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This brief overview describes some of the properties of various cellular phospho­transferase systems, with particular emphasis on nucleoside 5'-triphosphate (NTP)- dependent protein kinases and nucleoside kinases, for which it is widely and impli­citly assumed that ATP is the intracellular phosphate donor. Numerous examples are presented, based on the in vitro properties of these enzymes, to show that ATP is not the only, or frequently not even the major, phosphate donor, and that this is probably reflected in vivo. It is pointed out that in vitro studies of donor and acceptor speci­ficities of kinases must take account of the intracellular concentrations of nucleoside 5-triphosphates, a problem also relevant to the design of nucleoside analogues as chemotherapeutic agents. Attention is also drawn to NTP analogues as substrates/ inhibitors of protein kinases, and to several examples of low-molecular mass non- peptide substrates of these enzymes.
Two non-conventional analogues of ATP, 3'-deoxyadenosine-2'-triphosphate (3'-d-2'-ATP) and 2'-deoxyadenosine-3'-triphosphate (2'-d-3'-ATP), the syntheses of which are described, were examined as potential phosphate donors for the nucleoside kinases: 2'-deoxycytidine kinase (dCK), cytosolic thymidine kinase (TK1) and mitochondrial thymidine kinase (TK2). The reactions were monitored by means of a mixture of [γ-32P]ATP and cold analogue, andór with the use of 3H-labelled acceptors and cold donor. With dCK, using equimolar mixtures of ATP with each analogue, and dC as acceptor, phosphate transfer from 3'-d-2'-ATP and 2'-d-3'-ATP amounted to 34% and 14%, respectively. With each analogue used alone (each at concentration of 100 μM), phosphate transfer from 3'-d-2'-ATP was 55% that from ATP, and from 2'-d-3'-ATP 16%. With human TK2, and equimolar mixtures of [γ-32P]ATP with each of the analogues, and 1 μM dT as acceptor, there was no detectable transfer from either analogue. But, when each analogue was used alone, phosphate transfer attained 11% and 5%, respectively, that for ATP alone. With the low affinity form of human TK1, and dT as acceptor, only low phosphate transfer occurred with either analogue used alone. Both compounds exhibited Michaelis-Menten kinetics (with significantly lower Vmax than ATP), while ATP exhibited cooperative kinetics with all three kinases.
The mammalian deoxyribonucleoside kinases thymidine kinase 1 and 2, deoxy- cytidine kinase and deoxyguanosine kinase phosphorylate deoxyribonucleosides and provide an alternative to de novo synthesis of DNA precursors. Their activities are essential for activation of several chemotherapeutically important nucleoside analogs. These four salvage kinase enzymes exhibit distinct substrate specificities for nucleoside analogs modified in the base and glycon moieties. In this review their, structure-activity relationships are discussed. Alternative routes for phosphorylation of nucleoside analogs are also reviewed, such as the phosphotransfer capacity of 5'-nucleotidase and protein kinases.
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