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

Hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.8.; HPRT) catalyzes the salvage synthesis of inosine-5'-monophosphate (IMP) and guanosine-5'-monophosphate (GMP) from the purine bases hypoxanthine and guanine, respectively. Complete deficiency of HPRT activity is associated with the Lesch-Nyhan syndrome (LNS), characterized by excessive purine production and severe neurological manifestations. The etiology of the metabolic consequences of HPRT deficiency is clarified, but that of the neurological manifestations is not yet understood. HPRT-deficient mice represent an experimental animal model of LNS. In search for a possible metabolic abnormality in LNS brains, connecting the neurological deficit to HPRT deficiency, the purine and pyrimidine nucleotide content of cultured neurons, prepared from HPRT-deficient transgenic mice, was now determined. The HPRT-deficient neuronal cultures exhibited a significantly elevated content of the pyrimidine nucleotides UTP (1.33-fold the normal level, p = 0.0002) and CTP (1.28-fold the normal level, p = 0.02), but normal content of the purine nucleotides ATP and GTP. This abnormality in neuronal pyrimidine nucleotide content may be associated with the pathophysiology of the neurological deficit in LNS.
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PMID:Elevated UTP and CTP content in cultured neurons from HPRT-deficient transgenic mice. 1085 40

We recently showed that an increased supply of purine nucleotides increased the growth rate of cultured fibroblasts. To understand the mechanism of the growth rate regulation, CHO K1 (a wild type of Chinese hamster ovary fibroblast cell line) and CHO ade (-)A (a cell line deficient in amidophosphoribosyltransferase, a rate-limiting enzyme of the de novo pathway) were cultured under various conditions. Moreover, a defective de novo pathway in CHO ade (-)A cells was exogenously restored by 5-amino-4-imidazole-carboxamide riboside, a precursor of the de novo pathway. The following parameters were determined: the growth rate of CHO fibroblasts, the metabolic rate of the de novo pathway, the enzyme activities of amidophosphoribosyltransferase and hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase, the content of intracellular nucleotides, and the duration of each cell-cycle phase. We concluded the following: (i) Purine de novo synthesis, rather than purine salvage synthesis or pyrimidine synthesis, limits the growth rate. (ii) Purine nucleotides are synthesized preferentially by the salvage pathway as long as hypoxanthine is available for energy conservation. (iii) The GTP content depends on the intracellular ATP content. (iv) Biosynthesis of purine nucleotides increases the growth rate mainly through ATP production and promotion of the G(1)/S transition.
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PMID:The rate of cell growth is regulated by purine biosynthesis via ATP production and G(1) to S phase transition. 1087 58

GTP cyclohydrolase I feedback regulatory protein (GFRP) mediates the feedback inhibition of GTP cyclohydrolase I activity by (6R)-L-erythro-5,6,7,8-tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) through protein complex formation. Since guanine and BH4 have a common pyrimidine ring structure, we examined the inhibitory effect of guanine and its analogs on the enzyme activity. Guanine, 8-hydroxyguanine, 8-methylguanine, and 8-bromoguanine inhibited the enzyme activity in a GFRP-dependent and pH-dependent manner and induced complex formation between GTP cyclohydrolase I and GFRP. The type of inhibition by this group is a mixed type. All these properties were shared with BH4. In striking contrast, inhibition by 8-azaguanine and 8-mercaptoguanine was GFRP-independent and pH-independent. The type of inhibition by 8-azaguanine and 8-mercaptoguanine was a competitive type. The two compounds did not induce complex formation between the enzyme and GFRP. These results demonstrate that guanine compounds of the first group bind to the BH4-binding site of the GTP cyclohydrolase I/GFRP complex, whereas 8-azaguanine and 8-mercaptoguanine bind to the active site of the enzyme. Finally, the possible implications in Lesch-Nyhan syndrome and Parkinson diseases of the inhibition of GTP cyclohydrolase I by guanine and 8-hydroxyguanine are discussed.
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PMID:GTP cyclohydrolase I feedback regulatory protein-dependent and -independent inhibitors of GTP cyclohydrolase I. 1136 Nov 42

