Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P00492 (hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase)
2,385 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT, IMP:pyrophosphate phosphoribosyltransferase, EC 2.4.2.8) can be purified 5-to 10,000-fold from extracts of HeLa (human) cells by a three-step procedure consisting of high-speed centrifugation, adsorption to Sepharose-conjugated HPRT antibody, and sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Purified enzyme labeled in vivo with radioactive lysine, arginine, or methionine was digested with trypsin and the tryptic peptides were separated by column chromatography on Bio-Rad cation exchanger Aminex A-5. Less than 50 ng (2 pmol) of HPRT is required to produce a tryptic peptide pattern. A methionine-labeled peptide was identified as the COOH-terminus because it was not labeled with either lysine or arginine. We have compared the tryptic peptide patterns of normal HeLaHPRT and a crossreacting HPRT protein lacking enzyme activity from HeLa mutant H23 [Milman et al. (1976) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 73, 4589--4593]. The mutant protein has a new lysine-labeled peptide, but the chromatography patterns of arginine- or methionine-labeled peptides appear identical to those of the normal protein. The appearance in the H23 mutant HPRT protein of a new tryptic peptide provides strong evidence for a mutation in the HPRT structural gene. The tryptic peptide patterns were used to determine the total number of residues of labeled amino acid in the protein, and the values are reasonably consistent with those determined by conventional amino acid analysis pf erythrocyte HPRT.
...
PMID:Tryptic peptide analysis of normal and mutant forms of hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase from HeLa cells. 26 86

Experiments are described leading to partial compensation of a deficiency in the enzyme hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase in mutant cells by supplying the cells with exogenous purified enzymes. DEAE-dextran is an effective helper agent, whereas poly (L-lysine), lysolecithin and amphotericin B seem to inhibit the entry of the enzymes of their activity. Enzyme preparation from Chinese hamster was found to have different effects in different mutant cell lines. In mutant Chinese hamster cells, the electrophoretic activity pattern remains unchanged for the Chinese hamster enzyme, but changes progressively to faster-moving activity peaks for the human enzyme after several hours. The metabolic effect of the incorporated enzyme is in the range between 3 and 4% of the normal cellular enzyme activity which corresponds to a 10--20 fold increase of hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase activity in the mutant cells.
...
PMID:The incorporation of homologous and heterologous hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoriboxyltransferase into mutant cells. 56 35

In an effort to further understand the pathogenesis of Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, an X-linked recessive disease of purine metabolism associated with a deficiency of hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase, we have analyzed the amino acids in autopsy brain material obtained from five patients and six controls. The amino acids glycine and glutamine serve as substrates for the synthesis of purines in man. Amino acids were measured in the occipital cortex, limbic cortical area, cerebellar cortex, hippocampus and putamen. In general the amino acids were usually lower in concentration in brain material from affected individuals. Most dramatically decreased were threonine, serine, valine, isoleucine, lysine and arginine. Only glutamine and urea were higher than controls. Glutamate, gamma-aminobutyrate and cystathionine were essentially unaffected. The data reported here do not support a role for increased glycine in the pathogenesis of this disease as implied by findings previously reported in cultured cell lines (Skaper and Seegmiller 1976, 1977). The current findings suggest that individuals with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome have a generally lower concentration of free amino acids in brain. This decrease may be involved in the etiology of the disease or the decrease may be a result of the generally malnourished state of these individuals. These results imply that affected patients have a limited supply of amino acid precursors available for the synthesis of either proteins or neurotransmitters that the brain requires for normal function. Thus, the low amino acid pools could be an important factor in the brain dysfunction observed in patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome.
...
PMID:Decreased amino acids in various brain areas of patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. 713 31

The hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRTase) of human and the parasitic trematode, Schistosoma mansoni, were expressed at high levels in transformed Escherichia coli in their native forms. Guanosine 2',3'-dialdehyde 5'-phosphate (ox-GMP) was shown to bind irreversibly to both enzymes in a time-dependent manner. This binding was stabilized by sodium borohydride reduction, suggesting that a Schiff's base is formed between the dialdehyde groups of ox-GMP and the amino group of a lysine residue in the enzymes. This linkage formation applies also to inosine 2',3'-dialdehyde 5'-phosphate but not to adenosine 2',3'-dialdehyde 5'-phosphate. GMP was found to be protective against ox-GMP inactivation and [3H]ox-GMP labeling of both HGPRTases. 5-Phosphoribosyl-1-diphosphate (PRibPP) also protects human HGPRTase against the ox-GMP inactivation and [3H]ox-GMP labeling but provides virtually no protection against the ox-GMP inactivation and labeling of the schistosomal enzyme, even though PRibPP binds to the latter with a threefold higher affinity. These results imply that PRibPP and ox-GMP compete with each other for binding to the human HGPRTase but not for binding to the schistosomal enzyme. This discrepancy could be exploited for the purpose of designing selective inhibitors of the schistosomal HGPRTase. Guanosine 2',3'-dialdehyde (ox-guanosine) is nearly as active as ox-GMP in inhibiting schistosomal HGPRTase but much less potent in inhibiting human HGPRTase, suggesting that ox-guanosine and ox-GMP may bind equally well to the parasite enzyme. PRibPP can protect human but not schistosomal HGPRTase against the inactivation by ox-guanosine. Therefore, ox-GMP and ox-guanosine must be forming Schiff's bases with the same amino acid residues in each of the two HGPRTases.
...
PMID:Differential inhibitory effects of GMP-2',3'-dialdehyde on human and schistosomal hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferases. 751 83

Tritrichomonas foetus, an anaerobic flagellated protozoan, causes urogenital trichomoniasis in cattle. Hypoxanthine-guanine-xanthine phosphoribosyl transferase (HGXPRTase), an essential enzyme in T. foetus required for salvaging exogenous purine bases, has been regarded as a promising target for anti-tritrichomonial chemotherapy. The steady-state kinetic analyses of synthesis and pyrophosphorolysis of IMP, GMP, and XMP and product inhibition studies have been used to elucidate the reaction mechanisms. Double-reciprocal plots of initial velocities versus the varying concentrations of one substrate at a fixed concentration of the other show intersecting lines indicating a sequential mechanism for both the forward and the reverse reactions. In terms of the kcat/Km ratios, hypoxanthine is the most effective substrate whereas guanine and xanthine are converted equally well into their corresponding nucleotides. The minimum kinetic model from the data in product inhibition studies is an ordered bi-bi mechanism, where the substrates bind to the enzyme (first PRPP followed by the purine bases), and the products released (first PPi followed by purine nucleotide) in a defined order. The Kms for PPi in the T. foetus HGXPRTase-catalyzed reactions are unusually high, close to the millimolar range. Since the crystal structure of this enzyme [Somoza et al. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 7032-7040] suggests potential binding between the threonine-47 in a conserved cis-peptide loop and PPi whereas human HGPRTase has lysine-68 [Eads et al. (1994) Cell 78, 325-334] at the corresponding position, we prepared a T47K enzyme mutant and found in the T47K-catalyzed reaction a 4-10-fold decrease of Km for PPi. The lack of ionic interactions between Thr-47 and PPi and an increased distance between the loop and the active site as compared to the human HGPRTase are thus proposed to be responsible for the high Km for PPi in the T. foetus HGXPRTase-catalyzed reaction.
...
PMID:Steady-state kinetics of the hypoxanthine-guanine-xanthine phosphoribosyltransferase from Tritrichomonas foetus: the role of threonine-47. 952 25

The hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) from Trypanosoma cruzi, etiologic agent of Chagas' disease, was cocrystallized with the inosine analogue Formycin B (FmB) and the structure determined to 1.4 A resolution. This is the highest resolution structure yet reported for a phosphoribosyltransferase (PRT), and the asymmetric unit of the crystal contains a dimer of closely associated, nearly identical subunits. A conserved nonproline cis peptide in one active-site loop exposes the main-chain nitrogen to the enzyme active site, while the adjacent lysine side chain interacts with the other subunit of the dimer, thereby providing a possible mechanism for communication between the subunits and their active sites. The three-dimensional coordinates for the invariant Ser103-Tyr104 dipeptide are reported here for the first time. These are the only highly conserved residues in a second active-site loop, termed the long flexible loop, which is predicted to close over the active site of HPRTs to protect a labile transition state [Eads et al. (1994) Cell 78, 325-334]. This structure represents a major step forward in efforts to design/discover potent selective inhibitors of the HPRT of T. cruzi.
...
PMID:A 1.4 A crystal structure for the hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase of Trypanosoma cruzi. 979 Jun 69

