9 resultados para DIHYDRONICOTINAMIDE ADENINE-DINUCLEOTIDE

em DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center


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NADPH cytochrome P-450 reductase releases FMN and FAD upon dilution into slightly acidic potassium bromide. The flavins are released with positive cooperativity. Dithiothreitol protects the FAD dependent cytochrome c reductase activity against inactivation by free radicals. Behavior in potassium bromide is sensitive to changes in the pH. High performance hydroxylapatite resolved the FAD dependent reductase from holoreductase. For 96% FAD dependent reductase, the overall yield was 12%.^ High FAD dependence was matched by a low FAD content, with FAD/FMN as low as 0.015. There were three molecules of FMN for every four molecules of reductase. The aporeductase had negligible activity towards cytochrome c, ferricyanide, menadione, dichlorophenolindophenol, nitro blue tetrazolium, oxygen and acetyl pyridine adenine dinucleotide phosphate. A four minute incubation in FAD reconstituted one half to all of the specific activity, per milligram protein, of untreated reductase, depending upon the substrate. After a two hour reconstitution, the reductase eluted from hydroxylapatite at the location of holoreductase. It had little flavin dependence, was equimolar in FMN and FAD, and had nearly the specific activity (per mole flavin) of untreated reductase.^ The lack of activity and the ability of FMN to also reconstitute suggest that the redox center of FAD is essential for catalysis, rather than for structure. Dependence upon FAD is consistent with existing hypotheses for the catalytic cycle of the reductase. ^

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The occurrence of group G streptococci in cats and evaluation of the recovered organisms as potential human pathogens was investigated. Throat swabs were obtained from 89 cats (47 males and 42 females) and vaginal swabs from 39 female cats. Eighty-three of the examined cats were housed in individual cages at a University Animal Care Facility. Six cats, 2 mature males, 2 mature females and 2 young females were family pets in a rural area. Beta-hemolytic streptococci were recovered from 33 (37%) of the 89 cat throats cultured, and 27 (30.3%) were identified as group G. More males (34%) than females (24%) had throat cultures positive for group G. From the 39 vaginal cultures examined, 24 (61.5%) contained beta-hemolytic streptococci and 23 (58.9%) were identified as group G streptococci. Streptococci were not recovered from the vaginal cultures of the 5 females under 6 months of age.^ Thirty one group G streptococci isolated from cats were compared with 37 isolates of group G obtained from humans (health status or site of origin unknown). More group G cat isolates (81%) produced deoxyribonuclease (DNase) than did the human isolates (36%). The proportion of cat throat and vaginal isolates producing DNase was the same. Production of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide glycohydrolase (NADase) by group G isolates of human origin was 70%, cat throat isolates 53% and cat vaginal isolates 37%. The Serum Opacity Factor was present in 73% of the cat throat isolates of group G, 43.7% of the cat vaginal isolates and 58.6% of the human isolates. Possession of an anti-phagocytic factor (M protein like substance) demonstrated by the ability to multiply in fresh human blood was greater in the group G from cat throats (46.7%) than from cat vagina (37.5%) or from the human isolates (13.5%). Many of the biochemical characteristics of the group G streptococci of cat origin were more similar to the biochemical characteristics of group A streptococci, than to the characteristics of group G of human origin. The group G streptococci, found in a large number of cats, could be potential human pathogens, as their physiological and biological characteristics are very similar to those of group A, a known human pathogen. ^

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Cytokinesis in bacteria depends upon the contractile Z ring, which is composed of dynamic polymers of the tubulin homolog FtsZ as well as other membrane-associated proteins such as FtsA, a homolog of actin that is required for membrane attachment of the Z ring and its subsequent constriction. Here we show that a previously characterized hypermorphic mutant FtsA (FtsA*) partially disassembled FtsZ polymers in vitro. This effect was strictly dependent on ATP or ADP binding to FtsA* and occurred at substoichiometric levels relative to FtsZ, similar to cellular levels. Nucleotide-bound FtsA* did not affect FtsZ GTPase activity or the critical concentration for FtsZ assembly but was able to disassemble preformed FtsZ polymers, suggesting that FtsA* acts on FtsZ polymers. Microscopic examination of the inhibited FtsZ polymers revealed a transition from long, straight polymers and polymer bundles to mainly short, curved protofilaments. These results indicate that a bacterial actin, when activated by adenine nucleotides, can modify the length distribution of bacterial tubulin polymers, analogous to the effects of actin-depolymerizing factor/cofilin on F-actin.

