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)

We have investigated the mutagenicity of oxidative DNA damage induced in V79 Chinese hamster lung fibroblast, and measured 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine (8OHdG) levels as an indicator of this damage. A hydroxyl radical generator, N,N'-bis(2-hydroxyperoxy-2-methoxyethyl)-1,4,5,8-naphthalene-tetra -carboxylic-diimide (NP-III), induced 8OHdG in V79 upon irradiation with 366 nm ultraviolet light (UV) for 15 min. 8OHdG was determined by HPLC with electrochemical detection after anaerobic sample processing. The 8OHdG level in the cells treated without NP-III was 0.49 per 10(5) dG, whereas levels in the cells treated with 5, 10 or 20 microM NP-III and UV irradiation were 1.84, 4.06 or 6.95 per 10(5) dG, respectively. The 8OHdG induced by 20 microM NP-III with UV irradiation decreased rapidly, and the half-life of the induced 8OHdG was approximately 6 h. NP-III with UV irradiation also induced DNA strand breaks in all cells uniformly, as determined by single cell gel assay. Mutant frequencies at the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (hprt) locus in V79 were determined as the number of 6-thioguanine-resistant cells per 10(6) cells. Mutant frequency of the cells without NP-III was 8.0, and frequencies of the cells treated with 5, 10 or 20 microM NP-III and UV irradiation were 14.9, 20.6 or 24.7 respectively. Treatment with 20 microM NP-III and UV irradiation decreased the cell number, determined 3 days after the treatment, to 20.8%. These findings indicate that acutely induced oxidative DNA damage including mutagenic 8OHdG is only weakly mutagenic in V79.
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PMID:Mutagenicity of oxidative DNA damage in Chinese hamster V79 cells. 939 1

Apoptosis plays a crucial role in maintaining genomic integrity by selectively removing the most heavily damaged cells from the population. Under that premise, the dysregulation of apoptosis may result in an inappropriate survival of mutated cells. This study demonstrates that ectopic expression of Bcl-2 effectively suppresses benzene-active metabolites, 1,4-hydroquinone- and 1, 4-benzoquinone-induced apoptosis in human leukemic HL-60 cells, as evidenced by morphological changes and DNA fragmentation. Although reactive oxygen species production largely contributes to the benzene metabolites-induced apoptotic cell death, Bcl-2 fails to attenuate the benzene metabolites-elicited increase of reactive oxygen species in HL-60 cells, as confirmed by flow cytometry analysis. These data suggest that Bcl-2 prevents benzene metabolites-induced apoptosis at the downstream of oxidative damage events. This study also determines the level of 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine (8-OH-dGua), an indicator for oxidative DNA damage, in neo- and Bcl-2-overexpressing HL-60 cells after treating with 1,4-hydroquinone or 1,4-benzoquinone. Interestingly, our results indicate that a majority of the 8-OH-dGua is efficiently removed in neo control cells within 3 to 6 h, whereas only 25 to 35% of 8-OH-dGua is repaired in Bcl-2 transfectants even for 24 h. Similarly, another oxidative DNA base, thymine glycol, failed to repair and was retained in genomic DNA of Bcl-2 transfectants. The above findings suggest that Bcl-2 may retain benzene metabolites-induced oxidative DNA damage in surviving cells. Indeed, the failure of repairing 8-OH-dGua and thymine glycol in benzene metabolites-treated Bcl-2 survivors increases the number of mutation frequencies at the hprt locus. Results in this study thus provide a novel benzene-induced carcinogenesis mechanism by which up-regulation of Bcl-2 protein may promote the susceptibility to benzene metabolites-induced mutagenesis by overriding apoptosis and attenuating DNA repair capacity.
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PMID:Suppression of apoptosis by Bcl-2 to enhance benzene metabolites-induced oxidative DNA damage and mutagenesis: A possible mechanism of carcinogenesis. 1022 May 68

Potassium bromate (KBrO3) is a well-established rodent kidney carcinogen and its oxidising activity is considered to be a significant factor in its mechanism of action. Although it has also been shown to be clearly genotoxic in a range of in vivo and in vitro test systems, surprisingly, it is not readily detected in several cell lines using the standard alkaline Comet assay. However, previous results from this laboratory demonstrated huge increases in tail intensity by modifying the method to include incubation with either human 8-oxodeoxyguanosine DNA glycosylase-1 (hOGG1) or bacterial formamidopyrimidine DNA glycosylase (FPG) indicating that, as expected, significant amounts of 8-oxodeoxyguanosine (8-OHdG) were induced. The purpose of this work, therefore, was to investigate why KBrO3, in contrast to other oxidising agents, gives a relatively poor response in the standard Comet assay. Results confirmed that it is a potent genotoxin in mouse lymphoma L5178Y cells inducing micronuclei and mutation at the tk and hprt loci at relatively non-cytotoxic concentrations. Subsequent time-course studies demonstrated that substantial amounts of 8-OHdG appear to remain in cells 24h after treatment with KBrO3 but result in no increase in frank stand breaks (FSB) even though phosphorylated histone H2AX (gamma-H2AX) antibody labelling confirmed the presence of double-strand breaks. Using bromodeoxyuracil (BrdU) incorporation together with measured increases in cell numbers, L5178Y cells also appeared to go through the cell cycle with unrepaired hOGG1-recognisable damage. Since unrepaired 8-OHdG can give rise to point mutations through G:C-->T:A transversions, it was also surprising that mutation could not be detected at the Na+/K+ATPase locus as determined by ouabain resistance. Some increases in strand breakage could be seen in the Comet assay by increasing the unwinding time, but only at highly toxic concentrations and to a much smaller extent than would be expected from the magnitude of the other genotoxic responses. It was considered unlikely that these anomalous observations were due to the inability of L5178Y cells to recognise 8-OHdG because these cells were shown to express mOGG1 and have functional cleavage activity at the adducted site. It appears that the responses of L5178Y cells to KBrO3 are complex and differ from those induced by other oxidising agents.
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PMID:Anomalous genotoxic responses induced in mouse lymphoma L5178Y cells by potassium bromate. 1985 37