A Polymerase Chain Reaction-Based Method to Detect Gene-Specific Adducts Induced by Anticancer Drugs. Clinical Application in Multiple Myeloma.

Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 1879-1879
Author(s):  
Meletios A. Dimopoulos ◽  
Christine Liakos ◽  
Hara G. Episkopou ◽  
Dimitra T. Stefanou ◽  
Soterios A. Kyrtopoulos ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1879 Poster Board I-903 DNA repair plays an important role in the protection of cells and tissues after exposure to genotoxic agents including chemotherapeutics. We have previously shown that, in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of multiple myeloma (MM) patients treated with melphalan, accumulation of DNA adducts in the p53 gene correlates with better therapeutic response, and that repair in different genes correlated with the gene transcriptional activity and the degree of local chromatin condensation (Dimopoulos et al, J Clin Oncol 2005;23:4381–9; Souliotis et al, DNA Repair 2006;5:972–85; Dimopoulos et al, Haematologica 2007;92:1505–12). However, the assays used are fairly time-consuming, and require complex procedures such as Southern transfer and hybridization. Thus, we now present the development and clinical application in MM of a gene-specific, quantitative method for measuring DNA damage formation/repair following exposure to anticancer drugs inducing bulky adducts. Cell line (HepG2) as well as human whole blood and PBMC from eighteen patients (13M/5F) with MM were in vitro treated with melphalan. These patients underwent high dose melphalan with autologous stem cell support (ASCT) as part of their first line therapy and the whole blood was collected on the day of stem cell mobilization. Ten (55.5%) patients achieved further myeloma reduction after ASCT; 3 patients achieved a stringent complete response (CR), 2 a CR, 2 a very good partial response (vgPR) and 3 a PR. Among 8 non-responders post-ASCT, 6 had a stable disease while 2 experienced disease progression, according to the IMWG criteria. None of the patients had previously received alkylating agent therapy (melphalan-naive patients). Moreover, cell line (HepG2) and PBMC from five healthy volunteers (all females) were treated with platinum-based drugs (cisplatin, carboplatin). Following DNA isolation, gene-specific damage formation/repair was examined using Southern blot as well as a multiplex long quantitative PCR (Q-PCR). The extent of PCR amplification was conversely proportional to the treatment concentrations of all anticancer drugs examined, implying dose-related inhibition by the DNA adducts formed. In the case of melphalan, the adduct levels measured by Q-PCR were identical to the levels of interstrand cross-links (ICL) measured by Southern blot analysis. In addition, monoadducts induced by monofunctional melphalan could not be measured by Q-PCR, suggesting that this assay measures only melphalan-induced ICLs. Application of the Q-PCR assay to in vitro-treated human blood samples from MM patients taken prior to ASCT showed that the levels of DNA damage varied up to 12-fold, which probably reflects inter-individual DNA repair differences. Interestingly, significantly greater gene-specific damage was found in the responders group compared to non-responders [176.8±67.3 adducts/106 nucleotides (range 41.0 to 273.0) for responders and 65.1±39.4 adducts/106 nucleotides (range 22.0 to 135.0) for non-responders, p=0.002]. Similar results were obtained using whole blood from the same MM patients, but differences did not reach statistical significance [84.3±63.0 adducts/106 nucleotides (range 15.0 to 165.0) for responders and 46.5±2.1 adducts/106 nucleotides (range 45.0 to 48.0) for non-responders, p=0.5]. As for the platinum-based drugs, cisplatin-induced intrastrand cross-links levels measured by Southern blot analysis, reached a plateau within ∼3h of treatment, while peak interstrand cross-links was obtained at ∼24h of exposure. Carboplatin-induced maximal levels of both intra- and interstrand cross-links were obtained within 24h of drug incubation. Parallel analysis of the same samples using both Southern blot and Q-PCR showed that the DNA adducts measured by Q-PCR correspond to total platinum-induced lesions. In conclusion, our study suggest that by using the current Q-PCR methodology, it is feasible to measure gene-specific damage formation/repair in a readily accessible biological material such as PBMC from humans exposed to anticancer drugs inducing bulky adducts and to examine, at the level of individual patient, the relationship between the induction/repair of cytotoxic DNA damage and the clinical outcome. Patient accrual is ongoing and updated results will be presented during the meeting. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Science ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 346 (6213) ◽  
pp. 1127-1130 ◽  
Author(s):  
Renjing Wang ◽  
Nicole S. Persky ◽  
Barney Yoo ◽  
Ouathek Ouerfelli ◽  
Agata Smogorzewska ◽  
...  

