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1.
The gene encoding topoisomerase II in yeast is unique and essential, required for both mitotic and meiotic proliferation. The use of temperature-sensitive mutants in topoisomerase II have demonstrated roles in the relaxation of tortional stress, reduction of recombination rates, and in the separation of sister chromatids after replication. In vertebrate cells, topoisomerase II was shown to be the most abundant component of the metaphase chromosomal scaffold, and has been shown to play a role in chromosome condensationin vitro. The cell cycle control of chromosome condensation may well require phosphorylation of topoisomerase II, since the enzyme is more highly phosphorylated in metaphase than in G1. Recent studies have identified casein kinase II as the major enzyme phosphorylating topoisomerase II in intact yeast cells. The target sites of CKII are exclusively in the C-terminal 400 amino acids of topoisomerase II, the region that is most divergent among the eukaryotic type II enzymes and which is absent in the bacterial gyrase homologues.Abbreviations topoII topoisomerase II - CKII Casein Kinase II - SV40 Simian Virus 40  相似文献   

2.
The decatenation activity of DNA topoisomerase II is essential for viability as eukaryotic cells traverse mitosis. Phosphorylation has been shown to stimulate topoisomerase II activity in vitro. Here we show that topoisomerase II is a phosphoprotein in yeast and that the level of incorporated phosphate is significantly higher at mitosis than in G1. Comparison of tryptic phosphopeptide maps reveals that the major phosphorylation sites in vivo are targets for casein kinase II. Incorporation of phosphate into topoisomerase II is nearly undetectable at the non-permissive temperature in a conditional casein kinase II mutant. The sites modified by casein kinase II are located in the extreme C-terminal domain of topoisomerase II. This domain is absent in prokaryotic and highly divergent among eukaryotic type II topoisomerases, and may serve to regulate functions of topoisomerase II that are unique to eukaryotic cells.  相似文献   

3.
The dif locus is a site-specific recombination site located within the terminus region of the chromosome of Escherichia coli. Recombination at dif resolves circular dimer chromosomes to monomers, and this recombination requires the XerC, XerD and FtsK proteins, as well as cell division. In order to characterize other enzymes that interact at dif, we tested whether quinolone-induced cleavage occurs at this site. Quinolone drugs, such as norfloxacin, inhibit the type 2 topoisomerases, DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV, and can cleave DNA at sites where these enzymes interact with the chromosome. Using strains in which either DNA gyrase or topoisomerase IV, or both, were resistant to norfloxacin, we determined that specific interactions between dif and topoisomerase IV caused cleavage at that site. This interaction required XerC and XerD, but did not require the C-terminal region of FtsK or cell division.  相似文献   

4.
Dickey JS  Osheroff N 《Biochemistry》2005,44(34):11546-11554
The enzymatic function of the C-terminal domain of eukaryotic topoisomerase II is not well defined. This region of the enzyme is highly variable and hydrophilic and contains nuclear localization signals and phosphorylation sites. In contrast to eukaryotic topoisomerase II, type II enzymes from chlorella virus completely lack the C-terminal domain. These viral enzymes are characterized by a robust DNA cleavage activity, high coordination between their two active site tyrosyl residues, and reduced sensitivity to anticancer drugs. As a first step toward characterizing the contribution of the C-terminal domain of human topoisomerase IIalpha to enzyme function, the protein was truncated at amino acid 1175, which corresponds to the C-terminal residue of Paramecium bursaria chlorella virus-1 topoisomerase II as determined by BLAST sequence alignment. Although the overall catalytic activity of the resulting enzyme, hTop2alphaDelta1175, was lower than that of full-length topoisomerase IIalpha, the mutant protein displayed a double-stranded DNA cleavage activity that was approximately 2-3-fold higher. While the DNA breaks created by hTop2alphaDelta1175 were primarily double stranded, cuts generated by topoisomerase IIalpha were primarily single stranded. Thus, the enhanced cleavage observed for hTop2alphaDelta1175 appears to be due, at least in part, to an increase in active site coordination. Finally, hTop2alphaDelta1175 displayed a distinctly lower susceptibility to anticancer agents than did topoisomerase IIalpha, despite the fact that it showed a similar binding affinity for etoposide. Therefore, the C-terminal domain of human topoisomerase IIalpha appears to play significant roles in modulating the DNA cleavage/ligation reaction of the enzyme and its response to anticancer agents.  相似文献   

