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1.
An effective HPLC method for detecting deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates in hyphae from the fungus Neurospora crass has been developed. In rapidly growing cells the nucleotide levels vary from 11.8 pmoles/μg DNA for dGTP to 24.2 pmoles/μg DNA for dTTP. These levels fall by approximately one half in stationary-phase cultures but the ration of each pool to dGTP remains the same. The dNTP pools in conidia are at least 5-fold lower than in rapidly growing cells. The pool sizes are the same in static and shaking cultures. When the ribonucleotide reductase inhibitor, hydroxyurea (30 mM), is added to rapidly growing cultures, DNA synthesis is stopped and the dGTP pool is reduced by 39%, while the size of the other poolds remains the same. In the presence of 11 mM histadine, DNA synthesis is also stopped and the size of the dGTP pool reduced by 46% while the deoxypyrimidine pools are somewhat increased. This suggests that the toxicity of excess histidine in Neurospora may be due to its ability to interact with the ribonucleotide reductase, inactivating the enzyme. Histidine may react with free radical at the active sites, as does hydroxyurea.  相似文献   

2.
Hydroxyurea inactivates ribonucleotide reductase from mammalian cells and thereby depletes them of the deoxynucleoside triphosphates required for DNA replication. In cultures of exponentially growing 3T6 cells, with 60-70% of the cells in S-phase, 3 mM hydroxyurea rapidly stopped ribonucleotide reduction and DNA synthesis (incorporation of labeled thymidine). The pool of deoxyadenosine triphosphate (dATP) decreased in size primarily, but also the pools of the triphosphates of deoxyguanosine and deoxycytidine (dCTP) were depleted. Paradoxically, the pool of thymidine triphosphate increased. After addition of hydroxyurea this pool was fed by a net influx and phosphorylation of deoxyuridine from the medium and by deamination of intracellular dCTP. An influx of deoxycytidine from the medium contributed to the maintenance of intracellular dCTP. 10 min after addition of hydroxyurea, DNA synthesis appeared to be completely blocked even though the dATP pool was only moderately decreased. As possible explanations for this discrepancy, we discuss compartmentation of pools and/or vulnerability of newly formed DNA strands to nuclease action and pyrophosphorolysis.  相似文献   

3.
Hydroxyurea, an inhibitor of ribonucleotide reductase, blocks replication of vaccinia virus. However, when medium containing hydroxyurea and dialyzed serum was supplemented with deoxyadenosine, the block to viral reproduction was circumvented, provided that an inhibitor of adenosine deaminase was also present. Deoxyguanosine, deoxycytidine, and deoxythymidine were ineffective alone and did not augment the deoxyadenosine effect. In fact, increasing concentrations of deoxyguanosine and deoxythymidine, but not deoxycytidine, eliminated the deoxyadenosine rescue, an effect that was reversed by the addition of low concentrations of deoxycytidine. These results suggested that the inhibition of viral replication by hydroxyurea was primarily due to a deficiency of dATP. Deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate pools in vaccinia virus-infected cells were measured at the height of viral DNA synthesis after a synchronous infection. With 0.5 mM hydroxyurea, the dATP pool was greater than 90% depleted, the dCTP and dGTP pools were 40 to 50% reduced, and the dTTP pool was increased. Assay of ribonucleotide reductase activity in intact virus-infected cells suggested that hydroxyurea may differentially affect reduction of the various substrates of the enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
Mitochondrial deoxynucleoside triphosphates are formed and regulated by a network of anabolic and catabolic enzymes present both in mitochondria and the cytosol. Genetic deficiencies for enzymes of the network cause mitochondrial DNA depletion and disease. We investigate by isotope flow experiments the interrelation between mitochondrial and cytosolic deoxynucleotide pools as well as the contributions of the individual enzymes of the network to their maintenance. To study specifically the synthesis of dGTP used for the synthesis of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA, we labeled hamster CHO cells or human fibroblasts with [(3)H]deoxyguanosine during growth and quiescence and after inhibition with aphidicolin or hydroxyurea. At time intervals we determined the labeling of deoxyguanosine nucleotides and DNA and the turnover of dGTP from its specific radioactivity in the separated mitochondrial and cytosolic pools. In both cycling and quiescent cells, the import of deoxynucleotides formed by cytosolic ribonucleotide reductase accounted for most of the synthesis of mitochondrial dGTP, with minor contributions by cytosolic deoxycytidine kinase and mitochondrial deoxyguanosine kinase. A dynamic isotopic equilibrium arose rapidly from the shuttling of deoxynucleotides between mitochondria and cytosol, incorporation of dGTP into DNA, and degradation of dGMP. Inhibition of DNA synthesis by aphidicolin marginally affected the equilibrium. Inhibition of DNA synthesis by blockage of ribonucleotide reduction with hydroxyurea instead disturbed the equilibrium and led to accumulation of labeled dGTP in the cytosol. The turnover of dGTP decreased, suggesting a close connection between ribonucleotide reduction and pool degradation.  相似文献   

