tretinoin has been researched along with beta-ionone* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for tretinoin and beta-ionone
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Synthesis and preliminary biological evaluation of beta-carotene and retinoic acid oxidation products.
Synthesis of the beta-carotene oxidation product, 2,3-dihydro-5,8-endoperoxy-beta-apo-carotene-13-one (1) was achieved in six steps starting from beta-ionone. Photo-oxygenation of all trans-retinoic acid (8) and 13-cis-retinoic acid (9) produced a mixture of 5S*,8S*-epidioxy-5,8-dihydroretinoic acid (10) and 13-cis-5S*,8S*-epidioxy-5,8-dihydroretinoic acid (11). Methylation of the crude photo-oxygenation mixture afforded the corresponding methyl esters 12 and 13, respectively, both of which underwent ready aerial oxidation yielding hitherto unknown oxidation products of retinoic acid identified as methyl 5S*,8S*-epidioxy-9,10beta-epoxy-5,8,9,10-tetrahydroretinoate (14) and methyl 13-cis-5S*,8S*-epidioxy-9,10beta-epoxy-5,8,9,10-tetrahydroretinoate (15). Evaluation of 1, all trans-retinoic acid (8), 13-cis-retinoic acid (9), and the photo-oxygenation products 10-15 in a panel of five cancer cell lines showed 1 to be inactive and that 11 is significantly cytotoxic compared with the other retinoic acid analogs suggesting the requirement of the carboxylic acid moiety and the cis-geometry of the 13(14) double bond for cytotoxic activity. Topics: Antineoplastic Agents; beta Carotene; Cell Line, Tumor; Cell Survival; Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor; Humans; Norisoprenoids; Oxidation-Reduction; Photochemistry; Structure-Activity Relationship; Tretinoin | 2006 |
Rod outer segment retinol dehydrogenase: substrate specificity and role in phototransduction.
The reaction catalyzed by all-trans-retinol dehydrogenase of rod outer segments completes the quenching of photoactivated rhodopsin and initiates the cycle of reactions leading to regeneration of visual pigment. The goal of this study was to determine the kinetic parameters of the dehydrogenase at physiological levels of bleaching, to investigate its specificity, and to determine its possible role in modulating phototransduction. Reduction of all-trans-retinal could be measured after bleaching < 0.15% rhodopsin. Kinetic parameters for the forward reaction determined with endogenous all-trans-retinal were Km = 1.1 microM; Vmax = 7 nmol/min/mg rhodopsin. The low enzymatic activity suggests that at high bleach rates, all-trans-retinal could accumulate, increasing the steady state level of bleaching intermediates or promoting formation of pseudophotoproducts. Active pseudophotoproducts, which stimulate Gt activation and opsin phosphorylation by rhodopsin kinase, are formed with opsin and all-trans-retinal as well as retinal analogues lacking the 13 methyl or the terminal two carbons of the polyene chain. Addition of all-trans-retinol, NADP, and [32P]ATP to rod outer segments increased rhodopsin phosphorylation. Kinetic parameters for the reverse reaction determined with exogenous all-trans-retinol were Km = 10 microM; Vmax = 11 nmol/min/mg rhodopsin. Our results support the hypothesis that all-trans-retinol dehydrogenase could influence the phototransduction cascade, including activities of Gt, rhodopsin kinase, and binding of arrestin, by impeding the recycling of rhodopsin at high bleach levels. Topics: Alcohol Oxidoreductases; Animals; Catalysis; Cattle; GTP-Binding Proteins; Kinetics; Membranes; Norisoprenoids; Photochemistry; Retinaldehyde; Rhodopsin; Rod Cell Outer Segment; Rod Opsins; Substrate Specificity; Terpenes; Tretinoin | 1994 |