5.
DNA topoisomerase II has been implicated in regulating chromosome interactions. We investigated the effects of the specific DNA topoisomerase II inhibitor, teniposide on nuclear events during oocyte maturation, fertilization, and early embryonic development of fertilized Spisula solidissima oocytes using DNA fluorescence. Teniposide treatment before fertilization not only inhibited chromosome separation during meiosis, but also blocked chromosome condensation during mitosis; however, sperm nuclear decondensation was unaffected. Chromosome separation was selectively blocked in oocytes treated with teniposide during either meiotic metaphase I or II indicating that topoisomerase II activity may be required during oocyte maturation. Teniposide treatment during meiosis also disrupted mitotic chromosome condensation. Chromosome separation during anaphase was unaffected in embryos treated with teniposide when the chromosomes were already condensed in metaphase of either first or second mitosis; however, chromosome condensation during the next mitosis was blocked. When interphase two- and four-cell embryos were exposed to topoisomerase II inhibitor, the subsequent mitosis proceeded normally in that the chromosomes condensed, separated, and decondensed; in contrast, chromosome condensation of the next mitosis was blocked. These observations suggest that in Spisula oocytes, topoisomerase II activity is required for chromosome separation during meiosis and condensation during mitosis, but is not involved in decondensation of the sperm nucleus, maternal chromosomes, and somatic chromatin.  相似文献   

6.
The widely used anticancer drug etoposide kills cells by increasing levels of topoisomerase II-mediated DNA breaks. While it is known that the drug acts by inhibiting the ability of topoisomerase II to ligate cleaved DNA molecules, the precise mechanism by which it accomplishes this action is not well understood. Because there are two scissile bonds per enzyme-mediated double-stranded DNA break, it has been assumed that there are two sites for etoposide in every cleavage complex. However, it is not known whether the action of etoposide at only one scissile bond is sufficient to stabilize a double-stranded DNA break or whether both drug sites need to be occupied. An oligonucleotide system was utilized to address this important issue. Results of DNA cleavage and ligation assays support a two-drug model for the action of etoposide against human topoisomerase IIalpha. This model postulates that drug interactions at both scissile bonds are required in order to increase enzyme-mediated double-stranded DNA breaks. Etoposide actions at either of the two scissile bonds appear to be independent of one another, with each individual drug molecule stabilizing a strand-specific nick rather than a double-stranded DNA break. This finding suggests (at least in the presence of drug) that there is little or no communication between the two promoter active sites of topoisomerase II. The two-drug model has implications for cancer chemotherapy, the cellular processing of etoposide-stabilized enzyme-DNA cleavage complexes, and the catalytic mechanism of eukaryotic topoisomerase II.  相似文献   

7.
The pattern of sites for cleavage mediated by topoisomerase II was determined in 830 kb of cloned DNA from the Drosophila X chromosome, with the objectives of comparing it with mapped structural and functional landmarks and examining if the correlations with such landmarks reported in individual loci can be generalized to a region approximately 100 times longer. The relative frequencies of topoisomerase II cleavage sites in 247 restriction fragments from 67 clones were quantified by hybridization with probes prepared from DNA fragments which abutted all cleavage sites in each clone, selected through the covalently bound topoisomerase II subunit; the specificity and quantitative nature of this method were demonstrated using a plasmid DNA model. The 12 restriction fragments with strong nuclear scaffold attachment (SAR) activity, of which seven possess autonomous replication (ARS) activity, show statistically strong coincidence or contiguity ( P </=0.11) with regions of high topoisomerase II cleavage site frequency. These regions show no correlation with repetitive sequence or A/T or C/G content and some extend over >10 kb; their sensitivity is therefore unlikely to be due to alternating purine-pyrimidine repeats or regions of Z conformation, which are preferred motifs. The hypothesis that they possess intrinsic curvature is consistent with the similarity of their length and spacing to regions of predicted curvature in the 315 kb DNA of Saccharomyces cerevisiae chromosome III and with the reported strong binding preference of topoisomerase II for curved DNA. The topoisomerase II cleavage pattern in this DNA further shows that its relationships to functional properties seen in individual loci, especially to MAR/SAR and ARS activity and to the restricted accessibility of DNA to topoisomerase II in vivo, can be generalized to much longer regions of the genome.  相似文献   

