Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Owing to the high efficacy of L-asparaginase in the treatment of acute lymphatic leukaemia the enzyme was introduced into the chemotherapy schedules for remission induction of this disease shortly after results of large-scale clinical trials had become available. Since asparaginase monotherapy was associated with a high response rate but short remission duration, the enzyme is currently employed within the framework of combination chemotherapy schedules which achieve treatment response in about 90% and long-term remissions in the majority of patients. Recently initiated clinical trials have still confirmed the eminent value of asparaginase in the combination chemotherapy of acute lymphatic leukaemia and of some subtypes of non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and its important role as an essential component of multimodal treatment protocols. Despite the unique mechanism of action of this cytotoxic substance which shows relative selectivity with regard to the metabolism of malignant cells, some patients experience toxic effects during asparaginase therapy. Immunological reactions toward the foreign protein include enzyme inactivation without any clinical manifestations as well as anaphylactic shock. Severe functional disorders of organ systems result from the impaired homeostasis of the amino acids asparagine and glutamine. The changes affecting the proteins of the coagulation system have considerable clinical impact as they may induce bleeding as well as thromboembolic events and may be associated with life-threatening complications when the central nervous system is involved. Risk factors predisposing to thromboembolic complications are hereditary resistance against activated protein C and any other hereditary thrombophilia. Other organ systems potentially affected by relevant functional disorders are the central nervous system, the liver, and the pancreas, with patients who have a history of pancreatic disorders carrying an especially high risk of developing
pancreatitis
. Studies on the mechanisms of action and the occurrence of resistance phenomena have shown that a treatment response may only be expected if the malignant cells are unable to increase their
asparagine synthetase
activity to an extent providing enough asparagine to the cell; one may thus conclude that the enzyme-induced asparagine depletion of the serum constitutes the decisive cytotoxic mechanism. Independent of the asparagine depletion related cytotoxicity however, there are other mechanisms of clinical relevance like induction of apoptosis. Besides this, further influences on signal transduction cannot be excluded. Only few publications have dealt with the question of minimum trough activities to be ensured before each subsequent asparaginase dose in order to maintain uninterrupted asparagine depletion under treatment, and answers to this problem are not definitive. Clinical studies using enzymes from E. coli strains indicate that a trough activity of 100 U/l will suffice for complete asparagine depletion of the fluid body compartments with the preparations studied. These findings have been transferred to enzymes from other E. coli strains as well as those isolated from Erwinia chrysanthemi and to the PEG-conjugated E. coli asparaginases. It might be desirable to countercheck the results for confirmation or correction. The dosage and administration schedule of the various enzyme preparations required for complete asparagine depletion over a period of time have been insufficiently defined. While pharmacokinetic studies showed clinically relevant differences in biological activity and activity half-lives for enzymes from different biological sources, the findings of recently published clinical trials indicate that the therapeutic efficacy is affected when different asparaginase preparations are given by identical therapy schedules. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
...
PMID:Use of L-asparaginase in childhood ALL. 976 45
Asparaginase is one of the most important chemotherapeutic agents against pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), the most common form of childhood cancer. The therapeutic efficacy (e.g., chemoresistance) and adverse effects of asparaginase (e.g., hypersensivity and
pancreatitis
) have been investigated over the past four decades. It was suggested early on that leukemic cells are resistant to asparaginase because of their increased
asparagine synthetase
activity. Afterward, other mechanisms associated with asparaginase resistance were reported. Not only leukemic cells but also patients themselves may play a role in causing asparaginase resistance, which has been associated with unfavorable outcome in children with ALL. This article will briefly review asparaginase therapy in children with ALL and comprehensively analyze recent reports on the potential mechanisms of asparaginase resistance.
...
PMID:Asparaginase Therapy in Pediatric Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia: A Focus on the Mode of Drug Resistance. 2560 26
Asparaginase (ASNase) causes
pancreatitis
in approximately 10% of leukemia patients, and the mechanisms underlying this painful complication are not known. ASNase primarily depletes circulating asparagine, and the endogenously expressed enzyme,
asparagine synthetase
(
ASNS
), replenishes asparagine.
ASNS
was suggested previously to be highly expressed in the pancreas. In this study, we determined the expression pattern of
ASNS
in the pancreas and the mechanism for increased pancreatic
ASNS
abundance. Compared with other organs,
ASNS
was highly expressed in both the human and mouse pancreas, and, within the pancreas,
ASNS
was present primarily in the acinar cells. The high baseline pancreatic
ASNS
was associated with higher baseline activation of protein kinase R-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase (PERK) signaling in the pancreas, and inhibition of PERK in acinar cells lessened
ASNS
expression. ASNase exposure, but not the common
pancreatitis
triggers, uniquely up-regulated
ASNS
expression, indicating that the increase is mediated by nutrient stress. The up-regulation of acinar
ASNS
with ASNase exposure was owing to increased transcriptional rather than delayed degradation. Knockdown of
ASNS
in the 266-6 acinar cells provoked acinar cell injury and worsened ASNase-induced injury, whereas
ASNS
overexpression protected against ASNase-induced injury. In summary,
ASNS
is highly expressed in the pancreatic acinar cells through heightened basal activation of PERK, and
ASNS
appears to be crucial to maintaining acinar cell integrity. The implications are that
ASNS
is especially hardwired in the pancreas to protect against both baseline perturbations and nutrient deprivation stressors, such as during ASNase exposure.
...
PMID:Asparagine Synthetase Is Highly Expressed at Baseline in the Pancreas Through Heightened PERK Signaling. 3142 Dec 61
The pancreas avidly takes up and synthesizes the amino acid asparagine (Asn), in part, to maintain an active translational machinery that requires incorporation of the amino acid. The de novo synthesis of Asn in the pancreas occurs through the enzyme
asparagine synthetase
(
ASNS
). The pancreas has the highest expression of
ASNS
of any organ, and it can further upregulate
ASNS
expression in the setting of amino acid depletion.
ASNS
expression is driven by an intricate feedback network within the integrated stress response (ISR), which includes the amino acid response (AAR) and the unfolded protein response (UPR). Asparaginase is a cancer chemotherapeutic drug that depletes plasma Asn. However, asparaginase-associated
pancreatitis
(AAP) is a major medical problem and could be related to pancreatic Asn depletion. In this review, we will provide an overview of
ASNS
and then describe its role in pancreatic health and in the exocrine disorders of
pancreatitis
and pancreatic cancer. We will offer the overarching perspective that a high abundance of
ASNS
expression is hardwired in the exocrine pancreas to buffer the high demands of Asn for pancreatic digestive enzyme protein synthesis, that perturbations in the ability to express or upregulate
ASNS
could tip the balance towards
pancreatitis
, and that pancreatic cancers exploit
ASNS
to gain a metabolic survival advantage.
...
PMID:The role of asparagine synthetase on nutrient metabolism in pancreatic disease. 3280 Jun 52