The UV-sensitive V-H1 cell line has a T46I substitution mutation in the Walker A box in both alleles of XPD and lacks DNA helicase activity. We characterized three partial revertants that curiously display intermediate UV cytotoxicity (2- to 2.5-fold) but normal levels of UV-induced hprt mutations. In revertant RH1-26, the efficient removal of pyrimidine (6-4) pyrimidone photoproducts from both strands of hprt suggests that global-genomic nucleotide excision repair is normal, but the pattern of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer removal suggests that transcription-coupled repair (TCR) is impaired. To explain the intermediate UV survival and lack of RNA synthesis recovery in RH1-26 after 10 J of UV/m(2), we propose a defect in repair-transcription coupling, i.e., the inability of the cells to resume or reinitiate transcription after the first TCR event within a transcript. All three revertants carry an R658H suppressor mutation, in one allele of revertants RH1-26 and RH1-53 and in both alleles of revertant RH1-3. Remarkably, the R658H mutation produces the clinical phenotype of trichothiodystrophy (TTD) in several patients who display intermediate UV sensitivity. The XPD(R658H) TTD protein, like XPD(T46I/R658H), is codominant when overexpressed in V-H1 cells and partially complements their UV sensitivity. Thus, the suppressing R658H substitution must restore helicase activity to the inactive XPD(T46I) protein. Based on current knowledge of helicase structure, the intragenic reversion mutation may partially compensate for the T46I mutation by perturbing the XPD structure in a way that counteracts the effect of this mutation. These findings have implications for understanding the differences between xeroderma pigmentosum and TTD and illustrate the value of suppressor genetics for studying helicase structure-function relationships.
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PMID:Restoration of nucleotide excision repair in a helicase-deficient XPD mutant from intragenic suppression by a trichothiodystrophy mutation. 1158 17

The relationship between a complete deficiency of the purine enzyme hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase and the neurobehavioural abnormalities in Lesch-Nyhan disease remains an enigma. In vitro studies using lymphoblasts or fibroblasts have evaluated purine and pyrimidine metabolism with conflicting results. This study focused on pyridine nucleotide metabolism in control and Lesch-Nyhan fibroblasts using radiolabelled salvage precursors to couple the extent of uptake with endocellular nucleotide concentrations. The novel finding, highlighted by specific culture conditions, was a marked NAD depletion in Lesch-Nyhan fibroblasts. ATP and GTP were also 50% of the control, as reported in lymphoblasts. A 6-fold greater incorporation of [(14)C]nicotinic acid into nicotinic acid- adenine dinucleotide by Lesch-Nyhan fibroblasts, with no unmetabolized substrate (20% in controls), supported disturbed pyridine metabolism, NAD depletion being related to utilization by poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase in DNA repair. Although pyrimidine nucleotide concentrations were similar to controls, Lesch-Nyhan cells showed reduced [(14)C]cytidine/uridine salvage into UDP sugars. Incorporation of [(14)C]uridine into CTP by both was minimal, with more than 50% [(14)C]cytidine metabolized to UTP, indicating that fibroblasts, unlike lymphoblasts, lack active CTP synthetase, but possess cytidine deaminase. Restricted culture conditions may be neccesary to mimic the situation in human brain cells at an early developmental stage. Cell type may be equally important. NAD plus ATP depletion in developing brain could restrict DNA repair, leading to neuronal damage/loss by apoptosis, and, with GTP depletion, affect neurotransmitter synthesis and basal ganglia dopaminergic neuronal systems. Thus aberrant pyridine nucleotide metabolism could play a vital role in the pathophysiology of Lesch-Nyhan disease.
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PMID:Severe pyridine nucleotide depletion in fibroblasts from Lesch-Nyhan patients. 1199 69