8.
The mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases, extracellular signal-related kinase 1 (ERK1) and ERK2, regulate cellular responses by mediating extracellular growth signals toward cytoplasmic and nuclear targets. A potential target for ERK is topoisomerase IIalpha, which becomes highly phosphorylated during mitosis and is required for several aspects of nucleic acid metabolism, including chromosome condensation and daughter chromosome separation. In this study, we demonstrated interactions between ERK2 and topoisomerase IIalpha proteins by coimmunoprecipitation from mixtures of purified enzymes and from nuclear extracts. In vitro, diphosphorylated active ERK2 phosphorylated topoisomerase IIalpha and enhanced its specific activity by sevenfold, as measured by DNA relaxation assays, whereas unphosphorylated ERK2 had no effect. However, activation of topoisomerase II was also observed with diphosphorylated inactive mutant ERK2, suggesting a mechanism of activation that depends on the phosphorylation state of ERK2 but not on its kinase activity. Nevertheless, activation of ERK by transient transfection of constitutively active mutant MAP kinase kinase 1 (MKK1) enhanced endogenous topoisomerase II activity by fourfold. Our findings indicate that ERK regulates topoisomerase IIalpha in vitro and in vivo, suggesting a potential target for the MKK/ERK pathway in the modulation of chromatin reorganization events during mitosis and in other phases of the cell cycle.  相似文献   

9.
The peptidyl-prolyl isomerase Pin1 interacts in a phosphorylation-dependent manner with several proteins involved in cell cycle events. In this study, we demonstrate that Pin1 interacts with protein kinase CK2, an enzyme that generally exists in tetrameric complexes composed of two catalytic CK2 alpha and/or CK2 alpha' subunits together with two regulatory CK2 beta subunits. Our results indicate that Pin1 can interact with CK2 complexes that contain CK2 alpha. Furthermore, Pin1 can interact directly with the C-terminal domain of CK2 alpha that contains residues that are phosphorylated in vitro by p34(Cdc2) and in mitotic cells. Substitution of the phosphorylation sites of CK2 alpha with alanines resulted in decreased interactions between Pin1 and CK2. The other catalytic isoform of CK2, designated CK2 alpha', is not phosphorylated in mitotic cells and does not interact with Pin1, but a chimeric protein consisting of CK2 alpha' with the C terminus of CK2 alpha was phosphorylated in mitotic cells and interacts with Pin1, further implicating the phosphorylation sites in the interaction. In vitro, Pin1 inhibits the phosphorylation of Thr-1342 on human topoisomerase II alpha by CK2. Topoisomerase II alpha also interacts with Pin1 suggesting that the effect of Pin1 on the phosphorylation of Thr-1342 could result from its interactions with CK2 and/or topoisomerase II alpha. As compared with wild-type Pin1, isomerase-deficient and WW domain-deficient mutants of Pin1 are impaired in their ability to interact with CK2 and to inhibit the CK2-catalyzed phosphorylation of topoisomerase II alpha. Collectively, these results indicate that Pin1 and CK2 alpha interact and suggest a possible role for Pin1 in the regulation of topoisomerase II alpha. Furthermore, these results provide new insights into the functional role of the mitotic phosphorylation of CK2 and provide a new mechanism for selectively regulating the ability of CK2 to phosphorylate one of its mitotic targets.  相似文献   

10.
Phosphorylation of nucleolin by a nucleolar type NII protein kinase   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Nucleolin [C23 or 100 kilodaltons (kDa)] is the major nucleolar phosphorylated protein in exponentially growing Chinese hamster ovary cells. A nucleolar cyclic nucleotide independent protein kinase copurified with nucleolin in a complex which could be dissociated by hydroxyapatite chromatography. The kinase was stimulated by spermine and inhibited by heparin and presented most of the properties of nuclear casein kinase NII. Kinetic analyses showed the apparent Km value for nucleolin (7 X 10(-4) mg/mL) to be lower than those for other casein kinase II substrates such as nuclear protein HMG 14 (0.15 mg/mL), topoisomerase I (0.025 mg/mL), or topoisomerase II (0.04 mg/mL). Similarly, Vmax values were higher for nucleolin than for other substrates. Nucleolin thus appears to be a natural preferential substrate of nucleolar casein kinase NII. The kinase phosphorylated nucleolin in vitro at serine residues in a 29-kDa CNBr fragment located near the amino terminus of the molecule. The enzyme labeled typical casein kinase II sites. These sites were found predominantly in two highly acidic tryptic fragments designated A (residues 21-49) and C (residues 180-221) which contained serines having at least two acidic residues on their carboxyl-terminal sides. These results demonstrate the existence in the nucleolus of a type of NII protein kinase that uses a protein involved in ribosome assembly as preferential substrate.  相似文献   

