INCREASED N-MYRISTOYLTRANSFERASE ACTIVITY OBSERVED IN RAT AND HUMAN COLONIC TUMORS

被引:81
作者
MAGNUSON, BA
RAJA, RVS
MOYANA, TN
SHARMA, RK
机构
[1] UNIV SASKATCHEWAN,DEPT PATHOL,SASKATOON,SK S7N 4H4,CANADA
[2] UNIV SASKATCHEWAN,COLL MED,SASKATOON CANC CTR,SASKATOON,SK S7N 4H4,CANADA
关键词
D O I
10.1093/jnci/87.21.1630
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Background: Colorectal cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer death in North America. Since treatment of colonic cancer remains difficult because of the lack of effective chemotherapeutic agents, it is important to continue to search for cellular functions that can be disrupted by chemotherapeutic drugs and inhibit the development or progression of this disease. Modification of proteins by myristoylation has been recognized as important in the function of various viral, oncogenic, and signal-transduction proteins and thus has been proposed as a target for chemotherapeutic drug design. However, the activity of the enzyme that catalyzes this modification, N-myristoyltransferase, has not been investigated in cancer relative to normal tissue. Purpose: The purpose of this study was twofold: 1) to investigate the activity of N-myristoyltransferase in azoxymethance-induced rat colonic cancer tissue compared with normal and normal-appearing rat colonic tissue and 2) to determine if similar differences would be observed in a small sample of human colonic tumors. Methods: N-myristoyltransferase activity was determined in 45 colonic tissue specimens from Sprague-Dawley rats--10 given injections of the colon carcinogen, azoxymethane, and three untreated. Tissue specimens included 35 colonic tumors of varying pathologic stages, seven specimens of normal-appearing adhjacent mucosa, and three specimens of normal colonic mucosa. Colectomy specimens from five patients were assayed for N-myristoyltransferase activity. Subcellular distribution of N-myristoyltransferase activity was determined. Synthetic peptides of known myristoylated proteins-pp60(src) and cyclic adenosine monophospate-dependent protein kinase analyses of N-myristoyltransferase in colonic cancer and normal-appearing colonic tissue. All P values are two-tailed. Results: N-myristoyltransferase activity was increase in rat colonic tumors compared with normal-appearing adjacent mucosa and normal mucosa (P=.0002). Elevation of N-mristoyltransferase activity was present in all tumors, including colonic polyps. Increased N-myristoyltransferase activity was also observed in human colonic tumors and was predomintly cytosolic. N-myristolyltranferase of colonic cancer tissues had a similar Michaelis constant but an approximate twofold higher maximum velocity for both the pp60(src) and cyclic adenosine monophosphate-dependent protein kinase-derived peptides compared with N-myristoyltransferase of normal-appearing tissue. Conclusions: This study demonstrates for the first time is higher in colonic epithelial neoplasms than in normal-appearing colonic tissue and that an increase in N-myristoyltransferase activity appears at an early stage in colonic carcinogenesis.
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页码:1630 / 1635
页数:6
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