Early studies showed that in addition to GTP, the pyrimidine nucleotides UTP and CTP support activation of the adenylyl cyclase (AC)-stimulating G(s) protein. The aim of this study was to elucidate the mechanism by which UTP and CTP support G(s) activation. As models, we used S49 wild-type lymphoma cells, representing a physiologically relevant system in which the beta(2)-adrenoreceptor (beta(2)AR) couples to G(s), and Sf9 insect cell membranes expressing beta(2)AR-Galpha(s) fusion proteins. Fusion proteins provide a higher sensitivity for the analysis of beta(2)AR-G(s) coupling than native systems. Nucleoside 5'-triphosphates (NTPs) supported agonist-stimulated AC activity in the two systems and basal AC activity in membranes from cholera toxin-treated S49 cells in the order of efficacy GTP > or = UTP > CTP > ATP (ineffective). NTPs disrupted high affinity agonist binding in beta(2)AR-Galpha(s) in the order of efficacy GTP > UTP > CTP > ATP (ineffective). In contrast, the order of efficacy of NTPs as substrates for nucleoside diphosphokinase, catalyzing the formation of GTP from GDP and NTP was ATP > or = UTP > or = CTP > or = GTP. NTPs inhibited beta(2)AR-Galpha(s)-catalyzed [gamma-(32)P]GTP hydrolysis in the order of potency GTP > UTP > CTP. Molecular dynamics simulations revealed that UTP is accommodated more easily within the binding pocket of Galpha(s) than CTP. Collectively, our data indicate that GTP, UTP, and CTP interact differentially with G(s) proteins and that transphosphorylation of GDP to GTP is not involved in this G protein activation. In certain cell systems, intracellular UTP and CTP concentrations reach approximately 10 nmol/mg of protein and are higher than intracellular GTP concentrations, indicating that G protein activation by UTP and CTP can occur physiologically. G protein activation by UTP and CTP could be of particular importance in pathological conditions such as cholera and Lesch-Nyhan syndrome.
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PMID:Distinct interactions of GTP, UTP, and CTP with G(s) proteins. 1208 68

Nucleotide excision repair (NER) prevents skin cancer by eliminating highly genotoxic cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) induced in DNA by the UVB component of sunlight. NER consists of two distinct but overlapping subpathways, i.e., global NER, which removes CPD from the genome overall, and transcription-coupled NER (TCNER), which removes CPD uniquely from the transcribed strand of active genes. Previous investigations have clearly established that the p53 tumor suppressor plays a crucial role in the NER process. Here we used the ligation-mediated PCR technique to demonstrate, at nucleotide resolution along two chromosomal genes in human cells, that the requirement for functional p53 in TCNER, but not in global NER, depends on incident UV wavelength. Indeed, relative to an isogenic p53 wild-type counterpart, p53-deficient human lymphoblastoid strains were shown to remove CPD significantly less efficiently along both the transcribed and nontranscribed strands of the c-jun and hprt loci after exposure to polychromatic UVB (290-320 nm). However, in contrast, after irradiation with 254-nm UV, p53 deficiency engendered less efficient CPD repair only along the nontranscribed strands of these target genes. The revelation of this intriguing wavelength-dependent phenomenon reconciles an apparent conflict between previous studies which used either UVB or 254-nm UV to claim, respectively, that p53 is required for, or plays no role whatsoever in, TCNER of CPD. Furthermore, our finding highlights a major caveat in experimental photobiology by providing a prominent example where the extensively used "nonsolar" model mutagen 254-nm UV does not accurately replicate the effects of environmentally relevant UVB.
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PMID:UV wavelength-dependent regulation of transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair in p53-deficient human cells. 1277 60