The hypoxanthine-guanine-xanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGXPRTase) from Tritrichomonas foetus has been proven to be a target for potential anti-tritrichomonial chemotherapy. Using a structure-based approach, the base-binding region of the active site of this enzyme, which confers unique purine base specificity, was characterized using site-directed mutagenesis. Determining the roles of different active-site residues in purine specificity would form the basis for designing specific inhibitors toward the parasitic enzyme. A D163N mutant converts the HGXPRTase into a HGPRTase, which no longer recognizes xanthine as a substrate, whereas specificities toward guanine and hypoxanthine are unaffected. Apparently, the side-chain carboxyl of Asp163 forms a hydrogen bond through a water molecule with the C2-carbonyl of xanthine, which constitutes the critical force enabling the enzyme to recognize xanthine as a substrate. Mutations of Arg155, which orients and stacks the neighboring Tyr156 onto the bound purine base by forming a salt bridge between itself and Glu11, result in drastic increases in the Kms for GMP and XMP (but not IMP). This change leads to increased kcats for the forward reactions with guanine and xanthine as substrates without affecting the conversion of hypoxanthine to IMP. Thus, the apparent dislocation of Tyr156, resulted from mutations of Arg155, bring little effect on the hydrophobic interactions between Tyr156 and the purine ring. But the forces involved in recognizing the exocyclic C2-substituents of the purine ring, which involve the Tyr156 hydroxyl, Ile157 backbone carbonyl, and Asp163 side-chain carboxyl, may be weakened by the shifted conformation of the peptide backbone resulted from loss of the Glu11-Arg155 salt bridge. The conserved Lys134 was proven to be the primary determinant in conferring the specificity of the enzyme toward 6-oxopurines. By substituting the lysine residue for a serine, which can potentially hydrogen bond to either an amino or an oxo-group, we have successfully augmented the purine specificity of the enzyme. The K134S mutant recognizes adenine in addition to hypoxanthine, guanine, and xanthine as its substrates. Adenine and hypoxanthine are equivalent substrates for the mutant enzyme with similar Kms of 34.6 and 38.0 microM, respectively. The catalysis of an adenine phosphoribosyltransferase reaction by this mutant enzyme was further demonstrated by the competitive inhibition of AMP with an estimated Kis of 25.4 microM against alpha-D-5-phosphoribosyl-pyrophosphate (PRPP) in converting hypoxanthine to IMP. We have thus succeeded in using site-directed mutagenesis to convert T. foetusHGXPRTase into either a HGPRTase or a genuine AHGXPRTase.
...
PMID:Altering the purine specificity of hypoxanthine-guanine-xanthine phosphoribosyltransferase from Tritrichomonas foetus by structure-based point mutations in the enzyme protein. 984 28

Guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (GPRTase) from Giardia lamblia, an enzyme required for guanine salvage and necessary for the survival of this parasitic protozoan, has been kinetically characterized. Phosphoribosyltransfer proceeds through an ordered sequential mechanism common to many related purine phosphoribosyltransferases (PRTases) with alpha-D-5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate (PRPP) binding to the enzyme first and guanosine monophosphate (GMP) dissociating last. The enzyme is a highly unique purine PRTase, recognizing only guanine as its purine substrate (K(m) = 16.4 microM) but not hypoxanthine (K(m) > 200 microM) nor xanthine (no reaction). It also catalyzes both the forward (kcat = 76.7 s-1) and reverse (kcat = 5.8.s-1) reactions at significantly higher rates than all the other purine PRTases described to date. However, the relative catalytic efficiencies favor the forward reaction, which can be attributed to an unusually high K(m) for pyrophosphate (PPi) (323.9 microM) in the reverse reaction, comparable only with the high K(m) for PPi (165.5 microM) in Tritrichomonas foetus HGXPRTase-catalyzed reverse reaction. As the latter case was due to the substitution of threonine for a highly conserved lysine residue in the PPi-binding loop [Munagala et al. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 4045-4051], we identified a corresponding threonine residue in G. lamblia GPRTase at position 70 by sequence alignment, and then generated a T70K mutant of the enzyme. The mutant displays a 6.7-fold lower K(m) for PPi with a twofold increase in the K(m) for PRPP. Further attempts to improve PPi binding led to the construction of a T70K/A72G double mutant, which displays an even lower K(m) of 7.9 microM for PPi. However, mutations of the nearby Gly71 to Glu, Arg, or Ala completely inactivate the GPRTase, suggesting the requirement of flexibility in the putative PPi-binding loop for enzyme catalysis, which is apparently maintained by the glycine residue. We have thus tentatively identified the PPi-binding loop in G. lamblia GPRTase, and attributed the relatively higher catalytic efficiency in the forward reaction to the unusual loop structure for poor PPi binding in the reverse reaction.
...
PMID:Point mutations in the guanine phosphoribosyltransferase from Giardia lamblia modulate pyrophosphate binding and enzyme catalysis. 1009 38

