Gemcitabine Functions Epigenetically by Inhibiting Repair Mediated DNA Demethylation
Author(s) -
Andrea Schäfer,
Lars Schomacher,
Guillermo Barreto,
Gabi Döderlein,
Christof Niehrs
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0014060
Subject(s) - dna demethylation , base excision repair , dna methylation , dna repair , biology , gemcitabine , nucleotide excision repair , chemistry , cancer research , microbiology and biotechnology , dna , genetics , gene , cancer , gene expression
Gemcitabine is a cytotoxic cytidine analog, which is widely used in anti-cancer therapy. One mechanism by which gemcitabine acts is by inhibiting nucleotide excision repair (NER). Recently NER was implicated in Gadd45 mediated DNA demethylation and epigenetic gene activation. Here we analyzed the effect of gemcitabine on DNA demethylation. We find that gemcitabine inhibits specifically Gadd45a mediated reporter gene activation and DNA demethylation, similar to the topoisomerase I inhibitor camptothecin, which also inhibits NER. In contrast, base excision repair inhibitors had no effect on DNA demethylation. In Xenopus oocytes, gemcitabine inhibits DNA repair synthesis accompanying demethylation of oct4 . In mammalian cells, gemcitabine induces DNA hypermethylation and silencing of MLH1 . The results indicate that gemcitabine induces epigenetic gene silencing by inhibiting repair mediated DNA demethylation. Thus, gemcitabine can function epigenetically and provides a tool to manipulate DNA methylation.
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