-2 position could be correlated with a decrease in the amount of thymidine uptake by tumor cells. The above results clearly established that phospholipases A2 and C in the tumor cells were responsible for the formation of metabolites of liposomal Pl, and these metabolic products might have been responsible for cytotoxicity and cell death.
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PMID:Metabolic fate of liposomal phosphatidylinositol in murine tumor cells: implications for the mechanism of tumor cell cytotoxicity. 402 70

1. Binding of a purified scorpion toxin to membrane fragments isolated from electroplaque of an electric eel Electrophorus electricus was studied using a radio-iodinated toxin.2. A scorpion toxin was purified from the venom of Leiurus quinquestriatus and iodinated with (125)I in a lactoperoxidase-catalysed reaction. Monoiodinated toxin, isolated by an ion exchange chromatography, retarded the inactivation kinetics of Na current to a similar extent as the native toxin, indicating that radioiodination did not appreciably affect physiological and binding properties of the native toxin.3. Analyses of binding properties by Scatchard plots showed the presence of two classes of binding sites (with low and high affinities) in the membrane preparation from eel electroplaque; similar preparation from an electric skate, of which the electroplaque is known to be devoid of Na channels, possessed only the low affinity sites.4. The number of high affinity sites in the eel preparation was 41.8 +/- 10.5 p-mole/g tissue; the value was within the range reported for tetrodotoxin binding to similar preparations (15-148 p-mole/g tissue).5. A variety of cations (Na(+), Mn(2+) and La(3+)) inhibited the high affinity scorpion toxin binding, as indicated for the toxin binding to Na channels by a previous electrophysiological study. K(D) value in the presence of 120 mM-Na(+) (approx. 8 nM) agreed reasonably with that (approx. 10nM) reported for the scorpion toxin binding to excitable neuroblastoma cells or synaptic nerve ending particles under conditions where membrane potential was depolarized by the addition of 135 mM-KCl.6. Pretreatment of the eel membrane preparation with beta-bungarotoxin (7-44 ng/ml.) in the presence of Ca ions (10-200 muM) resulted in a substantial loss of high affinity binding of scorpion toxin. When phospholipase A(2) activity of the beta-toxin was inactivated by a chemical modification with p-bromophenacyl bromide, the inhibitory action of the beta-bungarotoxin was abolished.7. It is concluded that a high affinity binding of scorpion toxin to the eel electroplaque membrane fragments represents the binding to Na channels in vitro, and that phospholipase A(2) activity of beta-bungarotoxin interferes with the binding of scorpion toxin to Na channels.
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PMID:Binding of scorpion toxin to sodium channels in vitro and its modification by beta-bungarotoxin. 624 82

1. The changes of voltage-gated ion channels in the mouse oocyte after fertilization were investigated under voltage clamp.2. About 60 min after introduction of sperm suspension into the fertilization medium, the amplitude of inward current through Ca(2+)-channels increased, which occurred at anaphase during the second meiotic division. The peak amplitude of the maximum inward current per unit membrane capacity of the oocytes at metaphase was 20+/-3 muA/muF in 50 mM-Sr medium. It was 28+/-8 muA/muF at anaphase, and 32+/-5 muA/muF at telophase. The kinetic properties as well as selectivity among Ca, Sr and Mn ions were not altered after fertilization.3. The outward surge current which was found at the higher membrane potential over +50 mV also increased in amplitude after fertilization, simultaneously with the increase in amplitude of inward current through Ca(2+)-channels. The means and the standard deviations of the surge current per unit membrane capacity at 120 mV were 31+/-8 muA/muF at metaphase, and 48+/-7 muA/muF at telophase. The kinetic properties of the outward surge current were not altered after fertilization.4. Application of colcemid (10(-7) mole/l.) or cytochalasin B (2 x 10(-5) mole/l.) did not prevent the increase in amplitude of both inward current through Ca channels and the outward surge current.5. The membrane currents in N-18 mouse neuroblastoma cells in logarithmic growth phase were examined under voltage clamp. The N-18 neuroblastoma cells possessed the Ca inward current and the delayed outward current. The kinetic properties and the steady-state inactivation of Ca(2+)-channels in N-18 neuroblastoma cells were compared with those in mouse oocytes. It was concluded that they could be regarded as identical between the mouse oocyte and the N-18 neuroblastoma cell.
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PMID:Enhancement of ionic currents through voltage-gated channels in the mouse oocyte after fertilization. 629 5

Single sodium channel currents were studied in mouse neuroblastoma cells. Channel conductance (gamma) was 11.6 +/- 3.4 pS at 6-8 degrees C. Unitary current amplitudes and channel activity increased with increasing temperature. The Arrhenius plot of the conductance was linear between 5 and 35 degrees C with an activation enthalpy of 27.1 kJ/mole (Q10 = 1.28). Amplitude distributions were fitted by the sum of two Gaussian functions indicating the presence of two different single channel amplitudes: smaller i1 and larger i2. The relative probability of appearance of i1, which has a shorter mean open time, was higher during the early phase of depolarization (t less than 16 ms). The open time histograms, inactivating phase of macroscopic currents and delay time histograms were fitted by the sum of two exponentials. The distinct kinetic and steady-state parameters reflect two open states of sodium channels.
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PMID:Single Na channels in mouse neuroblastoma cell membrane. Indications for two open states. 632 86

At pH 4.1, bovine thrombin reacts rapidly with N-bromo-succinimide to yield modified enzyme containing oxidized tryptophan residue. Both fibrinogen clotting activity and esterase activity are reduced considerably when three moles of tryptophan residues per mole of thrombin are oxidized, but the Michaelis constants for synthetic substrates are not appreciably altered. Reaction of NBS also results in a decrease in the affinity of thrombin for heparin. The dissociation constant for heparin-thrombin complex is increased by 2.6-fold due to the modification of one tryptophan residue. However, the magnitude of the increase in the dissociation constant remains the same for modified enzymes containing approximately two or three oxidized tryptophan residues. The rate constant for the inactivation of thrombin by antithrombin III is increased by 2.5-fold due to the modification of a single tryptophan residue. This increase in rate constant is not further amplified when more than one tryptophan residue is oxidized. In contrast, in the presence of heparin the rate of inactivation of modified and unmodified thrombins by antithrombin III are not significantly different. Thus, the heparin-sensitized inactivation of thrombin by antithrombin III is affected by the modification of one tryptophan residue. Spectrophotometric titrations of the phenolic hydroxyl groups suggest that the structural environments of tyrosyl groups for both unmodified and modified thrombin containing one oxidized tryptophan residue, are similar. The temperature for half loss of catalytic activity of control and NBS-modified thrombin, containing one oxidized tryptophan, are 52 and 51.5 degrees C respectively. It appears that the one tryptophan residue of thrombin is situated at or close to the binding site of heparin.
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PMID:Catalytic and regulatory functions of N-bromosuccinimide-modified bovine thrombin. 652 42


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