5.
JB3-B is a Chinese hamster ovary cell mutant previously shown to be temperature sensitive for DNA replication (J. J. Dermody, B. E. Wojcik, H. Du, and H. L. Ozer, Mol. Cell. Biol. 6:4594-4601, 1986). It was chosen for detailed study because of its novel property of inhibiting both polyomavirus and adenovirus DNA synthesis in a temperature-dependent manner. Pulse-labeling studies demonstrated a defect in the rate of adenovirus DNA synthesis. Measurement of deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate (dNTP) pools as a function of time after shift of uninfected cultures from 33 to 39 degrees C revealed that all four dNTP pools declined at similar rates in extracts prepared either from whole cells or from rapidly isolated nuclei. Ribonucleoside triphosphate pools were unaffected by a temperature shift, ruling out the possibility that the mutation affects nucleoside diphosphokinase. However, ribonucleotide reductase activity, as measured in extracts, declined after cell cultures underwent a temperature shift, in parallel with the decline in dNTP pool sizes. Moreover, the activity of cell extracts was thermolabile in vitro, consistent with the model that the JB3-B mutation affects the structural gene for one of the ribonucleotide reductase subunits. The kinetics of dNTP pool size changes after temperature shift are quite distinct from those reported after inhibition of ribonucleotide reductase with hydroxyurea. An indirect effect on ribonucleotide reductase activity in JB3-B has not been excluded since human sequences other than those encoding the enzyme subunits can correct the temperature-sensitive growth defect in the mutant.  相似文献   

6.
We investigated the cell cycle regulation of deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate (dNTP) metabolism in hydroxyurea-resistant (HYUR) murine S49 T-lymphoma cell lines. Cell lines 10- to 40-fold more hydroxyurea-resistant were selected in a stepwise manner. These HYUR cells exhibited increased CDP reductase activity (5- to 8-fold) and increased dNTP pools (up to 5-fold) that appeared to result from increased activity of the M2 subunit (binding site of hydroxyurea) of ribonucleotide reductase. These characteristics remained stable when the cells were grown in the absence of hydroxyurea for up to 2 years. In both wild type and hydroxyurea-resistant cell populations synchronized by elutriation, dCTP and dTTP pools increased in S phase, whereas dATP and dGTP pools generally remained the same or decreased, suggesting that allosteric effector mechanisms were operating to regulate pool sizes. Additionally, CDP reductase activity measured in permeabilized cells increased in S phase in both wild type and hydroxyurea-resistant cells, suggesting a nonallosteric mechanism of increased ribonucleotide reductase activity during periods of active DNA synthesis. While wild type S49 cells could be arrested in the G1 phase of the cell cycle by dibutyryl cyclic AMP, hydroxyurea-resistant cell lines could not be arrested in the G1 phase by exogenous cyclic AMP or agents that elevate the concentration of endogenous cyclic AMP. These data suggest that cyclic AMP-generated G1 arrest in S49 cells might be mediated by the M2 subunit of ribonucleotide reductase.  相似文献   

