Literature DB >> 21538576

Neocarzinostatin as a probe for DNA protection activity--molecular interaction with caffeine.

Der-Hang Chin1, Huang-Hsien Li, Hsiu-Maan Kuo, Pei-Dawn Lee Chao, Chia-Wen Liu.   

Abstract

Neocarzinostatin (NCS), a potent mutagen and carcinogen, consists of an enediyne prodrug and a protein carrier. It has a unique double role in that it intercalates into DNA and imposes radical-mediated damage after thiol activation. Here we employed NCS as a probe to examine the DNA-protection capability of caffeine, one of common dietary phytochemicals with potential cancer-chemopreventive activity. NCS at the nanomolar concentration range could induce significant single- and double-strand lesions in DNA, but up to 75 ± 5% of such lesions were found to be efficiently inhibited by caffeine. The percentage of inhibition was caffeine-concentration dependent, but was not sensitive to the DNA-lesion types. The well-characterized activation reactions of NCS allowed us to explore the effect of caffeine on the enediyne-generated radicals. Postactivation analyses by chromatographic and mass spectroscopic methods identified a caffeine-quenched enediyne-radical adduct, but the yield was too small to fully account for the large inhibition effect on DNA lesions. The affinity between NCS chromophore and DNA was characterized by a fluorescence-based kinetic method. The drug-DNA intercalation was hampered by caffeine, and the caffeine-induced increases in DNA-drug dissociation constant was caffeine-concentration dependent, suggesting importance of binding affinity in the protection mechanism. Caffeine has been shown to be both an effective free radical scavenger and an intercalation inhibitor. Our results demonstrated that caffeine ingeniously protected DNA against the enediyne-induced damages mainly by inhibiting DNA intercalation beforehand. The direct scavenging of the DNA-bound NCS free radicals by caffeine played only a minor role.
Copyright © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Keywords:  enediyne; free radical; intercalation

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21538576     DOI: 10.1002/mc.20788

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Carcinog        ISSN: 0899-1987            Impact factor:   4.784


  1 in total

1.  A positive feedback loop of SIRT1 and miR17HG promotes the repair of DNA double-stranded breaks.

Authors:  Luoyijun Xie; Ruxiao Huang; Shuang Liu; Weijia Wu; Ailing Su; Runkai Li; Xu Liu; Yiting Lei; Huidi Sun; Xinguang Liu; Shun Xu
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2019-07-15       Impact factor: 4.534

  1 in total

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