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Folate AntagonistsFolic acid is a growth factor that provides single
carbons to the precursors used to form the nucleotides used in the synthesis of DNA and RNA. Folate antagonists, also known as antifolates, act by blocking the active site of dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR), an enzyme that reduces folic acid
to its active form. Active folates are co-enzymes necessary for methylation in various metabolic processes, in which they deliver methyl groups (one-carbon units) to specific target molecules. The inhibition of the dihydrofolate reductase keeps the folic acid in an inactive state. A decrease in the amount of activated folates is thought to cause a decrease in methylation, inhibiting a necessary step in purine and thymidylate formation. When nucleic acid formation is compromised because of a lack of nucleotides, cell growth is disrupted. More Details: Methotrexate inhibits the activity of DHFR by tightly, though
reversibly, binding to it rendering it inactive. It enters the cell via
specific folate receptors, the low pH folate transporter, or by reduced
folate carriers. Once in the cell, methotrexate binds to DHFR. This binding
reduces the amount of DHFR available to the cell, and stops the reduction
of the tetrahydrofolate precursors, ie. folic acid and dihydrofolic acid.
Without tetrahdryofolate, the active folate, the cell cannot create new
purine and thymidine nucleotides for DNA synthesis. Without replication,
cell growth is blocked.
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