7.
We investigated deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate metabolism in S49 mouse T-lymphoma cells synchronized in different phases of the cell cycle. S49 wild-type cultures enriched for G1 phase cells by exposure to dibutyryl cyclic AMP (Bt2cAMP) for 24 h had lower dCTP and dTTP pools but equivalent or increased pools of dATP and dGTP when compared with exponentially growing wild-type cells. Release from Bt2cAMP arrest resulted in a maximum enrichment of S phase occurring 24 h after removal of the Bt2cAMP, and was accompanied by an increase in dCTP and dTTP levels that persisted in colcemid-treated (G2/M phase enriched) cultures. Ribonucleotide reductase activity in permeabilized cells was low in G1 arrested cells, increased in S phase enriched cultures and further increased in G2/M enriched cultures. In cell lines heterozygous for mutations in the allosteric binding sites on the M1 subunit of ribonucleotide reductase, the deoxyribonucleotide pools in S phase enriched cultures were larger than in wild-type S49 cells, suggesting that feedback inhibition of ribonucleotide reductase is an important mechanism limiting the size of deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate pools. The M1 and M2 subunits of ribonucleotide reductase from wild-type S49 cells were identified on two-dimensional polyacrylamide gels, but showed no significant change in intensity during the cell cycle. These data are consistent with allosteric inhibition of ribonucleotide reductase during the G1 phase of the cycle and release of this inhibition during S phase. They suggest that the increase in ribonucleotide reductase activity observed in permeabilized S phase-enriched cultures may not be the result of increased synthesis of either the M1 or M2 subunit of the enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
It is presumed that the dGTP and dATP needed for replicative DNA synthesis can be formed by way of either `salvage' pathways or biosynthesis de novo. This was examined by adding hydroxyurea to cultures of rat thymus cells to inhibit ribonucleoside diphosphate reductase, a key enzyme of the `de novo' pathway. Most of the inhibition of the incorporation of [Me-3H]thymidine and deoxy[5-3H]cytidine by low concentrations of hydroxyurea (100–500μm) was prevented by substrates of the salvage pathway (400μm-deoxyguanosine and, to a lesser extent, 200μm-deoxyadenosine). However, isotope-dilution studies indicated that the purine deoxyribonucleosides prevented inhibition by decreasing pyrimidine deoxyribonucleotide competitor pools. Evidence was obtained that a hydroxyurea-induced increase in the thymidine-competitor pool (probably dTTP) was prevented to an equal extent by deoxyguanosine and by the inhibitor of thymidylate synthase, deoxy-5-fluorouridine. These compounds had almost identical effects on hydroxyurea dose–response curves and on thymidine isotope-dilution plots. The evidence suggests that exogenous purine deoxyribonucleosides cannot prevent the inhibition by hydroxyurea of thymus-cell DNA synthesis. This could mean that, with respect to the metabolism of purine deoxyribonucleotides, ribonucleoside diphosphate reductase is tightly coupled to DNA polymerase in a multienzyme complex. The complex would not permit entry of exogenous metabolic intermediates into the `de novo' pathway, but would still be subject to the regulatory effects of these intermediates. Thus dGTP and dATP formed from exogenous purine deoxyribonucleosides by salvage pathways might deplete pyrimidine deoxyribonucleotide competitor pools by inhibiting relatively hydroxyurea-insensitive activities of ribonucleoside diphosphate reductase.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Cessation of DNA synthesis in the temperature sensitive mutant 167 tsA 13 of Bacillus subtilis is correlated with the disappearance of dCTP and dATP pools at the nonpermissive temperature; dGTP and dTTP residual pools are stable. In the presence of AdR and CdR at 45°C, the dCTP and dATP pools remain normal and the cells continue to synthesise DNA and grow. It is inferred that in 167 tsA 13 AdR and CdR kinases exist, that the deoxynucleotide kinases function normally and the ribonucleotide reduction is deficient. B. subtilis strains have a hydroxyurea sensitive reductase and the drug inhibition can be reversed by exogenous deoxynucleosides. Evidence that the tsA 13 mutation is in the structural gene of the ribonucleotide reductase is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
In exponentially growing 3T6 cells, the synthesis of deoxythymidine triphosphate (dTTP) is balanced by its utilization for DNA replication, with a turnover of the dTTP pool of around 5 min. We now investigate the effects of two inhibitors of DNA synthesis (aphidicolin and hydroxyurea) on the synthesis and degradation of pyrimidine deoxynucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs). Complete inhibition of DNA replication with aphidicolin did not decrease the turnover of pyrimidine dNTP pools labeled from the corresponding [3H]deoxynucleosides, only partially inhibited the in situ activity of thymidylate synthetase and resulted in excretion into the medium of thymidine derived from breakdown of dTTP synthesized de novo. These data demonstrate continued synthesis of dTTP in the absence of DNA replication. In contrast, hydroxyurea decreased the turnover of pyrimidine dNTP pools 5-50-fold. Hydroxyurea is an inhibitor of ribonucleotide reductase and stops DNA synthesis by depleting cells of purine dNTPs but not pyrimidine dNTPs. Our results suggest that degradation of dNTPs is turned off by an unknown mechanism when de novo synthesis is blocked.  相似文献   

