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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (
colon cancer
)
28,837
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In extracts of spleen tissue from two patients with haemotological malignancies an RNA dependent
DNA polymerase
was found in particles with a density of 1.16, that is at the density of oncorna viruses. After treatment with noniomic detergents the enzyme activity was found in particles with a density of 1.23-1.24, similar to the density of oncorna viral cores. A simultaneous detection test with this core fraction material for 70 S RNA and RNA dependent
DNA polymerase
was positive for both patients. Electron microscopical inspection of the material with a density of 1.16 revealed immature C-type virus like particles, various stages of maturing particles and a number of particles resembling mature C-type oncorna viruses. In two normal spleens from patients with
carcinoma of the colon
and oesophagus respectively and in three spleens from patients with no history of malignancy no RNA dependent
DNA polymerase
was found. Material from one normal spleen was examined in the electron microscope and no virus-like particles were seen.
...
PMID:Biochemical and electron microscopical evidence for the presence of oncorna viruses in spleen tissue from two patients with haematological malignancies. 6 13
A hybridoma cell line (5F) secreting monoclonal antibodies directed to alpha
DNA polymerase
has been developed. Kinetic studies on peripheral blood lymphocytes stimulated with mitogen and human
colon cancer
cell lines established in vitro were made by the two autoradiographic techniques of Thymidine Labelling Index and Primer-dependent alpha
DNA polymerase
Labelling Index and the immunoperoxidase assay (PAP) with monoclonal antibody to alpha
DNA polymerase
. We demonstrated the exclusively intranuclear presence of alpha
DNA polymerase
in lymphocytes induced to proliferate and actively growing
colon cancer
cells in contrast with the cytoplasmic distribution of the enzyme in resting stage populations. The feasibility of using monoclonal antibodies to alpha
DNA polymerase
to determine cell growth fraction was evaluated.
...
PMID:Monoclonal antibodies to alpha DNA polymerase as a marker of cell proliferative activity. 332 40
We have established and partially characterized a panel of monoclonal antibodies against alpha-
DNA polymerase
. One of the hybridomas, clone 5F, has been exploited for cell kinetic studies on three
colon cancer
cell lines, LOVO, SW 620, and SW 403, which are endowed with different growth patterns and differentiation status. By an immunoperoxidase method, we could demonstrate the specific intranuclear localization of alpha-
DNA polymerase
during the exponential phase of in vitro growth and contrast it with the diffuse distribution of the enzyme throughout the cytoplasm during the resting state. The percentage of intranuclear staining positive cells, evaluated at successive time points of in vitro growth, changed from 75 to 95% (assayed on Days 3 and 7) to 15 to 25% in confluent and resting populations assayed on Days 12 to 14. In agreement with the assumption that the enzyme moves from nucleus to cytoplasm after entering quiescence, alpha-
DNA polymerase
was still present in the cytoplasm or in the cytoplasmic perinuclear area of cells in resting phase cultures. Comparisons between traditional kinetic parameters (thymidine labeling index and primer-dependent alpha-
DNA polymerase
) and proliferative state determined by the monoclonal antibody supported the feasibility of this approach to define the proportion of actively proliferating elements in a tumor cell population. Moreover, parallel flow cytometric analysis performed on Days 5 and 14 of continuous culture showed fluctuations of alpha-
DNA polymerase
content in relation to exponential and steady-state phases, with a significant increase in the amount of alpha-
DNA polymerase
in actively proliferating populations and a progressive reduction of the enzyme as the cultures entered the resting stage.
...
PMID:Evaluation of growth fractions with monoclonal antibodies to human alpha-DNA polymerase. 381 79
Adaptive reversion of a +1 frameshift mutation in Escherichia coli, which requires homologous recombination functions, is shown here to occur by -1 deletions in regions of small mononucleotide repeats. This pattern makes improbable recombinational mechanisms for adaptive mutation in which blocks of sequences are transferred into the mutating gene, and it supports mechanisms that use
DNA polymerase
errors. The pattern appears similar to that of mutations found in yeast cells and in hereditary
colon cancer
cells that are deficient in mismatch repair. These results suggest a recombinational mechanism for adaptive mutation that functions through polymerase errors that persist as a result of a deficiency in post-synthesis mismatch repair.
...