11.
DNA topoisomerases II are nuclear enzymes that have been identified recently as targets for some of the most active anticancer drugs. Antitumor topoisomerase II inhibitors such as teniposide (VM-26) produce enzyme-induced DNA cleavage and inhibition of enzyme activity. By adding to such reactions distamycin, a compound whose effects on DNA have been extensively characterized, we investigated the effects of drug binding upon topoisomerase II-mediated DNA cleavage induced by VM-26. We have found a correspondence between distamycin binding (determined by footprinting analysis) and topoisomerase II-mediated cleavage of SV40 DNA (determined by sequencing gel analysis). Distamycin binding potentiated the cleavage of specific sites in the near proximity of distamycin-binding sites (within at least 25 base pairs), which indicates that DNA secondary structure is involved in topoisomerase II-DNA interactions. That distamycin potentiated cleavage only at sites that were recognized in the absence of distamycin and suppressed cleavage directly at distamycin-binding sites indicates that topoisomerase II recognizes DNA on the basis of primary sequence. In addition, distamycin stimulated topoisomerase II-mediated DNA relaxation and antagonized the inhibitory effect of VM-26. These results show that the DNA sequence-specific binding of distamycin produces local and propagated effects in the DNA which markedly affect topoisomerase II activity.  相似文献   

12.
DNA topoisomerase II alpha is required for chromatin condensation during prophase. This process is temporally linked with the appearance of mitosis-specific phosphorylation sites on topoisomerase IIalpha including one recognized by the MPM-2 monoclonal antibody. We now report that the ability of mitotic extracts to create the MPM-2 epitope on human topoisomerase II alpha is abolished by immunodepletion of protein kinase CK2. Furthermore, the MPM-2 phosphoepitope on topoisomerase II alpha can be generated by purified CK2. Phosphorylation of C-truncated topoisomerase II alpha mutant proteins conclusively shows, that the MPM-2 epitope is present in the last 163 amino acids. Use of peptides containing all conserved CK2 consensus sites in this region indicates that only the peptide containing Arg-1466 to Ala-1485 is able to compete with topoisomerase II alpha for binding of the MPM-2 antibody. Replacement of Ser-1469 with Ala abolishes the ability of the phosphorylated peptide to bind to the MPM-2 antibody while a peptide containing phosphorylated Ser-1469 binds tightly. Surprisingly, the MPM-2 phosphoepitope influences neither the catalytic activity of topoisomerase II alpha nor its ability to form molecular complexes with CK2 in vitro. In conclusion, we have identified protein kinase CK2 as a new MPM-2 kinase able to phosphorylate an important mitotic protein, topoisomerase II alpha, on Ser-1469.  相似文献   

13.
Many intercalative antitumor drugs have been shown to induce reversible protein-linked DNA breaks in cultured mammalian cells. Using purified mammalian DNA topoisomerase II, we have demonstrated that the antitumor drugs ellipticine and 2-methyl-9-hydroxyellipticine (2-Me-9-OH-E+) can produce reversible protein-linked DNA breaks in vitro. 2-Me-9-OH-E+ which is more cytotoxic toward L1210 cells and more active against experimental tumors than ellipticine is also more effective in stimulating DNA cleavage in vitro. Similar to the effect of 4'-(9-acridinylamino)-methanesulfon-m-anisidide (m-AMSA) on topoisomerase II in vitro, the mechanism of DNA breakage induced by ellipticines is most likely due to the drug stabilization of a cleavable complex formed between topoisomerase II and DNA. Protein denaturant treatment of the cleavable complex results in DNA breakage and covalent linking of one topoisomerase II subunit to each 5'-end of the cleaved DNA. Cleavage sites on pBR322 DNA produced by ellipticine or 2-Me-9-OH-E+ treatment mapped at the same positions. However, many of these cleavage sites are distinctly different from those produced by the antitumor drug m-AMSA which also targets at topoisomerase II. Our results thus suggest that although mammalian DNA topoisomerase II may be a common target of these antitumor drugs, drug-DNA-topoisomerase interactions for different antitumor drugs may be different.  相似文献   