11.
DNA precursor synthesis can be blocked specifically by the drug hydroxyurea (HU) which has therefore been used for anticancer therapy. High concentrations of HU, however, affect other processes than DNA synthesis; nevertheless, most studies on the biological action of HU have been made with concentrations at least one order of magnitude higher than those needed for cell-growth inhibition. In this study we characterized the effects of low concentrations of HU (i.e. concentrations leading to 50% inhibition of cell growth in 72 h) on cell cycle kinetics and nucleotide pools in mouse S49 cells with various defined alterations in DNA precursor synthesis. The effect of 50 microM HU on deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate pools was a 2-3-fold decrease in the dATP and dGTP pools, with no change in the dCTP pool and a certain increase in the dTTP pool. Addition of deoxycytidine or thymidine led to a partial reversal of the growth inhibition and cell-cycle perturbation caused by HU, and was accompanied by an increased level of the deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates. Addition of purine deoxyribonucleoside gave no protection, indicating that salvage of these nucleosides could not supply precursors for DNA synthesis in T-lymphoma cells. We observed a higher sensitivity to HU of cells lacking purine nucleoside phosphorylase or with a ribonucleotide reductase with altered allosteric regulation. Cells lacking thymidine kinase or deoxycytidine kinase were just as sensitive as wild-type cells.  相似文献   

12.
ATP:AMP phosphotransferase from baker''s yeast. Purification and properties   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Synchronous cells of the green alga, Scenedesmus obliquus, cultured in a 14-h/10-h light/dark regime, contain a peak of ribonucleoside-diphosphate reductase activity and maximum deoxyribonucleoside 5'-triphosphate concentrations at the 12th hour of the cell cycle, coinciding with DNA synthesis and preceding the formation of eight daughter cells. The intracellular dTTP pool reaches 4.5 pmol and the other pools 2-3 pmol/10(6) cells. Algal reductase activity is sensitive to cycloheximide, but not to lincomycin. These correlations demonstrate the functioning of the NDP leads to dNDP leads to dNTP pathway of DNA precursor biosynthesis in plant cells. In the presence of 20 micrograms 5-fluorodeoxyuridine/ml, an inhibitor of thymidylate synthesis, the dTTP pool is rapidly depleted and DNA synthesis ceases. 5-Fluorouracil and methotrexate produce similar effects. At the same time the ribonucleotide reductase activity and also the dATP pool are greatly increased, especially when fluorodeoxyuridine treatment is combined with continued illumination of the algae. In contrast, arabinosylcytosine, an inhibitor of DNA replication, has no effect on ribonucleotide reduction. The control of de novo enzyme synthesis in the eucaryotic algae therefore appears to depend on the presence of dTTP (or a related nucleotide), but not directly coupled to DNA synthesis. This interdependence resembles the situation observed in HeLa cells, while it may differ in detail from control mechanisms of ribonucleotide reductase studied in bacteria.  相似文献   