PMID:Adaptive mutation by deletions in small mononucleotide repeats. 802 53
Interferon (IFN) augments the anabolism of 5-fluorouracil (5FU) to its active metabolite, fluorodeoxyuridylate (FdUMP), which inhibits thymidylate synthase (TS). We sought to determine whether this resulted in greater perturbations of nucleotide pools and if so, whether this was associated with an increase in cell lethality, specifically focussing on the lethal cellular lesion, DNA double strand breaks (dsb). To determine whether combination therapy with 5FU + IFN resulted in greater depletion of thymidine nucleotide pools than 5FU alone, a highly sensitive
DNA polymerase
assay was used. In two human
colon cancer
cell lines, treatment with 5FU + IFN resulted in a rapid decrease in levels of dTTP by 95%. The addition of IFN to 5FU resulted in greater depletion of dTTP levels over treatment with 5FU alone by up to fourfold, and markedly augmented the dATP/dTTP ratio. The addition of IFN to 5FU had no effect on 5FU-induced perturbations in dCTP, dGTP or dATP pools at 8 and 12 h. Measurement of DNA dsb demonstrated that treatment of HT-29 cells with 10 microM 5FU for 24 h did not increase DNA dsb versus control. The combination of 5FU + 500 U/ml IFN, however, resulted in an increased number of dsb versus both 5FU and untreated control cells (P < 0.01), equivalent to 0.74 +/- 0.12 Gy. The addition of IFN to 5FU resulted in a selective further depletion of pools of dTTP and an increase in the number of DNA dsb versus 5FU treatment alone.
...
PMID:Effect of interferon on 5-fluorouracil-induced perturbations in pools of deoxynucleotide triphosphates and DNA strand breaks. 882 94
Weekly administrations of the potent carcinogen 1,2-dimethylhydrazine (DMH) predominantly induce
carcinoma of the colon
by nearly 100% after six months' treatment in rats. Polyamines, and especially the key enzyme of polyamine de novo synthesis ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) are well-known to play an important role in cell growth and tumor carcinogenesis. Male Wistar rats were s. c.-injected with a single dose of 20 mg DMH/kg b. wt. and five to eight animals were sacrificed 4, 8, 12, 24, 72, 120, 168, and 240 hours after injection of DMH or the basic solution, respectively. Additionally, seven animals were simultaneously treated with the ODC inhibitor alpha-difluoromethylornithine (DFMO) and sacrificed seven days after a single DMH injection. A single s. c.-dosage of the colon carcinogen DMH resulted in dissimilar activation patterns of polyamine metabolism in the various organs studied: in distal and less pronounced in proximal colonic mucosa ODC and putrescine are significantly increased seven days after application of DMH and
DNA polymerase
after ten days; in small intestinal mucosa ODC activity is significantly elevated after seven days and especially S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase activity is significantly and prolonged increased between twelve and 72 hours after DMH injection; while spermidine/spermine N1-acetyltransferase activity is significantly elevated in liver after 168 and 240 hours, no changes compared to controls are found in the pancreas. DFMO treatment completely prevents DMH-induced activation of polyamine de novo synthesis and
DNA polymerase
in colon and small intestine. These data prove completely different and -interestingly-late appearing activation patterns of DMH on intracellular polyamine metabolism in various organ systems and further elucidate the complex metabolic changes following carcinogen treatment.
...
PMID:Dissimilar activation patterns of the carcinogen dimethylhydrazine (DMH) on intracellular polyamine metabolism in various organs. 901 96
Using reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), we have recently described a bona fide deletion within the coding sequence of the large subunit of ribonucleotide reductase (R1) mRNA in
colon cancer
. Consecutive studies have raised questions about the nature of this phenomenon, because the corresponding genomic alteration at the DNA level or an aberrant protein could not be detected. Thus we considered an in vitro artifact during RT-PCR as a possible explanation for this observation. In contrast to reverse transcriptase, Taq DNA polymerase or C. therm
DNA polymerase
did not generate the aberrant product, suggesting the demand for the template switching activity intrinsic to retroviral reverse transcriptases. In fact, virtually the same deletion was observed in RT-PCR experiments when in vitro transcribed R1 mRNA was used. Considering structural prerequisites for template switching within R1 mRNA, we show that two direct repeats adjacent to a strong stem-loop secondary structure flank the deleted region of 1851 base pairs. Because several mRNAs encoding proteins of clinical and diagnostic importance fulfill these criteria, template switching enhances the potential risk of observing artifacts when interpreting results from RT-PCR studies. As shown in the present example, this may involve the artificial generation and the misinterpretation of PCR fragments amplified from targets relevant to tumor biology or cancer pharmacology. As a possible solution, one-step PCR with C. therm polymerase should be considered. This polymerase eliminates the artificial generation of aberrant mRNA signals observed during cDNA synthesis.
...
