JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org.. The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) and Brogan & Partners are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Environmental Health Perspectives.The anthracycline antitumor antibiotics occupy a central position in the chemotherapeutic control of cancer. They remain, however, antibiotics of the last resort and thus exhibit toxicity both to the neoplasm and to the host organism. As part of the continuing effort to dissociate the molecular processes responsible for these two separate toxicities, attention has been drawn to the intrinsic redox capacity of their tetrahydronapthacenedione aglycone moiety, and to the possible expression of this redox activity against those biomolecules for which anthracyclines have a particular affinity (polynucleotides and membranes). This review is a synopsis of the present trends and thoughts concerning this relationship, written from the point of view of the intrinsic chemical competence of the anthracyclines and their metabolites. While our ignorance is profound-the precise molecular locus of the antitumor expression of the anthracyclines remains unknown-there is now evidence that the relationship of the anthracyclines to the DNA (possibly requiring enzymatic cooperation) and to the membranes, with neither event requiring redox chemistry, may comprise the core of the antitumor effects. The adventitious expression of the redox activity under either aerobic conditions (in which circumstances molecular oxygen is reduced) or anaerobic conditions (in which circumstances potentially reactive aglycone tautomers are obtained) is therefore thought to contribute more strongly to the host toxicity. Yet little remains proven, and the understanding of the intrinsic chemical competence can do little more than lightly define the boundaries within which are found these and numerous other working hypotheses.This content downloaded from 91.
Spinach NADPH:ferredoxin oxidoreductase (EC 1.6.7.1) catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of the anthracyclines daunomycin, aclacinomycin A, and nogalamycin and their respective 7-deoxyanthracyclinones. Under anaerobic conditions, the endogenous rate of O2 reduction by NADPH catalyzed by ferredoxin reductase (0.12 s-1 at pH 7.4) is augmented by the anthracyclines and 7-deoxyanthracyclinones. The catalytic constants are approximately equivalent for this augmentation for all substrates (approximate V of 2 s-1 and KM of 75 microM). Both O2- and H2O2 are made. Under anaerobic conditions, anthracycline reduction catalyzed by ferredoxin reductase results in the elimination of the C-7 substituent to provide a quinone methide intermediate. Following tautomerization by C-7 protonation, 7-deoxyanthracyclinones are obtained. Under appropriate conditions these may be further reduced to the 7-deoxyanthracyclinone hydroquinones. For daunomycin, the quinone methide is formed rapidly after reduction and is easily monitored at 600 nm. It may react with electrophiles other than H+, as demonstrated by its competitive trapping by p-carboxybenzaldehyde. It may also react with nucleophiles, as demonstrated by its competitive trapping by N-acetylcysteine. For aclacinomycin, quinone methide formation is also rapid although no distinct transient near 600 nm occurs. In addition to protonation, it reacts with itself providing the 7,7'-dimer. With ethyl xanthate as a thiolate nucleophile, adducts derived from addition to C-7 are obtained. For nogalamycin, quinone methide formation is not rapid. Nogalamycin is reduced to its hydroquinone, which slowly converts in a first-order process [k = (1.2 +/- 0.2) X 10(-3) s-1, pH 8.0, 30 degrees C] to the quinone methide, which is then quenched by protonation. Spinach ferredoxin in its reduced form is chemically competent for anthracycline reduction. Its effect on both the aerobic and anaerobic reactions catalyzed by ferredoxin reductase is to increase severalfold the overall velocity for anthracycline reduction. In conclusion, the aerobic reaction pathways for the anthracyclines as mediated by ferredoxin reductase are remarkably similar, while the anaerobic reactions are remarkably different. If these anthracyclines exert their antitumor activity by a common anaerobic pathway, it is most likely that the pathway is determined by the properties of the anthracycline as complexed to its in vivo target. The behavior of ferredoxin further suggests that not only low-potential flavin centers but also iron-sulfur centers should be regarded as important loci for anthracycline reductive activation.
The anthracycline antitumor antibiotics occupy a central position in the chemotherapeutic control of cancer. They remain, however, antibiotics of the last resort and thus exhibit toxicity both to the neoplasm and to the host organism. As part of the continuing effort to dissociate the molecular processes responsible for these two separate toxicities, attention has been drawn to the intrinsic redox capacity of their tetrahydronapthacenedione aglycone moiety, and to the possible expression of this redox activity against those biomolecules for which anthracyclines have a particular affinity (polynucleotides and membranes). This review is a synopsis of the present trends and thoughts concerning this relationship, written from the point of view of the intrinsic chemical competence of the anthracyclines and their metabolites. While our ignorance is profound-the precise molecular locus of the antitumor expression of the anthracyclines remains unknown-there is now evidence that the relationship of the anthracyclines to the DNA (possibly requiring enzymatic cooperation) and to the membranes, with neither event requiring redox chemistry, may comprise the core of the antitumor effects. The adventitious expression of the redox activity under either aerobic conditions (in which circumstances molecular oxygen is reduced) or anaerobic conditions (in which circumstances potentially reactive aglycone tautomers are obtained) is therefore thought to contribute more strongly to the host toxicity. Yet little remains proven, and the understanding of the intrinsic chemical competence can do little more than lightly define the boundaries within which are found these and numerous other working hypotheses.
A three-course sequence for first-year students that integrates beginning concepts in biology and chemistry has been designed. The first two courses that emphasize chemistry and its capacity to inform biological applications are described here. The content of the first course moves from small to large particles with an emphasis on membrane macrostructures and protein structure. Critical to this progression is an understanding of strong and weak bonding interactions within and between macrostructure subunits. The Boltzmann distribution and Boltzmann entropy are used in the second course to rationalize enthalpy and entropy changes in biochemical reactions and consequences of the second law of thermodynamics. Biochemical processes in the second course include protein folding, hydration, ligand binding to proteins, ATP hydrolysis, protein redox reactions, and enzyme kinetics. Attitude assessment indicated students were overwhelmingly satisfied with the course sequence. Students had a broader view of interdisciplinary science after finishing the sequence compared to their counterparts in the traditional chemistry or biology sequence. For schools that do not have a three-term schedule, integrated biological examples are provided to help strengthen ties between chemistry and biology disciplines.
This paper describes the St. Olaf College experience moving to a more interdisciplinary approach to student learning. The authors place this within the context of the three “P”s of higher education—people, place, and program. The key for transformation resided in focusing on the people and the place. In so doing, an interdisciplinary program emerged.
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