Abstract

Human dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) protein levels rapidly increase upon exposure to methotrexate, a potent inhibitor of this enzyme. A model to explain this increase proposes that DHFR inhibits its own translation by binding to its cognate mRNA and that methotrexate disrupts the DHFR protein-mRNA complex allowing its translation to resume. In the present study, Chinese hamster ovary cells lacking DHFR were transfected with wild type and mutants of human DHFR to identify amino acids that are essential for increases in DHFR in response to methotrexate. Glu-30, Leu-22, and Ser-118 were involved in the up-regulation of DHFR protein levels by methotrexate and certain other antifolates. Cells transfected with E30A, L22R, and S118A mutants that did not respond to methotrexate up-regulation had higher basal levels of DHFR, consistent with the model, i.e. lack of feedback regulation of these enzymes. Although cells containing the S118A mutant enzyme had higher levels of DHFR and had catalytic activity similar to that of wild type DHFR, they had the same sensitivity to the cytotoxicity of methotrexate, as were cells with wild type DHFR. This finding provides evidence that the adaptive up-regulation of DHFR by methotrexate contributes to the decreased sensitivity to this drug. Based on these observations, a new model is proposed whereby DHFR exists in two conformations, one bound to DHFR mRNA and the other bound to NADPH. The mutants that are not up-regulated by methotrexate are unable to bind their cognate mRNA.

Highlights

  • Erwin Chargaff (1905–2002) was born in Czernowitz, which at that time was a provincial capital of the Austrian monarchy

  • In 1935 he returned to the United States to become an assistant professor of biochemistry at Columbia University

  • Because large amounts of DNA would be hard to come by, his methods had to be applicable to small amounts of material. The formulation of this procedure took two years and was aided by several recent technological developments including the introduction of paper chromatography to separate and identify minute quantities of organic substances and the photoelectric ultraviolet spectrophotometer

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Summary

Introduction

Erwin Chargaff (1905–2002) was born in Czernowitz, which at that time was a provincial capital of the Austrian monarchy. Started Chargaff’s work on the chemistry of nucleic acids. The paper describing Chargaff’s analytical method is reprinted here as a Journal of Biological Chemistry (JBC) Classic.

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