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Differential human nucleotide excision repair of paired and mispaired cisplatin-DNA adducts
Author(s) -
Jonathan G. Moggs,
David E. Szymkowski,
Masami Yamada,
Peter Karran,
Richard D. Wood
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/25.3.480
Subject(s) - cisplatin , nucleotide excision repair , biology , dna repair , dna , dna damage , nuclease , biochemistry , adduct , microbiology and biotechnology , genetics , chemistry , chemotherapy , organic chemistry
In order to understand the action of the chemotherapeutic drug cisplatin, it is necessary to determine why some types of cisplatin-DNA intrastrand crosslinks are repaired better than others. Using cell extracts and circular duplex DNA, we compared nucleotide excision repair of uniquely placed 1,2-GG, 1,2-AG, and 1,3-GTG cisplatin-crosslinks, and a 2-acetylaminofluorene lesion. The 1,3 crosslink and the acetylaminofluorene lesion were repaired by normal cell extracts approximately 15-20 fold better than the 1,2 crosslinks. No evidence was found for selective shielding of 1,2 cisplatin crosslinks from repair by cellular proteins. Fractionation of cell extracts to remove putative shielding proteins did not improve repair of the 1,2-GG crosslink, and cell extracts did not selectively inhibit access of UvrABC incision nuclease to 1,2-GG crosslinks. The poorer repair of 1,2 crosslinks in comparison to the 1,3 crosslink is more likely a consequence of different structural alterations of the DNA helix. In support of this, a 1,2-GG-cisplatin crosslink was much better repaired when it was opposite one or two non-complementary thymines. Extracts from cells defective in the hMutSalpha mismatch binding activity also showed preferential repair of the 1,3 crosslink over the 1,2 crosslink, and increased repair of the 1,2 adduct when opposite thymines, showing that hMutSalphais not involved in the differential NER of these substrates in vitro. Mismatched cisplatin adducts could arise by translesion DNA synthesis, and improved repair of such adducts could promote cisplatin-induced mutagenesis in some cases.

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