scholarly journals Nucleoside transport in rat cerebral-cortical synaptosomes. Evidence for two types of nucleoside transporters

1988 ◽  
Vol 249 (2) ◽  
pp. 557-564 ◽  
Author(s):  
C W Lee ◽  
S M Jarvis

The transport of [U-14C]uridine was investigated in rat cerebral-cortical synaptosomes using an inhibitor-stop filtration method. Under these conditions the rapid efflux of uridine from the synaptosomes is prevented and uridine is not significantly metabolized in the synaptosome during the first 1 min of uptake. The dose-response curve for the inhibition of uridine transport by nitrobenzylthioinosine (NBMPR) was biphasic: approx. 40% of the transport activity was inhibited with an IC50 (concentration causing half-maximal inhibition) value of 0.5 nM, but the remaining activity was insensitive to concentrations as high as 1 microM. Similar biphasic dose-response curves were observed for dilazep inhibition, but both transport components were equally sensitive to dipyridamole inhibition. Uridine influx by both components was saturable (Km 300 +/- 51 and 214 +/- 23 microM, and Vmax. 12 +/- 3 and 16 +/- 3 pmol/s per mg of protein, for NBMPR-sensitive and NBMPR-insensitive components respectively), and inhibited by other nucleosides such as 2-chloroadenosine, adenosine, inosine, thymidine and guanosine with similar IC50 values for the two components. Inhibition of uridine transport by NBMPR was associated with high-affinity binding of NBMPR to the synaptosome membrane (Kd 58 +/- 15 pM). Binding of NBMPR to these sites was competitively blocked by uridine and adenosine and inhibited by dilazep and dipyridamole, with Ki values similar to those measured for inhibiting NBMPR-sensitive uridine influx. These results demonstrate that there are two components of nucleoside transport in our rat synaptosomal preparation that differ in their sensitivity to inhibition by NBMPR. Thus conclusions regarding nucleoside transport in rat brain based only on NBMPR-binding activity must be viewed with caution.

1994 ◽  
Vol 300 (2) ◽  
pp. 407-412 ◽  
Author(s):  
C W Lee

The dose-response curves for the inhibition of equilibrative uridine transport by dilazep, dipyridamole and nitrobenzylthioinosine (NBMPR) in undifferentiated HL-60 cells were biphasic. Some 70% of the transport activity was inhibited with IC50 values of 0.7, 1 and 7 nM respectively. No inhibition of the remaining 30% of transport activity was observed until the dilazep, dipyridamole and NBMPR concentrations exceeded 1, 0.1 and 3 microM respectively. Exposure to phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) for 48 h, to induce monocytic differentiation, caused a 20-fold decrease in Vmax. of both NBMPR-sensitive and NBMPR-insensitive equilibrative uridine transport. The decrease in NBMPR-sensitive uridine transport induced by PMA corresponded to a decrease in NBMPR binding sites. A 30% decrease in specific NBMPR binding sites occurred within 6 h of PMA exposure, and could be prevented by uridine and thymidine at concentrations as low as 100 microM, and by staurosporine at 40 nM. However, the protective effects of these compounds diminished with prolonged PMA exposure. No protection was observed with uracil. Exogenous protein kinase C (PKC) in the presence of ATP and PMA decreased the number of specific NBMPR-binding sites in purified HL-60 cell plasma membranes. These results suggest that a PKC-induced conformational change in substrate-binding/transporting site may be responsible for the decrease in NBMPR-sensitive nucleoside transport during PMA-induced monocytic differentiation of HL-60 cells.


