Sample records for amethopterin

  1. Experimentally Validated Novel Inhibitors of Helicobacter pylori Phosphopantetheine Adenylyltransferase Discovered by Virtual High-Throughput Screening

    PubMed Central

    Cheng, Chao-Sheng; Jia, Kai-Fan; Chen, Ting; Chang, Shun-Ya; Lin, Ming-Shen; Yin, Hsien-Sheng

    2013-01-01

    Helicobacter pylori is a major etiologic agent associated with the development and maintenance of human gastritis. The goal of this study was to develop novel antibiotics against H. pylori, and we thus targeted H. pylori phosphopantetheine adenylyltransferase (HpPPAT). PPAT catalyzes the penultimate step in coenzyme A biosynthesis. Its inactivation effectively prevents bacterial viability, making it an attractive target for antibacterial drug discovery. We employed virtual high-throughput screening and the HpPPAT crystal structure to identify compounds in the PubChem database that might act as inhibitors of HpPPAT. d-amethopterin is a potential inhibitor for blocking HpPPAT activity and suppressing H. pylori viability. Following treatment with d-amethopterin, H. pylori exhibited morphological characteristics associated with cell death. d-amethopterin is a mixed inhibitor of HpPPAT activity; it simultaneously occupies the HpPPAT 4'-phosphopantetheine- and ATP-binding sites. Its binding affinity is in the micromolar range, implying that it is sufficiently potent to serve as a lead compound in subsequent drug development. Characterization of the d-amethopterin and HpPPAT interaction network in a docked model will allow us to initiate rational drug optimization to improve the inhibitory efficacy of d-amethopterin. We anticipate that novel, potent, and selective HpPPAT inhibitors will emerge for the treatment of H. pylori infection. PMID:24040220

  2. [Surgical and chemotherapeutic treatment of fibrosarcoma in a cat].

    PubMed

    Odendaal, J S; Cronje, J D; Bastianello, S S

    1983-09-01

    Fibrosarcoma in a cat was repeatedly treated unsuccessfully by surgery and chemotherapy, which included drugs such as amethopterin sodium at very high dosages, vincristine sulphate and doxyrubicine hydrochloride.

  3. Dose—response relationships for agents inhibiting the immune response

    PubMed Central

    Berenbaum, M. C.; Brown, I. N.

    1964-01-01

    Mice were injected with T.A.B. vaccine and, 2 days later, with various doses of different compounds. The relation between dose of compound, mortality and antibody production was studied, and therapeutic indices were calculated for a number of compounds. The most effective agent in suppressing antibody production at relatively non-toxic doses was cyclophosphamide, with next amethopterin (the effect of which was, however, inexplicably erratic), 6-thioguanine and 6-mercaptopurine, in that order. Vincaleukoblastine, triethylene melamine, triethylenethiophosphoramide, mannomustine and 5-fluorouracil were less effective. Compounds of a miscellaneous group (boric acid, caffeine, sodium nitrite, bacitracin, neomycin and polymyxin `B') were studied in the same way: they had no effect on antibody production, even in lethal doses. PMID:14113077

  4. Acute hepatotoxicity induced by hepatotoxins in Suncus murinus

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Lin, S.; Saito, H.; Yohro, T.

    A comparative study was conducted to contrast the hepatotoxicity of several chemicals in the musk shrew (Suncus murinus) versus other common laboratory species (mouse or rat), and the following results were obtained from serum enzymes (SGOT and SGPT) and histopathological findings of liver specimens. (1) The sensitivity of Suncus liver to CCl/sub 4/ was different from that of mouse liver. (2) The sensitivity of Suncus liver to ..beta..-D-galactosamine was weaker than that of rat liver. (3) The sensitivity of Suncus liver to ethanol was stronger than that of mouse liver. After a single oral administration of ethanol (99.5% v/v, 0.1more » ml/50 g body weight), the gallbladder of Suncus became enlarged and dark blue in color. (4) A striking fatty degeneration was seen 24 h after a single ip administration of amethopterin at 50 mg/kg in Suncus liver.« less

  5. Effect of temperature on the methotrexate BSA interaction: Spectroscopic study

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Sułkowska, A.; Maciążek, M.; Równicka, J.; Bojko, B.; Pentak, D.; Sułkowski, W. W.

    2007-05-01

    Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is an autoimmune and chronic inflammatory illness which affects about one percent of the world's population. Methotrexate (4-amino-10-methylfolic acid) (MTX) also known as amethopterin is commonly used to treat rheumatoid arthritis (RA). It is transported in the circulary system as a complex with serum albumin. The aim of this study was to investigate the interactions of MTX with transporting protein with the use of spectroscopic methods. The binding of MTX to bovine serum albumin (BSA) was studied by monitoring the changes in the emission fluorescence spectra of protein in the presence of MTX at excitation wavelength of 280 nm and 295 nm. The quenching of protein fluorescence at temperature range from 298 K to 316 K was observed. Energy transfer between methotrexate and fluorophores contained in the serum albumin structure was found at the molar ratio MTX:BSA 7.5:1. The relative fluorescence intensity of BSA decreases with increase of temperature. Similar results were observed for BSA excited with 280 nm and 295 nm at the same temperature range. The presence of MTX seems to prevent these changes. Temperature dependence of the binding constant has been presented. The binding and quenching constants for equilibrium complex were calculated using Scatchard and Stern-Volmer method, respectively. The results show that MTX forms π-π complex with aromatic amino acid residues of BSA. The binding site for MTX on BSA was found to be situated in the hydrophobic IIA or IB subdomain where the Trps were located. The spontaneity of MTX-BSA complex formation in the temperature range 298-316 K was ascertained.

  6. EFFECTS OF VARIOUS IMMUNE RABBIT SERUMS ON THE CELLS OF SEVERAL TRANSPLANTED MOUSE LYMPHOMAS IN VITRO AND IN VIVO

    PubMed Central

    Mohos, Steven C.; Kidd, John G.

    1957-01-01

    Immune serums prepared in rabbits with antigens made from normal mouse organs and tissues that were presumably devoid of large numbers of lymphocytic cells (notably kidney, liver, brain, whole embryos, and erythrocytes) proved lethal for the cells of several transplanted mouse lymphomas in vitro in the presence of complement; but these immune serums, when given intraperitoneally in large amounts to susceptible mice that had been implanted subcutaneously with lymphoma cells of one or another of several types, failed entirely to inhibit growth of the lymphoma cells in vivo. In contrast, immune serums made with cells procured from transplanted mouse lymphomas as antigens, and those made with cells from normal mouse thymus or lymph nodes, acted even more powerfully upon the several types of lymphoma cells in vitro than did the immune serums prepared with normal mouse organs, and when given intraperitoneally to implanted mice they brought about death of the lymphoma cells in vivo, the effect being to a considerable extent specific and referable to an antibody that reacts with neoplastic and non-neoplastic lymphocytic cells of mice, as absorption experiments disclosed. In comparative tests, furthermore, the anti-lymphoma serums acted more powerfully upon the lymphoma cells in vivo than did such chemotherapeutic agents as amethopterin, azaguanine, ethionine, azaserine, and 6-mercaptopurine, given singly or in various combinations in maximal tolerated amounts, though their effects were not so powerful as those exerted by normal guinea pig serum on lymphoma cells of two types that are susceptible to its action in vivo. The significance of the findings was briefly discussed. PMID:13406182

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