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The human choriocarcinoma cell line JEG-3 is heterozygous at the adenosine deaminase (ADA) gene locus. Both allelic genes are under strong but incomplete repression causing a very low level expression of the gene locus. Because cytotoxic adenosine analogues such as 9-(beta)-D arabinofuranosyladenine (ara-A) and 9-(beta)-D xylofuranosyladenine (xyl-A) can be specifically detoxified by the action of ADA, these analogues were used to select for JEG-3 derived cells which had increased ADA expression. When JEG-3 cells were subjected to a multi-step, successively increasing dosage of either ara-A or xyl-A, resistant cells with increased ADA expression were generated. This increased ADA expression in the resistant cells was unstable, so that when the selective pressure was removed, cellular ADA expression would decrease. Subclone analysis of xyl-A resistant cells revealed that compared to parental JEG-3 cells, individual resistant cells had either elevated ADA levels or decreased adenosine kinase (ADK) levels or both. This altered ADA and ADK expression in the resistant cells were found to be independent events. Because of high endogenous tissue conversion factor (TCF) expression in the JEG-3 cells, the allelic nature of the increased ADA expression in most of the resistant cells could not be determined. However, several resistant subcloned cells were found to have lost TCF expression. These TCF('-) cells expressed only the ADA*2 allelic gene product. Cell fusion experiments demonstrated that the ADA*1 allelic gene was intact and functional in the A3-1A7 cell line. Chromosomal analysis of the A3-1A7 cells showed that they had no double-minutes or homogeneously staining chromosomal regions, although a pair of new chromosomes were found in these cells. Segregation analysis of the hybrid cells indicated that an ADA*2 allelic gene was probably located on this new chromosome. The analysis of the A3-1A7 cell line suggested that the expression of only ADA 2 in these cells was the result of possibly a cis-deregulation of the ADA gene locus or more probably an amplification of the ADA*2 allelic gene. Two effective positive selection systems for ADA('+) cells were also developed and tested. These selection systems should eventually lead to the isolation of the ADA gene.^

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The myogenin gene encodes an evolutionarily conserved basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor that regulates the expression of skeletal muscle-specific genes and its homozygous deletion results in mice who die of respiratory failure at birth. The histology of skeletal muscle in the myogenin null mice is reminiscent of that found in some severe congenital myopathy patients, many of whom also die of respiratory complications and provides the rationale that an aberrant human myogenin (myf4) coding region could be associated with some congenital myopathy conditions.^ With PCR, we found similarly sized amplimers for the three exons of the myogenin gene in 37 patient and 40 control samples. In contrast to the GeneBank sequence for human myogenin, we report several differences in flanking and coding regions plus an additional 659 and 498 bps in the first and second introns, respectively, in all patients and controls. We also find a novel (CA)-dinucleotide repeat in the second intron. No causative mutations were detected in the myogenin coding regions of genomic DNA from patients with severe congenital myopathy.^ Severe congenital myopathies in humans are often associated with respiratory complications and pulmonary hypoplasia. We have employed the myogenin null mouse, which lacks normal development of skeletal muscle fibers as a genetically defined severe congenital myopathy mouse model to evaluate the effect of absent fetal breathing movement on pulmonary development.^ Significant differences are observed at embryonic days E14, E17 and E20 of lung:body weight, total DNA and histologically, suggesting that the myogenin null lungs are hypoplastic. RT-PCR, in-situ immunofluorescence and EM reveal pneumocyte type II differentiation in both null and wild lungs as early as E14. However, at E14, myogenin null lungs have decreased BrdU incorporation while E17 through term, augmented cell death is detected in the myogenin null lungs, not seen in wild littermates. Absent mechanical forces appear to impair normal growth, but not maturation, of the developing lungs in myogenin null mouse.^ These investigations provide the basis for delineating the DNA sequence of the myogenin gene and and highlight the importance of skeletal muscle development in utero for normal lung organogenesis. My observation of no mutations within the coding regions of the human myogenin gene in DNA from patients with severe congenital myopathy do not support any association with this condition. ^