PMID:Reverse transcriptase template switching during reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction: artificial generation of deletions in ribonucleotide reductase mRNA. 1138 63
Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) is caused by mutations of genes encoding for proteins of the mismatch repair (MMR) machinery. The majority of mutations occur in the MLH1 and MSH2 genes, and consist of splice-site, frameshift and nonsense changes, leading to loss of protein function. In this study, we screened 7 HNPCC families for MLH1/MSH2 mutations. Sequence changes were identified in 5 families. Four alterations were novel 1- or 2-bp deletions or insertions causing a frameshift and appearance of premature stop codons (MLH1: c.597-598delGA, c.1520-1521insT; MSH2: c.1444delA, c.119delG). The four small insertions/ deletions were located within stretches of simple repeated sequences. By reviewing the HNPCC mutation database, we found that the majority of 1-2 bp frameshift mutations similarly affects simple repetitive stretches, pointing to
DNA polymerase
slippage during replication as the most likely source of such errors. We also evaluated microsatellite instability (MSI) in a breast carcinoma (BC) from an MLH1 mutation carrier. While a
colon cancer
from the same individual showed MSI, the BC specimen was MSI-negative, indicating that development of the latter tumor was unrelated to MMR impairment, despite presence of a constitutional MLH1 mutation. Hum Mutat 17:521, 2001.
...
PMID:Four novel MSH2 and MLH1 frameshift mutations and occurrence of a breast cancer phenocopy in hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer. 1138 12
A method is described for the preparation of ganciclovir triphosphate (GCV-TP) using murine
colon cancer
cells (MC38) transduced with the herpes simplex virus-thymidine kinase (MC38/HSV-tk). Murine cells transduced with viral-tk contain required viral and host enzymes needed for complete cellular synthesis of this potent antiviral metabolite. Dose response studies showed optimal intracellular levels of GCV-TP occurred after exposure of MC38/HSV-tk cells to 300 microM ganciclovir for 24 h producing 7.5 nmol GCV-TP/10(6) cells. This reflects cellular accumulation of GCV-TP to levels 25-fold greater than the medium concentration of parent drug. A simple isolation scheme included methanolic extraction and anion-exchange chromatography to recover the target triphosphate. Mass spectral analysis and selective enzyme degradation provided structural confirmation of the purified product. Biological activity of the purified GCV-TP was demonstrated by competitive inhibition experiments using human DNA polymerase alpha and HSV
DNA polymerase
that showed substantially greater sensitivity for the viral polymerase in agreement with previous reports. The GCV-TP obtained was further used to enzymatically prepare GCV mono- and diphosphate in high yield. This method provides an easily scalable means of preparing milligram amounts of the triphosphates of pharmacologically active acyclic nucleosides like ganciclovir.
...
PMID:Biosynthetic ganciclovir triphosphate: its isolation and characterization from ganciclovir-treated herpes simplex thymidine kinase-transduced murine cells. 1171 5
A significant proportion of human cancers overexpress DNA polymerase beta (Pol beta), the major
DNA polymerase
involved in base excision repair. The underlying mechanism and biological consequences of overexpression of this protein are unknown. We examined whether Pol beta, expressed at levels found in tumor cells, is involved in the repair of DNA damage induced by oxaliplatin treatment and whether the expression status of this protein alters the sensitivity of cells to oxaliplatin. DNA damage induced by oxaliplatin treatment of HCT116 and HT29
colon cancer
cells was observed to be associated with the stabilization of Pol beta protein on chromatin. In comparison with HCT116
colon cancer
cells, isogenic oxaliplatin-resistant (HCT-OR) cells were found to have higher constitutive levels of Pol beta protein, faster in vitro repair of a DNA substrate containing a single nucleotide gap and faster repair of 1,2-GG oxaliplatin adduct levels in cells. In HCT-OR cells, small interfering RNA knockdown of Pol beta delayed the repair of oxaliplatin-induced DNA damage. In a different model system, Pol beta-deficient fibroblasts were less able to repair 1,2-GG oxaliplatin adducts and were hypersensitive to oxaliplatin treatment compared with isogenic Pol beta-expressing cells. Consistent with previous studies, Pol beta-deficient mouse fibroblasts were not hypersensitive to cisplatin treatment. These data provide the first link between oxaliplatin sensitivity and DNA repair involving Pol beta. They demonstrate that Pol beta modulates the sensitivity of cells to oxaliplatin treatment.
...
PMID:Cells deficient in the base excision repair protein, DNA polymerase beta, are hypersensitive to oxaliplatin chemotherapy. 1983 17
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