Protein Information

ID 874
Name Aldehyde dehydrogenases (protein family or complex)
Synonyms aldehyde dehydrogenase; aldehyde dehydrogenases

Compound Information

ID 1242
Name cyanamide
CAS cyanamide

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
3437102 Kohn FR, Landkamer GJ, Sladek NE: Effect of the aldehyde dehydrogenase inhibitor, cyanamide, on the ex vivo sensitivity of murine multipotent and committed hematopoietic progenitor cells to mafosfamide (ASTA Z 7557). Immunopharmacol Immunotoxicol. 1987;9(2-3):163-76.
The ex vivo sensitivity of murine multipotent (CFU-GEMM) and committed (CFU-Mk, CFU-GM, BFU-E and CFU-E) hematopoietic progenitor cells to mafosfamide was quantified with and without concurrent exposure to cyanamide, an inhibitor of aldehyde dehydrogenase activity. In the absence of cyanamide, CFU-GEMM, CFU-Mk and CFU-GM were approximately equisensitive to mafosfamide while the erythroid progenitors were more sensitive to the drug. Cyanamide potentiated the cytotoxicity of mafosfamide toward CFU-GEMM and CFU-Mk, but not toward CFU-GM, BFU-E and CFU-E. Cellular aldehyde dehydrogenases are known to catalyze the oxidation of 4-hydroxycyclophosphamide/aldophosphamide, the major intermediate in cyclophosphamide and mafosfamide activation, to the relatively nontoxic acid, carboxyphosphamide. Thus, our findings indicate that 1) murine CFU-GEMM contain the relevant aldehyde dehydrogenase activity, and 2) the relevant aldehyde dehydrogenase activity is retained upon differentiation to progenitors committed to the megakaryocytoid lineage, but lost upon differentiation to progenitors committed to the granulocytoid/monocytoid and erythroid lineages. The relative insensitivity of CFU-GM to mafosfamide is apparently due to a cellular determinant that influences their sensitivity to all cross-linking agents since CFU-GM were found to be relatively insensitive to non-oxazaphosphorine cross-linking agents as well.
34(0,1,1,4)