1999 ◽  
Vol 91 (6) ◽  
pp. 1853-1853 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick Friederich ◽  
Bernd W. Urban

Background Neuronal voltage-dependent potassium (K) currents are crucial for various cellular functions, such as the integration of temporal information in the central nervous system. Data for the effects of intravenous anesthetics on human neuronal K currents are limited. It was the authors' aim to evaluate the concentration-related effects of three opioids (fentanyl, alfentanil, sufentanil) and seven nonopioids (thiopental, pentobarbital, methohexital, propofol, ketamine, midazolam, droperidol) used in clinical anesthesia on neuronal voltage-dependent K currents of human origin. Method K currents were measured in SH-SY5Y cells using the whole cell patch-clamp technique. Currents were elicited by step depolarization from a holding potential of -80 to -50 mV through +90 mV, and their steady state amplitudes were determined. Results All drugs inhibited the K currents in a concentration-dependent and reversible manner. Because time dependence of inhibition differed among the drugs, effects were measured after 54-64 ms of the test pulse. The IC50 values (concentration of half-maximal inhibition) for current suppression ranged from 7 microM for sufentanil to 2 mM for pentobarbital. Suppression of the K currents by the opioids occurred at 10-fold lower IC50 values (concentration of half-maximal inhibition) than that by the barbiturates. As estimated from the concentration-response curves, K-current suppression at clinical concentrations would be less than 0.1% for the opioids and approximately 3% for the other drugs. Conclusions Effects of intravenous anesthetics on voltage-dependent K currents occur at clinical concentrations. The IC50 values for current inhibition of the nonopioid anesthetics correlated with these concentrations (r = 0.95). The results suggest that anesthetic drug action on voltage-dependent K currents may contribute to clinical effects or side effects of intravenous anesthetics.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 1670-1670
Author(s):  
Vladimir Vainstein ◽  
Christopher A. Eide ◽  
Thomas O'Hare ◽  
Brian J. Druker