The purine nucleoside cycle is a cyclic pathway composed of three cytosolic enzymes, hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase, IMP-GMP specific 5'-nucleotidase, and purine-nucleoside phosphorylase. It may be considered a 'futile cycle', whose net reaction is the hydrolysis of 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate to inorganic pyrophosphate and ribose 1-phosphate. The availability of a highly purified preparation of cytosolic 5'-nucleotidase prompted us to reconstitute the purine nucleoside cycle. Its kinetics were strikingly similar to those observed when dialyzed extracts of rat brain were used. Thus, when the cycle is started by addition of inorganic phospate (Pi) and hypoxanthine or inosine (the 'inosine cycle'), steady-state levels of the intermediates are observed and the cycle 'turns over' as far as 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate is being consumed. In the presence of ATP, which acts both as an activator of IMP-GMP-specific 5'-nucleotidase and as substrate of nucleoside mono- and di-phosphokinases, no IDP and ITP are formed. The inosine cycle is further favored by the extremely low xanthine oxidase activity. Evidence is presented that ribose 1-phosphate needed to salvage pyrimidine bases in rat brain may arise, at least in part, from the 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate hydrolysis as catalyzed by the inosine cycle, showing that it may function as a link between purine and pyrimidine salvage. When the cycle is started by addition of Pi and guanine (the 'guanosine cycle'), xanthine and xanthosine are formed, in addition to GMP and guanosine, showing that the guanosine cycle 'turns over' in conjunction with the recycling of ribose 1-phosphate for nucleoside interconversion. In the presence of ATP, GDP and GTP are also formed, and the velocity of the cycle is drastically reduced, suggesting that it might metabolically modulate the salvage synthesis of guanyl nucleotides.
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PMID:The purine nucleoside cycle in cell-free extracts of rat brain: evidence for the occurrence of an inosine and a guanosine cycle with distinct metabolic roles. 1278 25

The purine analogue, allopurinol, has been in clinical use for more than 30 years as an inhibitor of xanthine oxidase (XO) in the treatment of hyperuricemia and gout. As consequences of structural similarities to purine compounds, however, allopurinol, its major active product, oxypurinol, and their respective metabolites inhibit other enzymes involved in purine and pyrimidine metabolism. Febuxostat (TEI-6720, TMX-67) is a potent, non-purine inhibitor of XO, currently under clinical evaluation for the treatment of hyperuricemia and gout. In this study, we investigated the effects of febuxostat on several enzymes in purine and pyrimidine metabolism and characterized the mechanism of febuxostat inhibition of XO activity. Febuxostat displayed potent mixed-type inhibition of the activity of purified bovine milk XO, with Ki and Ki' values of 0.6 and 3.1 nM respectively, indicating inhibition of both the oxidized and reduced forms of XO. In contrast, at concentrations up to 100 muM, febuxostat had no significant effects on the activities of the following enzymes of purine and pyrimidine metabolism: guanine deaminase, hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase, purine nucleoside phosphorylase, orotate phosphoribosyltransferase and orotidine-5'-monophosphate decarboxylase. These results demonstrate that febuxostat is a potent non-purine, selective inhibitor of XO, and could be useful for the treatment of hyperuricemia and gout.
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PMID:Selectivity of febuxostat, a novel non-purine inhibitor of xanthine oxidase/xanthine dehydrogenase. 1569 61

Human hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT) catalyses the synthesis of the purine nucleoside monophosphates, IMP and GMP, by the addition of a 6-oxopurine base, either hypoxanthine or guanine, to the 1-beta-position of 5-phospho-alpha-d-ribosyl-1-pyrophosphate (PRib-PP). The mechanism is sequential, with PRib-PP binding to the free enzyme prior to the base. After the covalent reaction, pyrophosphate is released followed by the nucleoside monophosphate. A number of snapshots of the structure of this enzyme along the reaction pathway have been captured. These include the structure in the presence of the inactive purine base analogue, 7-hydroxy [4,3-d] pyrazolo pyrimidine (HPP) and PRib-PP.Mg2+, and in complex with IMP or GMP. The third structure is that of the immucillinHP.Mg(2+).PP(i) complex, a transition-state analogue. Here, the first crystal structure of free human HGPRT is reported to 1.9A resolution, showing that significant conformational changes have to occur for the substrate(s) to bind and for catalysis to proceed. Included in these changes are relative movement of subunits within the tetramer, rotation and extension of an active-site alpha-helix (D137-D153), reorientation of key active-site residues K68, D137 and K165, and the rearrangement of three active-site loops (100-128, 165-173 and 186-196). Toxoplasma gondii HGXPRT is the only other 6-oxopurine phosphoribosyltransferase structure solved in the absence of ligands. Comparison of this structure with human HGPRT reveals significant differences in the two active sites, including the structure of the flexible loop containing K68 (human) or K79 (T.gondii).
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PMID:The crystal structure of free human hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase reveals extensive conformational plasticity throughout the catalytic cycle. 1599 Jan 11


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