In tissue cultures of C-57 black mouse heart and sarcoma T-241, ß-2-thienyl-DL-alanine acts specifically as a phenylalanine antagonist.
Heart cultures can transaminate between ß-2-thienyl-DL-alanine and phenylpyruvate to form L-phenylalanine and thus block the toxic action of the remaining ß-2-thienyl-DL-alanine, whereas sarcoma T-241 cultures cannot.
Of eleven mouse tumors and four rat tumors tested for their ability to perform this reaction, nine tumors had little or no activity.
The ß-2-thienylpyruvic acid resulting from transamination further reacts to form a red compound the exact structure of which is not yet known.
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Copyright, 1952, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research New York
1952
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