Abstract Abstract 1670 BCR-ABL mutations result in clinical resistance to ABL tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) in CML. Although in vitro IC50 values for specific mutations have been suggested to guide TKI choice in the clinic, quantitative relationship between IC50 and clinical response has never been demonstrated. Notably, IC50 value constitutes only one point on the dose-response curve for a given drug. Most dose-response curves can be described by Hill's equation (equation 1), which incorporates both IC50 and slope (m) parameters: Here, fa is cell fraction affected by treatment and D is drug dose. We report estimation of the slope of in vitro dose-response curves for wild-type and kinase domain-mutant BCR-ABL against clinical ABL TKIs for CML and examine the value of this incorporated parameter for predicting clinical response. Dose response curves for imatinib, nilotinib and dasatinib were determined by methanethiosulfonate-based cell viability assay in Ba/F3 cells expressing wild-type BCR-ABL or each of 15 specific kinase domain point mutations (O'Hare T. et al Cancer Res 65:4500-5). The parameters m and IC50 were determined for each mutation and drug by fitting the log-transformed equation 1 to the respective dose-response curve. Excellent goodness of fit (r2 range 0.94–0.99) was observed for all drug-mutation pairings, confirming the adequacy of Hill's equation to describe the effect of ABL TKIs on cellular viability in vitro. Inhibitory potential at peak concentration (IPP) was subsequently calculated as: Here, fu is cell fraction unaffected by treatment, and D is mean peak concentration (Cmax) reported in plasma (Laneuville P. et al J Clin Oncol 28:e169-71). IPP and IC50 values for each Ba/F3 BCR-ABL mutant were compared with previously reported CCyR rates for nilotinib (Kantarjian H. et al Blood 110:3540-6) and dasatinib (Muller M.C. et al Blood 114:4944-53). Consistent with the particularly negative effect of P-loop mutations on drug binding and clinical outcome with imatinib, we found that 4 of 7 these mutations tested (G250E, Y253H, E255K, E255V) showed lower dose-response slope relative to wild-type BCR-ABL in addition to high IC50, while all other mutations showed variably increased slopes. Furthermore, the range of IPPs of imatinib for these mutations was lower than (and not overlapping with) all other mutations (0.084–1.66 vs 2.93–5.59; p=6*10−6). Slope variability provided particular additional interpretive value in cases where in vitro IC50 and clinical response are disparate. For example, G250E and V379I mutants feature comparable cellular IC50 values for imatinib (1184 and 1140 nM, respectively), but only G250E harbors worse clinical prognosis, arguably due to a lower dose-response slope of G250E, as also reflected in a lower IPP value compared to V379I (1.66 vs 3.04). Similarly, the M244V mutant does not confer substantial clinical resistance to imatinib despite increased IC50, possibly due to an exceptionally high slope value (m=5 vs. m=1.87 for wild-type BCR-ABL) reflecting a very steep dose-response curve which may render patients with this mutation particularly vulnerable to consequences of unfavorable imatinib pharmacokinetic profile or reduced compliance. Lastly, we examined whether higher IPP values were predictive of better clinical response to nilotinib and dasatinib in second-line clinical setting. Dasatinib-treated patients with mutations resulting in high IPP (IPP>7) had a significantly higher mean CCyR rate than those patients with lower IPPs (53% vs 31%; p=0.038). In contrast, this relationship was not evident when IC50 alone was used. In nilotinib-treated patients the difference in mean CCyR rate between patients with values above or below the median IPP or IC50 value approached but did not reach statistical significance (p=0.055 for both cases), potentially due to the lower number of patients for which response data by mutation has been reported (7 vs 11 mutations, 65 vs 295 patients with mutations, for nilotinib and dasatinib respectively). Taken together, our data suggest an integrated metric such as IPP may have both further relevance in conjunction with individual pharmacokinetic measurements and application to improved interpretation of mutationally-guided TKI treatment selection in CML and other malignancies. Disclosures: Vainstein: Neumedicines Inc: Employment. Druker:MolecularMD: OHSU and Dr. Druker have a financial interest in MolecularMD. Dr Druker is a scientific founder, consultant, and stock holder in MolecularMD. OHSU has licensed technology used in some of these clinical trials to MolecularMD., OHSU and Dr. Druker have a financial interest in MolecularMD. Dr Druker is a scientific founder, consultant, and stock holder in MolecularMD. OHSU has licensed technology used in some of these clinical trials to MolecularMD. Other; Novartis, Bristol-Myers Squibb: Dr Druker's institution has contracts with these companies to pay for patient costs, nurse and data manager salaries, and institutional overhead. Dr Druker does not derive salary, nor does his lab receive funds from these contracts. Other.


Author(s):  
Maribel Lozano ◽  
Maribel Lozano ◽  
Wendy Soria ◽  
Wendy Soria ◽  
Giovanna R. Almanza ◽  
...  

Cancer is the leading cause of death worldwide, and there is a constant need for new treatment strategies. Sesquiterpene lactones containing a 3-methylenedihydrofuran-2(3H)-one (or a-methylene-g-lactone) moiety, for example damsin (1), are Michael acceptors that affect biological processes such as cell proliferation, death/apoptosis, and cell migration, by interfering with cell signalling pathways. Although the reactivity of the α-methylene-γ-lactone moiety is important for these effects, the Michael addition is reversible and it can be assumed that also other parts of the molecules will moderate any given biological activity. In this investigation, the cytotoxicity of 23 a-methylene-g-lactones towards normal breast epithelial MCF-10A cells as well as breast cancer JIMT-1 cells is compared. Most of the investigated compounds are semisynthetic derivatives prepared by the condensation of the natural product damsin (1) with aldehydes. The two cell lines were treated with various concentrations of the compounds in dose response assays, and the 50 % inhibitory concentration (IC50) was determined from dose response curves. The IC50 values were found to depend strongly on the overall structure. The ratio between the IC50 values for MCF-10A and JIMT-1 cells, as a measure for the selectivity of a compound to kill cancer cells, was calculated, and found to vary between just over 1 to more than 10. The most potent derivatives formed from the condensation of 1 with aromatic aldehydes towards JIMT-1 cells are 3a and 3i, both with ratios between the IC50 values for MCF-10A and JIMT-1 cells close to 5. Also some aldol condensation products with acyclic aldehydes, i.e. 3r and 3u, were equally potent, and the latter showed the highest selectivity (ratio > 10). Structure-activity relationships that may explain the observed differences in potency and selectivity are discussed.


