2 resultados para Serial novel

em DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center


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Cyclosporine (CsA) has shown great benefit to organ transplant recipients, as an immunosuppressive drug. To optimize CsA immunosuppressive therapy, pharmacodynamic evaluation of serial patient serum samples after CsA administration, using mixed lymphocyte culture (MLC) assays, revealed in vitro serum immunosuppressive activity of a CsA-like, ether-extractable component, associated with good clinical outcome in vivo. Since the in vitro immunosuppressive CsA metabolites, M-17 and M-1, are erythrocyte-bound, the immunosuppressive activity demonstrated in patient serum suggests that other immunosuppressive metabolites need exist. To test this hypothesis and obtain CsA metabolites for study, ether-extracted bile from tritiated and nonradioactive CsA-treated pigs was processed by novel high performance liquid and thin-layer chromatography (HPLC and HPTLC) techniques. Initial MLC screening of potential metabolites revealed a component, designated M-E, to have immunosuppressive activity. Pig bile-derived M-E was characterized as a CsA metabolite, by radioactive CsA tracer studies, by 56% crossreactivity in CsA radioimmunoassay, and by mass spectrometric (MS) analysis. MS revealed a CsA ring structure, hydroxylated at a site other than at amino acid one. M-E was different than M-1 and M-17, as demonstrated by different retention properties for each metabolite, using HPTLC and a novel rhodamine B/ $\alpha$-cyclodextrin stain, and using HPLC, performed by Sandoz, that revealed M-E to be different than previously characterized metabolites. The immunosuppressive activity of M-E was quantified by determination of mean metabolite potency ratio in human MLC assays, which was found to be 0.79 $\pm$ 0.23 (CsA, 1.0). Similar to parent drug, M-E revealed inter-individual differences in its immunosuppressive activity. M-E demonstrates inhibition of IL-2 production by concanavalin A stimulated C3H mouse spleen cells, similar to CsA, as determined with an IL-2 dependent mouse cytotoxic T-cell line. ^

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Prostate cancer remains the second leading cause of male cancer deaths in the United States, yet the molecular mechanisms underlying this disease remain largely unknown. Cytogenetic and molecular analyses of prostate tumors suggest a consistent association with the loss of chromosome 10. Previously, we have defined a novel tumor suppressor locus PAC-1 within chromosome 10pter-q11. Introduction of the short arm of chromosome 10 into a prostatic adenocarcinoma cell line PC-3H resulted in dramatic tumor suppression and restoration of a programmed cell death pathway. Using a combined approach of comparative genomic hybridization and microsatellite analysis of PC-3H, I have identified a region of hemizygosity within 10p12-p15. This region has been shown to be involved in frequent loss of heterozygosity in gliomas and melanoma. To functionally dissect the region within chromosome 10p containing PAC-1, we developed a strategy of serial microcell fusion, a technique that allows the transfer of defined fragments of chromosome 10p into PC-3H. Serial microcell fusion was used to transfer defined 10p fragments into a mouse A9 fibrosarcoma cell line. Once characterized by FISH and microsatellite analyses, the 10p fragments were subsequently transferred into PC-3H to generate a panel of microcell hybrid clones containing overlapping deletions of chromosome 10p. In vivo and microsatellite analyses of these PC hybrids identified a small chromosome 10p fragment (an estimated 31 Mb in size inclusive of the centromere) that when transferred into the PC-3H background, resulted in significant tumor suppression and limited a region of functional tumor suppressor activity to chromosome 10p12.31-q11. This region coincides with a region of LOH demonstrated in prostate cancer. These studies demonstrate the utility of this approach as a powerful tool to limit regions of functional tumor suppressor activity. Furthermore, these data used in conjunction with data generated by the Human Genome Project lent a focused approach to identify candidate tumor suppressor genes involved in prostate cancer. ^