DNA interstrand cross-links (ICLs) are highly toxic lesions associated with cancer and degenerative diseases. ICLs can be repaired by the Fanconi anemia (FA) pathway and through FA-independent processes involving the FAN1 nuclease. In this work, FAN1-DNA crystal structures and biochemical data reveal that human FAN1 cleaves DNA successively at every third nucleotide. In vitro, this exonuclease mechanism allows FAN1 to excise an ICL from one strand through flanking incisions. DNA access requires a 5′-terminal phosphate anchor at a nick or a 1- or 2-nucleotide flap and is augmented by a 3′ flap, suggesting that FAN1 action is coupled to DNA synthesis or recombination. FAN1’s mechanism of ICL excision is well suited for processing other localized DNA adducts as well.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 725-725
Author(s):  
Muriel W. Lambert ◽  
Laura W. McMahon ◽  
Joel A. Lefferts ◽  
Deepa M. Sridharan

Abstract Fanconi anemia (FA) is characterized by bone marrow failure, a predisposition to cancer and, at the cellular level, a hypersensitivity to DNA interstrand cross-linking agents that correlates with a defect in ability to repair cross-links produced by these agents. We have previously shown that the structural protein, nonerythroid a spectrin (αSpII∑*), binds to DNA containing interstrand cross-links and plays an important role in the repair of this type of damage and that there is a deficiency in this protein in cells from FA-A, FA-B, FA-C, FA-D1, FA-F and FA-G cells. We have also shown that after damage to normal cells, αSpII∑* co-localizes in nuclear foci with FANCA, FANCF and the DNA interstrand cross-link repair protein XPF. In FA-A cells, where there is a deficiency in αSpII∑*, damage-induced nuclear foci formation is significantly reduced. In order to further assess the functional importance of αSpII∑* in the repair process and the DNA repair defect in FA cells, studies were carried out on siRNA-mediated silencing of αII spectrin gene expression. Three siRNA oligonucleotide templates were synthesized, which were targeted for different αII spectrin gene sequences. The 21-mer siRNAs produced were purified and normal human lymphoblastoid cells were transfected with these siRNAs. αII spectrin mRNA and protein levels in transfected cells were determined by RT-PCR and Western blot analysis, respectively. By 48 hours after transfection, levels of αII spectrin mRNA and protein were approximately 34% and 30% of mock transfected cells, respectively. Cells were then damaged with 8-MOP plus UVA light so as to produce DNA interstrand cross-links and localization of αII spectrin and FANCA in the nuclei was examined by immunofluorescence microscopy. The results showed that, in cells transfected with αII spectrin siRNA, there was a marked reduction in the number of αII spectrin and FANCA foci in the nuclei of the siRNA transfected cells compared to the mock transfected cells. There was also markedly reduced survival of the siRNA transfected cells after damage compared to mock transfected cells. These results show that there is a correlation between a reduction of αII spectrin levels in these cells and decreased formation of FANCA as well as αII spectrin nuclear foci after damage with a DNA interstrand cross-linking agent and that this in turn correlates with decreased survival and DNA repair in these cells after DNA damage. These results support our model that αII spectrin is needed in the DNA repair process where it acts as a scaffold in the recruitment and alignment of FANC and repair proteins at sites of DNA damage and that, in FA cells, where there is a deficiency in αII spectrin, this recruitment and repair are defective. α∑


Anemia ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chelsea Jenkins ◽  
Jenny Kan ◽  
Maureen E. Hoatlin

The Fanconi Anemia (FA) pathway consists of proteins involved in repairing DNA damage, including interstrand cross-links (ICLs). The pathway contains an upstream multiprotein core complex that mediates the monoubiquitylation of the FANCD2 and FANCI heterodimer, and a downstream pathway that converges with a larger network of proteins with roles in homologous recombination and other DNA repair pathways. Selective killing of cancer cells with an intact FA pathway but deficient in certain other DNA repair pathways is an emerging approach to tailored cancer therapy. Inhibiting the FA pathway becomes selectively lethal when certain repair genes are defective, such as the checkpoint kinase ATM. Inhibiting the FA pathway in ATM deficient cells can be achieved with small molecule inhibitors, suggesting that new cancer therapeutics could be developed by identifying FA pathway inhibitors to treat cancers that contain defects that are synthetic lethal with FA.


Author(s):  
S.K. Aggarwal

The proposed primary mechanism of action of the anticancer drug cisplatin (Cis-DDP) is through its interaction with DNA, mostly through DNA intrastrand cross-links or DNA interstrand cross-links. DNA repair mechanisms can circumvent this arrest thus permitting replication and transcription to proceed. Various membrane transport enzymes have also been demonstrated to be effected by cisplatin. Glycoprotein alkaline phosphatase was looked at in the proximal tubule cells before and after cisplatin both in vivo and in vitro for its inactivation or its removal from the membrane using light and electron microscopy.Outbred male Swiss Webster (Crl: (WI) BR) rats weighing 150-250g were given ip injections of cisplatin (7mg/kg). Animals were killed on day 3 and day 5. Thick slices (20-50.um) of kidney tissue from treated and untreated animals were fixed in 1% buffered glutaraldehyde and 1% formaldehyde (0.05 M cacodylate buffer, pH 7.3) for 30 min at 4°C. Alkaline phosphatase activity and carbohydrates were demonstrated according to methods described earlier.


Biomolecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 366
Author(s):  
Valeria Guidolin ◽  
Erik S. Carlson ◽  
Andrea Carrà ◽  
Peter W. Villalta ◽  
Laura A. Maertens ◽  
...  

Alcohol consumption is a risk factor for the development of several cancers, including those of the head and neck and the esophagus. The underlying mechanisms of alcohol-induced carcinogenesis remain unclear; however, at these sites, alcohol-derived acetaldehyde seems to play a major role. By reacting with DNA, acetaldehyde generates covalent modifications (adducts) that can lead to mutations. Previous studies have shown a dose dependence between levels of a major acetaldehyde-derived DNA adduct and alcohol exposure in oral-cell DNA. The goal of this study was to optimize a mass spectrometry (MS)-based DNA adductomic approach to screen for all acetaldehyde-derived DNA adducts to more comprehensively characterize the genotoxic effects of acetaldehyde in humans. A high-resolution/-accurate-mass data-dependent constant-neutral-loss-MS3 methodology was developed to profile acetaldehyde-DNA adducts in purified DNA. This resulted in the identification of 22 DNA adducts. In addition to the expected N2-ethyldeoxyguanosine (after NaBH3CN reduction), two previously unreported adducts showed prominent signals in the mass spectra. MSn fragmentation spectra and accurate mass were used to hypothesize the structure of the two new adducts, which were then identified as N6-ethyldeoxyadenosine and N4-ethyldeoxycytidine by comparison with synthesized standards. These adducts were quantified in DNA isolated from oral cells collected from volunteers exposed to alcohol, revealing a significant increase after the exposure. In addition, 17 of the adducts identified in vitro were detected in these samples confirming our ability to more comprehensively characterize the DNA damage deriving from alcohol exposures.


2005 ◽  
Vol 280 (49) ◽  
pp. 40559-40567 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nianxiang Zhang ◽  
Ramandeep Kaur ◽  
Xiaoyan Lu ◽  
Xi Shen ◽  
Lei Li ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
pp. 135-142
Author(s):  
I. Lagroye ◽  
B. Wettring ◽  
E. G. Moros ◽  
W. L. Straube ◽  
W. F. Pickard ◽  
...  

Cancers ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 2684 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giacomo Milletti ◽  
Luisa Strocchio ◽  
Daria Pagliara ◽  
Katia Girardi ◽  
Roberto Carta ◽  
...  

Fanconi anemia (FA) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous disorder characterized by the variable presence of congenital somatic abnormalities, bone marrow failure (BMF), and a predisposition to develop cancer. Monoallelic germline mutations in at least five genes involved in the FA pathway are associated with the development of sporadic hematological and solid malignancies. The key function of the FA pathway is to orchestrate proteins involved in the repair of interstrand cross-links (ICLs), to prevent genomic instability and replication stress. Recently, many studies have highlighted the importance of FA genes in noncanonical pathways, such as mitochondria homeostasis, inflammation, and virophagy, which act, in some cases, independently of DNA repair processes. Thus, primary defects in DNA repair mechanisms of FA patients are typically exacerbated by an impairment of other cytoprotective pathways that contribute to the multifaceted clinical phenotype of this disease. In this review, we summarize recent advances in the understanding of the pathogenesis of FA, with a focus on the cytosolic noncanonical roles of FA genes, discussing how they may contribute to cancer development, thus suggesting opportunities to envisage novel therapeutic approaches.


Cancers ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 453 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sudhir Raghavan ◽  
David S. Baskin ◽  
Martyn A. Sharpe

Various pathways can repair DNA alkylation by chemotherapeutic agents such as temozolomide (TMZ). The enzyme O6-methylguanine methyltransferase (MGMT) removes O6-methylated DNA adducts, leading to the failure of chemotherapy in resistant glioblastomas. Because of the anti-chemotherapeutic activities of MGMT previously described, estimating the levels of active MGMT in cancer cells can be a significant predictor of response to alkylating agents. Current methods to detect MGMT in cells are indirect, complicated, time-intensive, or utilize molecules that require complex and multistep chemistry synthesis. Our design simulates DNA repair by the transfer of a clickable propargyl group from O6-propargyl guanine to active MGMT and subsequent attachment of fluorescein-linked PEG linker via ”click chemistry.” Visualization of active MGMT levels reveals discrete active and inactive MGMT populations with biphasic kinetics for MGMT inactivation in response to TMZ-induced DNA damage.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document