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Journal ArticleDOI

Induction of nuclear catechol-O-methyltransferase by estrogens in hamster kidney: implications for estrogen-induced renal cancer.

TLDR
The findings are consistent with the catechol/quinone estrogen hypothesis of estrogen-induced cancer, while the translocation of the enzyme to the nucleus following estrogen treatment suggests a response to a threat to the genome by electrophilic products of catechols.
Abstract
Catecholestrogens are postulated to contribute to carcinogenesis by causing DNA damage mediated by reactive oxygen species generated during redox cycling between catechol and quinone estrogens, and by quinone estrogens that can form depurinating adducts. The above hypothesis is based principally on studies of the cancers that develop in renal cortex of hamsters treated with primary estrogens: Hamster kidney can catalyze 2- and 4-hydroxylation of estrogens and support their redox cycling, and the kidneys of estradiol-treated hamsters show evidence of oxidative cellular and DNA damage. Here we used immunocytochemisty to test the postulate that catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT), the enzyme that can prevent oxidation of catecholestrogens to their quinone derivatives, would be induced in renal cortex of hamsters treated with estradiol or ethinyl estradiol. In kidneys of control hamsters, COMT was localized in cytoplasm of epithelial cells of proximal convoluted tubules, predominantly in the juxtamedullary region where the estrogen-induced cancers arise. After 2- or 4-weeks of treatment with either estrogen, COMT was seen in epithelial cells of proximal convoluted tubules throughout the cortex, and many cells also showed intense nuclear COMT immunoreactivity. Estradiol-induced renal cancers were negative for COMT, but were surrounded by tubules with intense cytoplasmic and nuclear immunostaining. The nucleus-associated COMT was shown by immunoblot analysis to be the soluble form of the enzyme. Using reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction amplification, hamster kidney COMT was shown to lack the putative nuclear localization signal sequence present in human COMT. A second phase II enzyme, CuZn-superoxide dismutase (CuZnSOD), was shown by immunocytochemistry to remain extranuclear in proximal convoluted tubules of estrogen-treated hamsters, which indicates entry of COMT into the nucleus to be selective. The findings are consistent with the catechol/quinone estrogen hypothesis of estrogen-induced cancer, while the translocation of the enzyme to the nucleus following estrogen treatment suggests a response to a threat to the genome by electrophilic products of catechols.

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Journal Article

Catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT): biochemistry, molecular biology, pharmacology, and clinical efficacy of the new selective COMT inhibitors.

TL;DR: The enzyme responsible for the O- methylation, catechol- O -methyltransferase (COMT) was partly purified and characterized by the same group as EC, which first described the enzyme-catalyzed O-methylation of catechlamines and other catechols in the late 1950s.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization and implications of estrogenic down-regulation of human catechol-O-methyltransferase gene transcription.

TL;DR: These findings provide the first evidence and molecular mechanism for estrogen to inhibit COMT gene transcription, which may shed new insight into the role of estrogen in the pathophysiology of different human disorders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estrogen metabolism by conjugation.

TL;DR: In this chapter, the biochemistry and molecular genetics of those conjugative reaction pathways are discussed and the involvement of specific enzymatic isoforms is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Catechol-O-methyltransferase and its inhibitors in Parkinson's disease.

TL;DR: The current knowledge on the enzyme catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) and the role of COMT inhibitors in PD are reviewed and conversion of levodopa to dopamine at the target region in the brain and facilitation of the continuous action of this amine at the receptor sites are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lifestyle factors, exposures, genetic susceptibility, and renal cell cancer risk: a review.

TL;DR: Recent trends in RCC incidence and the currently identifiable etiological causes that account for approximately half of the RCC cases diagnoses are described and additional risk factors are focused on that may be helpful in explaining the increasing incidence trends and the geographic or racial variation observed nationally and worldwide.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Kinetics of human soluble and membrane-bound catechol O-methyltransferase: a revised mechanism and description of the thermolabile variant of the enzyme.

TL;DR: Comparison of velocity parameters, substrate selectivity, and regioselectivity of the methylation of both enzyme forms, and a revised mechanism for the reaction cycle are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular origin of cancer: Catechol estrogen-3,4-quinones as endogenous tumor initiators

TL;DR: The hypothesis that CE-3,4-Q are endogenous tumor initiators is supported, supported by data that indicates that depurinating hydrocarbon-DNA adducts generate oncogenic mutations found in mouse skin papillomas.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular Mechanisms of Estrogen Carcinogenesis

TL;DR: The examples demonstrate that the parent compounds and their metabolites cause both nongenotoxic cell proliferative effects as well as direct and indirect genotoxic effects, which illustrates the complex nature of estrogen carcinogenesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Protein Import into the Cell Nucleus

TL;DR: The study of the mechanisms by which proteins are selectively accumulations in the cell nucleus has lagged behind the study of other transport processes, such as those that direct proteins to the cell exterior or to cytoplasmic organelles.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of phosphorylation and the CDC28 protein kinase in cell cycle-regulated nuclear import of the S. cerevisiae transcription factor SW15

TL;DR: The intracellular localization of the S. cerevisiae transcription factor SWI5's nuclear localization signal (NLS) is identified and it is shown that it can confer cell cycle-dependent nuclear entry to a heterologous protein.
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