13.
Two alternative pathways for the synthesis of dGTP and its incorporation into DNA were studied: guanine (Gua)----GMP----GDP----dGDP----dGTP----DNA and dG----dGMP----dGDP----dGTP----DNA. To determine the contribution of each pathway to DNA synthesis independently of each other, [14C]Gua and [3H]dG tracer experiments were performed in a double-mutant S-49 mouse T-lymphoma cell line, dGuo-L, with purine nucleoside phosphorylase (EC 2.4.2.1)-deficiency and dGTP-feedback-resistant ribonucleotide reductase (RR, EC 1.17.4.1). In this cell line, dGTP pools can be selectively elevated by exogenous dG without affect RR and DNA synthesis. Although [3H]dG, but not [14C]Gua (up to 200 microM), readily expanded the cellular dGTP pool in a dose-dependent fashion in asynchronous cells, only a small fraction of the Gua flux into DNA was derived from [3H]dG, with the major fraction coming from [14C]Gua. H.p.l.c. analysis of G1- and partially enriched S-phase cells revealed that [3H]dGTP only accumulates in G1- but not in S-phase cells because of a rapid turnover of the dGTP pool during DNA synthesis. These results fail to provide evidence for cellular dGTP compartmentation and suggest that the pathway dG----dGMP----dGDP----dGTP alone has insufficient capacity to maintain DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

14.
Hydroxyurea-resistant S49 T-lymphoma cells have increased ribonucleotide reductase activity and deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate pools when compared with wild-type cultures. If ribonucleotide reductase inhibition is the mechanism by which deoxyadenosine is cytotoxic, then hydroxyurea (HU)-resistant S49 cells might be more resistant to deoxyadenosine toxicity when adenosine deaminase is inhibited than wild-type cells. Five S49 cell lines resistant to varying concentrations of HU were compared with wild-type cells by measuring CDP reductase activity, deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate pools, and deoxyadenosine toxicity. All five cell lines resistant to increasing concentrations of HU exhibited a twofold increase in resistance to deoxyadenosine toxicity when compared to wild type, and the resistance was proportional to the twofold increased pools of dNTPs in these cell lines but was less than the six- to eight fold increase in ribonucleotide reductase activity. In both wild-type and mutant cell lines, deoxyadenosine toxicity was accompanied by the accumulation of deoxyadenosine triphosphate and reduction of the other dNTPs; however, only dGTP greatly diminished. Exogenous addition of deoxycytidine decreased the dATP accumulation by about 20%, but also resulted in increases in the dCTP, dTTP, and dGTP pools. The S49 cells arrested in G1 phase when exposed to dAdo, although hydroxyurea-resistant cells required higher dAdo concentrations to elicit G1-phase arrest than wild-type cells. Deoxycytidine prevented dAdo-induced G1 arrest in all cell types. In summary, these data support the hypothesis that deoxyadenosine-induced dATP accumulation results in inhibition of ribonucleotide reductase and that this may be the mechanism for both cell cycle arrest and cytotoxicity in S49 T-lymphoma cells.  相似文献   