Enzymes that salvage 6-oxopurines, including hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferases (HPRTs), are potential targets for drugs in the treatment of diseases caused by protozoan parasites. For this reason, a number of high-resolution X-ray crystal structures of the HPRTs from protozoa have been reported. Although these structures did not reveal why HPRTs need to form dimers for catalysis, they revealed the existence of potentially relevant interactions involving residues in a loop of amino acid residues adjacent to the dimer interface, but the contributions of these interactions to catalysis remained poorly understood. The loop, referred to as active-site loop I, contains an unusual non-proline cis-peptide and is composed of residues that are structurally analogous with Leu67, Lys68, and Gly69 in the human HPRT. Functional analyses of site-directed mutations (K68D, K68E, K68N, K68P, and K68R) in the HPRT from Trypanosoma cruzi, etiologic agent of Chagas' disease, show that the side-chain at position 68 can differentially influence the K(m) values for all four substrates as well as the k(cat) values for both IMP formation and pyrophosphorolysis. Also, the results for the K68P mutant are inconsistent with a cis-trans peptide isomerization-assisted catalytic mechanism. These data, together with the results of structural studies of the K68R mutant, reveal that the side-chain of residue 68 does not participate directly in reaction chemistry, but it strongly influences the relative efficiencies for IMP formation and pyrophosphorolysis, and the prevalence of lysine at position 68 in the HPRT of the majority of eukaryotes is consistent with there being a biological role for nucleotide pyrophosphorolysis.
...
PMID:Interactions at the dimer interface influence the relative efficiencies for purine nucleotide synthesis and pyrophosphorolysis in a phosphoribosyltransferase. 1469 88

A variety of commercial DNA arrays specific for humans and rodents are widely available; however, microarrays containing well-characterized genes to study pathway-specific gene expression are not as accessible for domestic animals, such as cattle, sheep and pigs. Therefore, a small-scale application-targeted bovine immune-endocrine cDNA array was developed to evaluate genetic pathways involved in the immune-endocrine axis of cattle during periods of altered homeostasis provoked by physiological or environmental stressors, such as infection, vaccination or disease. For this purpose, 167 cDNA sequences corresponding to immune, endocrine and inflammatory response genes were collected and categorized. Positive controls included 5 housekeeping genes (glyceraldehydes-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase, ribosomal protein L19, beta-actin, beta2-microglobulin) and bovine genomic DNA. Negative controls were a bacterial gene (Rhodococcus equi 17-kDa virulence-associated protein) and a partial sequence of the plasmid pACYC177. In addition, RNA extracted from un-stimulated, as well as superantigen (Staphylococcus aureus enterotoxin-A, S. aureus Cowan Pansorbin Cells) and mitogen-stimulated (LPS, ConA) bovine blood leukocytes was mixed, reverse transcribed and PCR amplified using gene-specific primers. The endocrine-associated genes were amplified from cDNA derived from un-stimulated bovine hypothalamus, pituitary, adrenal and thyroid gland tissues. The array was constructed in 4 repeating grids of 180 duplicated spots by coupling the PCR amplified 213-630 bp gene fragments onto poly-l-lysine coated glass slides. The bovine immune-endocrine arrays were standardized and preliminary gene expression profiles generated using Cy3 and Cy5 labelled cDNA from un-stimulated and ConA (5 microg/ml) stimulated PBMC of 4 healthy Holstein cows (2-4 replicate arrays/cow) in a time course study. Mononuclear cell-derived cytokine and chemokine (IL-2, IL-1alpha, TNFalpha, IFN-gamma, TGFbeta-1, MCP-1, MCP-2 and MIP-3alpha) mRNA exhibited a repeatable and consistently low expression in un-stimulated cells and at least a two-fold increased expression following 6 and 24 h ConA stimulation as compared to 0 h un-stimulated controls. In contrast, expression of antigen presenting molecules, MHC-DR, MHC-DQ and MHC-DY, were consistently at least two-fold lower following 6 and 24 h ConA stimulation. The only endocrine gene with differential expression following ConA stimulation was prolactin. Additionally, due to the high level of genetic homology between ovine, swine and bovine genes, RNA similarly acquired from sheep and pigs was evaluated and similar gene expression patterns were noted. These data demonstrate that this application-targeted array containing a set of well characterized genes can be used to determine the relative gene expression corresponding to immune-endocrine responses of cattle and related species, sheep and pigs.
...
PMID:Construction and application of a bovine immune-endocrine cDNA microarray. 1526 89


1