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The biochemical determinants of cytotoxicity of the purine nucleoside analog, 9-(beta)-D-xylofuranosyladenine (xyl-A) were studied in wild-type Chinese hamster ovary cells and in nucleoside kinase deficient mutants. It was found that {('3)H}xyl-A was readily phosphorylated to the triphosphate level in both the wild-type and deoxycytidine kinase deficient mutant, but not by the adenosine kinase deficient cells. Values for the apparent Km and Vmax of this uptake process were 43.9 (mu)M and 118.7 nmol/min/10('9) cells, respectively. Cloning procedures indicated that the viability of CHO cells was decreased 90 per cent by a 5-hr incubation with 10 (mu)M xyl-A. However, the toxicity of xyl-A was increased 100-fold by the addition of a nontoxic concentration (10 (mu)M) of the adenosine deaminase inhibitor erythro-9-(2-hydroxy-3-nonyl)adenine (EHNA) to the medium. High-pressure liquid chromatographic analysis indicated that after 5 hr, the concentration of 9-(beta)-D-xylofuranosyladenine 5'-triphosphate (xyl-ATP) in cells incubated with xyl-A plus EHNA was 2.0 mM, four times greater than in those cells incubated with xyl-A alone. Incubation with xyl-A plus EHNA had no significant effect on the cellular concentrations of 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate after 1 hr whereas, treatment with 3'-dexoyadenosine (cordycepin) decreased the concentration of this metabolite. Determinations of the cellular nucleoside triphosphates indicated that under conditions that resulted in an intracellular accumulation of 500 (mu)M xyl-ATP, the endogenous concentrations of neither the ribonucleoside triphosphates nor deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates were significantly different from those of control cells. The ID(,50) for {('3)H}thymidine incorporation into DNA, 105 (mu)M xyl-ATP, was four-fold less than the ID(,50) for {('3)H}uridine incorporation into RNA suggesting that the process of DNA synthesis is more sensitive to the presence of xyl-ATP. When removed from exogenous xyl-A, CHO cells failed to recover their ability to synthesize RNA and DNA, although the intracellular xyl-ATP concentration decreased to less than 35 (mu)M. The selective inhibition of RNA synthesis by 6-azauridine did not prevent the expression of toxicity by xyl-ATP. However, the selective inhibition of DNA synthesis by ara-C significantly spared toxicity in cells that had accumulated an otherwise lethal concentration of xyl-ATP. It is shown that in cells which had accumulated 1.27 mM {('3)H}xyl-ATP, {('3)H}xyl-A was found to terminate cellular RNA chains at a frequency of 1.42 (mu)mol of {('3)H}xyl-A 3' termini per mol of mononucleotide. These results indicate that a general mechanism for the toxicity of xyl-A to CHO cells includes the cellular accumulation of xyl-ATP, which serves as a substrate for RNA synthesizing enzymes and subsequently is incorporated into nascent RNA transcripts as a chain terminator. A specific mechanism involving the premature termination of RNA primers required for the initiation of DNA synthesis is proposed to account for the inhibitory action of xyl-ATP on DNA synthesis. ^

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2-Chloro-9-(2-deoxy-2-fluoro-$\beta $-D-arabinofuranosyl)adenine(Cl-F-ara-A) is a new deoxyadenosine analogue which is resistant to phosphorolytic cleavage and deamination, and exhibits therapeutic activity for both leukemia and solid tumors in experimental systems. To characterize its mechanism of cytotoxicity, the present study investigated the cellular pharmacology and the biochemical and molecular mechanisms of action of Cl-F-ara-A, from entrance of the drug into the cell, chemical changes to active metabolites, targeting on different cellular enzymes, to final programmed cell death response to the drug treatment.^ Cl-F-ara-A exhibited potent inhibitory action on DNA synthesis in a concentration-dependent and irreversible manner. The mono-, di-, and triphosphates of Cl-F-ara-A accumulated in cells, and their elimination was non-linear with a prolonged terminal phase, which resulted in prolonged dNTP depression. Ribonucleotide reductase activity was inversely correlated with the cellular Cl-F-ara-ATP level, and the inhibition of the reductase was saturated at higher cellular Cl-F-ara-ATP concentrations. The sustained inhibition of ribonucleotide reductase and the consequent depletion of deoxynucleotide triphosphate pools result in a cellular Cl-F-ara-ATP to dATP ratio which favors analogue incorporation into DNA.^ Incubation of CCRF-CEM cells with Cl-F-ara-A resulted in the incorporation of Cl-F-ara-AMP into DNA. A much lesser amount was associated with RNA, suggesting that Cl-F-ara-A is a more DNA-directed compound. The site of Cl-F-ara-AMP in DNA was related to the ratio of the cellular concentrations of the analogue triphosphate and the natural substrate dATP. Clonogenicity assays showed a strong inverse correlation between cell survival and Cl-F-ara-AMP incorporation into DNA, suggesting that the incorporation of Cl-F-ara-A monophosphate into DNA is critical for the cytotoxicity of Cl-F-ara-A.^ Cl-F-ara-ATP competed with dATP for incorporation into the A-site of the extending DNA strand catalyzed by both DNA polymerase $\alpha$ and $\varepsilon$. The incorporation of Cl-F-ara-AMP into DNA resulted in termination of DNA strand elongation, with the most pronounced effect being observed at Cl-F-ara-ATP:dATP ratio $>$1. The presence of Cl-F-ara-AMP at the 3$\sp\prime$-terminus of DNA also resulted in an increased incidence of nucleotide misincorporation in the following nucleotide position. The DNA termination and the nucleotide misincorporation induced by the incorporation of Cl-F-ara-AMP into DNA may contribute to the cytotoxicity of Cl-F-ara-A. ^