2008 ◽  
Vol 414 (2) ◽  
pp. 291-300 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert J. Paproski ◽  
Frank Visser ◽  
Jing Zhang ◽  
Tracey Tackaberry ◽  
Vijaya Damaraju ◽  
...  

hENT1 (human equilibrative nucleoside transporter 1) is inhibited by nanomolar concentrations of various structurally distinct coronary vasodilator drugs, including dipyridamole, dilazep, draflazine, soluflazine and NBMPR (nitrobenzylmercaptopurine ribonucleoside). When a library of randomly mutated hENT1 cDNAs was screened using a yeast-based functional complementation assay for resistance to dilazep, a clone containing the W29G mutation was identified. Multiple sequence alignments revealed that this residue was highly conserved. Mutations at Trp29 were generated and tested for adenosine transport activity and inhibitor sensitivity. Trp29 mutations significantly reduced the apparent Vmax and/or increased the apparent Km values for adenosine transport. Trp29 mutations increased the IC50 values for hENT1 inhibition by dipyridamole, dilazep, NBMPR, soluflazine and draflazine. NBMPR and soluflazine displayed remarkably similar trends, with large aromatic substitutions at residue 29 resulting in the lowest IC50 values, suggesting that both drugs could interact via ring-stacking interactions with Trp29. The W29T mutant displayed a selective loss of pyrimidine nucleoside transport activity, which contrasts with the previously identified L442I mutant that displayed a selective loss of purine nucleoside transport. W29T, L442I and the double mutant W29T/L442I were characterized kinetically for nucleoside transport activity. A helical wheel projection of TM (transmembrane segment) 1 suggests that Trp29 is positioned close to Met33, implicated previously in nucleoside and inhibitor recognition, and that both residues line the permeant translocation pathway. The data also suggest that Trp29 forms part of, or lies close to, the binding sites for dipyridamole, dilazep, NBMPR, soluflazine and draflazine.


2005 ◽  
Vol 280 (16) ◽  
pp. 15880-15887 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen A. Baldwin ◽  
Sylvia Y. M. Yao ◽  
Ralph J. Hyde ◽  
Amy M. L. Ng ◽  
Sophie Foppolo ◽  
...  

The first mammalian examples of the equilibrative nucleoside transporter family to be characterized, hENT1 and hENT2, were passive transporters located predominantly in the plasma membranes of human cells. We now report the functional characterization of members of a third subgroup of the family, from human and mouse, which differ profoundly in their properties from previously characterized mammalian nucleoside transporters. The 475-residue human and mouse proteins, designated hENT3 and mENT3, respectively, are 73% identical in amino acid sequence and possess long N-terminal hydrophilic domains that bear typical (DE)XXXL(LI) endosomal/lysosomal targeting motifs. ENT3 transcripts and proteins are widely distributed in human and rodent tissues, with a particular abundance in placenta. However, in contrast to ENT1 and ENT2, the endogenous and green fluorescent protein-tagged forms of the full-length hENT3 protein were found to be predominantly intracellular proteins that co-localized, in part, with lysosomal markers in cultured human cells. Truncation of the hydrophilic N-terminal region or mutation of its dileucine motif to alanine caused the protein to be relocated to the cell surface both in human cells and inXenopusoocytes, allowing characterization of its transport activity in the latter. The protein proved to be a broad selectivity, low affinity nucleoside transporter that could also transport adenine. Transport activity was relatively insensitive to the classical nucleoside transport inhibitors nitrobenzylthioinosine, dipyridamole, and dilazep and was sodium ion-independent. However, it was strongly dependent upon pH, and the optimum pH value of 5.5 probably reflected the location of the transporter in acidic, intracellular compartments.