14.
Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus (AcMNPV) pp31 is a nuclear phosphoprotein that accumulates in the virogenic stroma, which is the viral replication center in the infected-cell nucleus, binds to DNA, and serves as a late expression factor. Considering that reversible phosphorylation could influence its functional properties, we examined phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of pp31 in detail. Our results showed that pp31 is posttranslationally phosphorylated by both cellular and virus-encoded or -induced kinases. Threonine phosphorylation of pp31 by the virus-specific kinase activity was sensitive to aphidicolin, indicating that it requires late viral gene expression. We also found that pp31 is dephosphorylated by a virus-encoded or -induced phosphatase(s), indicating that phosphorylation of pp31 is a dynamic process. Analysis of pp31 fusion proteins showed that pp31 contains at least three phosphorylation sites. The amino-terminal 100 amino acids of pp31 include at least one serine residue that is phosphorylated by a cellular kinase(s). The C-terminal 67 amino acids of pp31 include at least one threonine residue that is phosphorylated by the virus-specific kinase(s). Finally, this C-terminal domain of pp31 includes at least one serine that is phosphorylated by either a host or viral kinase(s). Interestingly, site-directed mutagenesis of the consensus threonine phosphorylation sites in the C-terminal domain of pp31 failed to prevent threonine phosphorylation, suggesting that the virus-specific kinase is unique and has an undetermined recognition site.  相似文献   

15.
Catalytic function of DNA topoisomerase II.   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
Although the genetic code is defined by a linear array of nucleotides, it is the three-dimensional structure of the double helix that regulates most of its cellular functions. Over the past two decades, it has become increasingly clear that aspects of this three-dimensionality which reflect topological relationships within the double helix (i.e., superhelical twisting, knotting, or tangling) influence virtually every facet of nucleic acid physiology. In vivo, DNA topology is modulated by ubiquitous enzymes known as topoisomerases. The type II enzyme is essential to the eukaryotic cell and is required for unlinking daughter chromosomes and maintaining chromosome structure. Moreover, topoisomerase II also has been identified as the primary cellular target for several widely used antineoplastic drugs. Before the physiological functions of topoisomerase II can be effectively dissected or its drug interactions fully exploited, it is imperative to understand the mechanism by which this important enzyme carries out its catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

16.
A consensus sequence has been derived for vertebrate topoisomerase II cleavage of DNA (Spitzner, J. R. and Muller, M. T. (1988) Nucleic Acid. Res. 16, 5533-5556). An independent sample of 65 topoisomerase II sites (obtained in the absence of topoisomerase II inhibitors) was analyzed and found to match the consensus sequence as well as enzyme sites determined in the presence of the anti-tumor drug 4'-(9-acridinyl-amino)-methanesulfon-m-anisidide (m-AMSA). As originally described, conventional application of the consensus sequence afforded accuracy in the prediction of the locations but not the frequencies of topoisomerase II cleavages. In the present report, we describe a new method which quantitatively discriminates sites from nonsites, called the 'matrix mean' method (the mean match of a site to the matrix of base proportions from the original consensus sequence derivation). Furthermore, we derived a second method, called the 'unique score' model, which predicts frequency of topoisomerase II activity at a cleavage site. In the unique score method both DNA strands of a site are examined to determine the total number of the consensus positions that match on at least one strand of a potential site. From the new data base of 65 topoisomerase II sites, cleavages were scored for relative cleavage strength. Linear regression analysis showed a significant (p less than 0.01) correlation between the unique score and cleavage strength. The study was extended to show that the unique score model accurately and quantitatively predicts topoisomerase II sites either in the absence or presence of m-AMSA using the same consensus sequence.  相似文献   

17.
Chromosome segregation requires sister chromatid resolution. Condensins are essential for this process since they organize an axial structure where topoisomerase II can work. How sister chromatid separation is coordinated with chromosome condensation and decatenation activity remains unknown. We combined four-dimensional (4D) microscopy, RNA interference (RNAi), and biochemical analyses to show that topoisomerase II plays an essential role in this process. Either depletion of topoisomerase II or exposure to specific anti-topoisomerase II inhibitors causes centromere nondisjunction, associated with syntelic chromosome attachments. However, cells degrade cohesins and timely exit mitosis after satisfying the spindle assembly checkpoint. Moreover, in topoisomerase II–depleted cells, Aurora B and INCENP fail to transfer to the central spindle in late mitosis and remain tightly associated with centromeres of nondisjoined sister chromatids. Also, in topoisomerase II–depleted cells, Aurora B shows significantly reduced kinase activity both in S2 and HeLa cells. Codepletion of BubR1 in S2 cells restores Aurora B kinase activity, and consequently, most syntelic attachments are released. Taken together, our results support that topoisomerase II ensures proper sister chromatid separation through a direct role in centromere resolution and prevents incorrect microtubule–kinetochore attachments by allowing proper activation of Aurora B kinase.  相似文献   