15.
Ribonucleotide reductase, the central enzyme of DNA precursor biosynthesis, has been isolated and characterized from baker's yeast. The enzyme activity, measured in extracts from three different, exponentially growing yeast strains, is high enough to meet the substrate requirement of DNA replication, in contrast to very low activities found in most other organisms. In thymidylate-permeable yeast cells ribonucleotide reductase activity is stimulated under both starvation and excess of intracellular dTMP. On the other hand growth of yeast in presence of 20 mM hydroxyurea did not increase enzyme activity. Yeast ribonucleotide reductase is composed of two non-identical subunits, inactive separately, of which one binds to immobilized dATP. The relative molecular mass of the holoenzyme is about 250 000. The enzyme reduces all four natural ribonucleoside diphosphates with comparable efficacy. GDP reduction requires dTTP as effector, ADP reduction is stimulated by dGTP, whereas pyrimidine nucleotide reduction is stimulated by any deoxyribonucleotide and ATP. Enzyme activity is independent of exogenous metal ions and is insensitive towards chelating agents. Hydroxyurea inactivates yeast ribonucleotide reductase in a slow reaction; half-inhibition (I50) is reached only at 2-6 mM hydroxyurea concentration. Up to 50% reactivation occurs spontaneously after removal of the inhibitor. In accord with previous attempts by others, extensive purification of the yeast enzyme has failed owing to its extreme instability in solution; the half-life of about 11 h could not be influenced by any protective measure. Taken together, yeast ribonucleotide reductase combines features known from Escherichia coli and mammalian enzymes with differing, individual properties.  相似文献   

16.
Pool sizes of deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs) in cultured cells are tightly regulated by i.al., the allosteric control of ribonucleotide reductase. We now determine the in situ activity of this enzyme from the turnover of the deoxycytidine triphosphate (dCTP) pool in rapidly growing 3T6 mouse fibroblasts, as well as in cells whose DNA replication was inhibited by aphidicolin or amethopterin, by following under steady state conditions the path of isotope from [5-3H]cytidine into nucleotides, DNA, and deoxynucleosides excreted into the medium. In normal cells as much as 28% of the dCDP synthesized was excreted as deoxynucleoside (mostly deoxyuridine), leading to an accumulation of deoxyuridine in the medium. Inhibition with amethopterin slightly increased ribonucleotide reductase activity, while aphidicolin halved the activity of this enzyme (and thymidylate synthase). In both instances all dCDP synthesized was degraded and excreted as nucleosides. This continued synthesis and turnover in the absence of DNA synthesis is in contrast to the earlier found inhibition of dCTP (and dTTP) turnover when hydroxyurea, an inhibitor of ribonucleotide reductase, was used to block DNA synthesis. To explain our results, we propose that substrate cycles between deoxyribonucleosides and their monophosphates, involving the activities of kinases and phosphatases, participate in the regulation of pool sizes. Within the cycles, a block of the reductase activates net phosphorylation, while inhibition of DNA polymerase stimulates degradation.  相似文献   

17.
J Cai  R R Speed    H H Winkler 《Journal of bacteriology》1991,173(4):1471-1477
Rickettsia prowazekii, an obligate intracellular parasitic bacterium, was shown to have a ribonucleotide reductase that would allow the rickettsiae to obtain the deoxyribonucleotides needed for DNA synthesis from rickettsial ribonucleotides rather than from transport. In the presence of hydroxyurea, R. prowazekii failed to grow in mouse L929 cells or SC2 cells (a hydroxyurea-resistant cell line), which suggested that R. prowazekii contains a functional ribonucleotide reductase. This enzymatic activity was demonstrated by the conversion of ADP to dADP and CDP to dCDP, using (i) a crude extract of Renografin-purified R. prowazekii that had been harvested from infected yolk sacs and (ii) high-performance liquid chromatographic analysis. The rickettsial ribonucleotide reductase utilized ribonucleoside diphosphates as substrates, required magnesium and a reducing agent, and was inhibited by hydroxyurea. ADP reduction was stimulated by dGTP and inhibited by dATP. CDP reduction was stimulated by ATP and adenylylimido-diphosphate and inhibited by dATP and dGTP. These characteristics provided strong evidence that the rickettsial enzyme is a nonheme iron-containing enzyme similar to those found in mammalian cells and aerobic Escherichia coli.  相似文献   

