Purine analogue

Class of antymetabolites for cytostatic chemotherapy

Purine analogues are antimetabolites that mimic the structure of metabolic purines.

Examples

  • Nucleobase analogues
    • Thiopurines such as thioguanine are used to treat acute leukemias and remissions in acute granulocytic leukemias.
      • Azathioprine is the main immunosuppressive cytotoxic substance. A prodrug, it is widely used in transplantation to control rejection reactions. It is nonenzymatically cleaved to mercaptopurine, a purine analogue that inhibits DNA synthesis. By preventing the clonal expansion of lymphocytes in the induction phase of the immune response, it affects both cell immunity and humoral immunity. It also successfully suppresses autoimmunity.
      • Mercaptopurine
      • Thioguanine
  • Nucleoside analogues
    • Clofarabine
    • Pentostatin and cladribine are adenosine analogs that are used primarily to treat hairy cell leukemia.
  • Nucleotide analogues
    • Fludarabine inhibits multiple DNA polymerases, DNA primase, and DNA ligase I, and is S phase-specific (since these enzymes are highly active during DNA replication).

Medical uses

Purine antimetabolites are commonly used to treat cancer by interfering with DNA replication.[1]

References

  1. ^ Parker, William B. (2009). "Enzymology of Purine and Pyrimidine Antimetabolites Used in the Treatment of Cancer". Chem Rev. 109 (7): 2880–2893. doi:10.1021/cr900028p. PMC 2827868. PMID 19476376.
  • v
  • t
  • e
DNA virus antivirals (primarily J05, also S01AD and D06BB)
Baltimore I
Herpesvirus
DNA-synthesis
inhibitor
TK activated
Purine analogue
Pyrimidine analogue
Not TK activated
Other
HPV/MC
Vaccinia
Poxviridae
Hepatitis B (VII)Multiple/general
Nucleic acid inhibitors
Interferon
Multiple/unknown
  • v
  • t
  • e
Nucleic acid constituents
Nucleobase
Nucleoside
Ribonucleoside
Deoxyribonucleoside
Nucleotide
(Nucleoside monophosphate)
Ribonucleotide
Deoxyribonucleotide
Cyclic nucleotide
Nucleoside diphosphate
Nucleoside triphosphate
  • v
  • t
  • e
Receptor
(ligands)
P0 (adenine)
P1
(adenosine)
P2
(nucleotide)
P2X
(ATPTooltip Adenosine triphosphate)
P2Y
Transporter
(blockers)
CNTsTooltip Concentrative nucleoside transporters
ENTsTooltip Equilibrative nucleoside transporters
PMATTooltip Plasma membrane monoamine transporter
Enzyme
(inhibitors)
XOTooltip Xanthine oxidase
Others
Others
See also: Receptor/signaling modulators


Stub icon

This biochemistry article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e