18.
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(5):1753-1762
We have examined the effects of topoisomerase inhibitors on the phosphorylation of histones in chromatin during the G2 and the M phases of the cell cycle. Throughout the G2 phase of BHK cells, addition of the topoisomerase II inhibitor VM-26 prevented histone H1 phosphorylation, accompanied by the inhibition of intracellular histone H1 kinase activity. However, VM-26 had no inhibitory effect on the activity of the kinase in vitro, suggesting an indirect influence on histone H1 kinase activity. Entry into mitosis was also prevented, as monitored by the absence of nuclear lamina depolymerization, chromosome condensation, and histone H3 phosphorylation. In contrast, the topoisomerase I inhibitor, camptothecin, inhibited histone H1 phosphorylation and entry into mitosis only when applied at early G2. In cells that were arrested in mitosis, VM-26 induced dephosphorylation of histones H1 and H3, DNA breaks, and partial chromosome decondensation. These changes in chromatin parameters probably reverse the process of chromosome condensation, unfolding condensed regions to permit the repair of strand breaks in the DNA that were induced by VM- 26. The involvement of growth-associated histone H1 kinase in these processes raises the possibility that the cell detects breaks in the DNA through their effects on the state of DNA supercoiling in constrained domains or loops. It would appear that histone H1 kinase and topoisomerase II work coordinately in both chromosome condensation and decondensation, and that this process participates in the VM-26- induced G2 arrest of the cell.  相似文献   

19.
Chromosomal breakage resulting from stabilization of DNA topoisomerase II covalent complexes by epipodophyllotoxins may play a role in the genesis of leukemia-associated MLL gene translocations. We investigated whether etoposide catechol and quinone metabolites can damage the MLL breakpoint cluster region in a DNA topoisomerase II-dependent manner like the parent drug and the nature of the damage. Cleavage of two DNA substrates containing the normal homologues of five MLL intron 6 translocation breakpoints was examined in vitro upon incubation with human DNA topoisomerase IIalpha, ATP, and either etoposide, etoposide catechol, or etoposide quinone. Many of the same cleavage sites were induced by etoposide and by its metabolites, but several unique sites were induced by the metabolites. There was a preference for G(-1) among the unique sites, which differs from the parent drug. Cleavage at most sites was greater and more heat-stable in the presence of the metabolites compared to etoposide. The MLL translocation breakpoints contained within the substrates were near strong and/or stable cleavage sites. The metabolites induced more cleavage than etoposide at the same sites within a 40 bp double-stranded oligonucleotide containing two of the translocation breakpoints, confirming the results at a subset of the sites. Cleavage assays using the same oligonucleotide substrate in which guanines at several positions were replaced with N7-deaza guanines indicated that the N7 position of guanine is important in metabolite-induced cleavage, possibly suggesting N7-guanine alkylation by etoposide quinone. Not only etoposide, but also its metabolites, enhance DNA topoisomerase II cleavage near MLL translocation breakpoints in in vitro assays. It is possible that etoposide metabolites may be relevant to translocations.  相似文献   

20.
Although acetaminophen is the most widely used analgesic in the world, it is also a leading cause of toxic drug overdoses. Beyond normal therapeutic doses, the drug is hepatotoxic and genotoxic. All of the harmful effects of acetaminophen have been attributed to the production of its toxic metabolite, N-acetyl-p-benzoquinone imine (NAPQI). Since many of the cytotoxic/genotoxic events triggered by NAPQI are consistent with the actions of topoisomerase II-targeted drugs, the effects of this metabolite on human topoisomerase IIalpha were examined. NAPQI was a strong topoisomerase II poison and increased levels of enzyme-mediated DNA cleavage >5-fold at 100 microM. The compound induced scission at a number of DNA sites that were similar to those observed in the presence of the topoisomerase II-targeted anticancer drug etoposide; however, the relative site utilization differed. NAPQI strongly impaired the ability of topoisomerase IIalpha to reseal cleaved DNA molecules, suggesting that inhibition of DNA religation is the primary mechanism underlying cleavage enhancement. In addition to its effects in purified systems, NAPQI appeared to increase levels of DNA scission mediated by human topoisomerase IIalpha in cultured CEM leukemia cells. In contrast, acetaminophen did not significantly affect the DNA cleavage activity of the human enzyme in vitro or in cultured CEM cells. Furthermore, the analgesic did not interfere with the actions of etoposide against the type II enzyme. These results suggest that at least some of the cytotoxic/genotoxic effects caused by acetaminophen overdose may be mediated by the actions of NAPQI as a topoisomerase II poison.  相似文献   

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