18.
R D Snyder 《Mutation research》1984,131(3-4):163-172
The effects of hydroxyurea (HU) on the DNA-excision repair process in human cells has been systematically examined. It is demonstrated that HU induces DNA single-strand break accumulation in a dose-dependent fashion in ultraviolet-irradiated and MMS-treated confluent but not log-phase fibroblasts and that these breaks are clearly the consequence of the inhibition by HU of the enzyme, ribonucleotide reductase. The breaks form rapidly, are stable for at least 10 h and largely disappear by 20 h. The production of these DNA-strand breaks is antagonized by a combined treatment of 10 microM deoxyadenosine, deoxycytidine and deoxyguanosine whereas thymidine potentiates strand-break formation at low HU concentrations. It is also confirmed that HU, while inhibiting replicative synthesis has no apparent inhibitory effect on unscheduled DNA synthesis (UDS) although the increased uptake of labeled DNA precursors into HU-treated cells makes it difficult to assess the actual effects on the repair-synthetic process. Analysis of the effects of HU on deoxynucleoside triphosphate pool levels and the demonstration of the failure of the HU block to replicative synthesis to be reversed by high (1 mM) concentrations of added deoxynucleosides lend support to the notion of compartmentalized dNTP pools for repair and replication.  相似文献   

19.
L6 and L8 rat myoblast cell lines have been selected for resistance to hydroxyurea, an antineoplastic agent whose intracellular target is the rate-limiting enzyme activity of DNA synthesis, ribonucleotide reductase. In contrast to the differentiation-competent parental lines from which they were selected, the drug-resistant lines exhibit a grossly altered or absent myogenic capacity. Independent selections have revealed a strong correlation between changes in ribonucleotide reductase, as determined by velocity levels and product pool analyses, and altered myogenic potential. These results provide the first indication that alterations in this key enzyme activity and its accompanying deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate pools can affect cellular differentiation.  相似文献   

20.
Phosphonoformic acid (PFA) and its congener phosphonoacetic acid (PAA) are inhibitors of viral replication whose mechanism of action appears to be the inhibition of viral DNA polymerase. These drugs inhibit mammalian DNA polymerase to a lesser extent. We sought to characterize the effects of phonoformic acid on mammalian cells by examining mutants of S49 cells (a mouse T-lymphoma line), which were selected by virtue of their resistance to phosphonoformic acid. The 11 mutant lines that were resistant to growth inhibition by 3 mM PFA had a range of growth rates, cell cycle distribution abnormalities, and resistance to the inhibitory effects of thymidine, acycloguanosine (acyclovir), aphidicolin, deoxyadenosine, and novobiocin. Most mutant lines had pools of ribonucleoside triphosphates and deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates similar to those of wild-type S49 cells. However, one line (PFA 3-9) had a greatly elevated dCTP pool. When this mutant line was further characterized, no apparent defect in DNA polymerase alpha activity was seen, but an increased ribonucleotide reductase activity, as assayed by CDP reduction in permeabilized cells, was observed. The CDP reductase activity in the PFA 3-9 cells decreased to wild-type control levels, and the CDP reductase activity of wild-type cells was also greatly reduced when PFA (2-3 mM) was added to permeabilized cells during the enzyme assay. These results demonstrate that PFA can directly inhibit ribonucleotide reductase activity in permeabilized cells. In addition, when PFA was added to exponentially growing cultures of either wild-type or PFA 3-9 mutant cells, the drug caused an arrest in S phase of the cell cycle and a decrease in all four deoxyribonucleotide pools, with the most dramatic decrease in the dCTP pools. The reduction in the dCTP pool level could be reversed by addition of exogenous deoxycytidine, but this reversed PFA toxicity only marginally. These observations suggest that PFA is an inhibitor of mammalian ribonucleotide reductase and that partial resistance to PFA can be effected by mutation to increased CDP reductase activity resulting in a large dCTP pool. This mutation results in less than twofold resistance to PFA, suggesting that other sites of inhibition coexist.  相似文献   

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