1974 ◽  
Vol 32 (02/03) ◽  
pp. 356-365 ◽  
Author(s):  
F Haverkate ◽  
D. W Traas

SummaryIn the fibrin plate assay different types of relationships between the dose of applied proteolytic enzyme and the response have been previously reported. This study was undertaken to determine whether a generally valid relationship might exist.Trypsin, chymotrypsin, papain, the plasminogen activator urokinase and all of the microbial proteases investigated, including brinase gave a linear relationship between the logarithm of the enzyme concentration and the diameter of the circular lysed zone. A similar linearity of dose-response curves has frequently been found by investigators who used enzyme plate assays with substrates different from fibrin incorporated in an agar gel. Consequently, it seems that this linearity of dose-response curves is generally valid for the fibrin plate assay as well as for other enzyme plate bioassays.Both human plasmin and porcine tissue activator of plasminogen showed deviations from linearity of semi-logarithmic dose-response curves in the fibrin plate assay.


1991 ◽  
Vol 65 (02) ◽  
pp. 160-164 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marina Poggio ◽  
Armando Tripodi ◽  
Guglielmo Mariani ◽  
Pier Mannuccio Mannucci ◽  

SummaryBeing a putative predictor of ischemic heart disease, the measurement of factor VII (FVTI) coagulant activity will be presumably requested to clinical laboratories with increasing frequency. To assess the influence on FVII assays of different thromboplastins and FVII-deficient plasmas we compared performances of all possible combinations of 5 thromboplastins and 6 deficient plasmas. The reproducibility of the clotting times of the dose-response curves for human and rabbit thromboplastins were acceptable (CV lower than 7%), whereas bovine thromboplastin had a higher CV. Reproducibility was very similar for all deficient plasmas when they were used in combination with a given thromboplastin. Responsiveness of the dose-response curve did not depend on the deficient plasma but rather on the thromboplastin: one rabbit thromboplastin was the least responsive, the bovine thromboplastin the most responsive, the human and the remaining two rabbit thromboplastins had intermediate responsiveness. Assay sensitivity to cold-activated FVII varied according to the thromboplastin: the bovine thromboplastin was the most sensitive, the human thromboplastin the least sensitive, of the three rabbit thromboplastins two were relatively sensitive, one was almost insensitive. In conclusion, our results indicate that thromboplastin rather than deficient plasma is the crucial factor in the standardization of FVII assay.


1967 ◽  
Vol 56 (4) ◽  
pp. 619-625 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans Jacob Koed ◽  
Christian Hamburger

ABSTRACT Comparison of the dose-response curves for LH of ovine origin (NIH-LH-S8) and of human origin (IRP-HMG-2) using the OAAD test showed a small, though statistically significant difference, the dose-response curve for LH of human origin being a little flatter. Two standard curves for ovine LH obtained with 14 months' interval, were parallel but at different levels of ovarian ascorbic acid. When the mean ascorbic acid depletions were calculated as percentages of the control levels, the two curves for NIH-LH-S8 were identical. The use of standards of human origin in the OAAD test for LH activity of human preparations is recommended.


1962 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 143-153 ◽  
Author(s):  
U. Henriques

ABSTRACT A bioassay of thyroid hormone has been developed using Xenopus larvae made hypothyroid by the administration of thiourea. Only tadpoles of uniform developmental rate were used. Thiourea was given just before the metamorphotic climax in concentrations that produced neoteni in an early metamorphotic stage. During maintained thiourea neotoni, 1-thyroxine and 1-triiodothyronine were added as sodium salts to the water for three days and at the end of one week the stage of metamorphosis produced was determined. In this way identical dose-response curves were obtained for the two compounds. No qualitative differences between their effects were noted except that triiodothyronine seemed more toxic than thyroxine in equivalent doses. Triiodothyronine was found to be 7–12 times as active as thyroxine.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document