Literature DB >> 26901461

Using DNA devices to track anticancer drug activity.

Dimithree Kahanda1, Gaurab Chakrabarti2, Marc A Mcwilliams1, David A Boothman2, Jason D Slinker3.   

Abstract

It is beneficial to develop systems that reproduce complex reactions of biological systems while maintaining control over specific factors involved in such processes. We demonstrated a DNA device for following the repair of DNA damage produced by a redox-cycling anticancer drug, beta-lapachone (β-lap). These chips supported ß-lap-induced biological redox cycle and tracked subsequent DNA damage repair activity with redox-modified DNA monolayers on gold. We observed drug-specific changes in square wave voltammetry from these chips at therapeutic ß-lap concentrations of high statistical significance over drug-free control. We also demonstrated a high correlation of this change with the specific ß-lap-induced redox cycle using rational controls. The concentration dependence of ß-lap revealed significant signal changes at levels of high clinical significance as well as sensitivity to sub-lethal levels of ß-lap. Catalase, an enzyme decomposing peroxide, was found to suppress DNA damage at a NQO1/catalase ratio found in healthy cells, but was clearly overcome at a higher NQO1/catalase ratio consistent with cancer cells. We found that it was necessary to reproduce key features of the cellular environment to observe this activity. Thus, this chip-based platform enabled tracking of ß-lap-induced DNA damage repair when biological criteria were met, providing a unique synthetic platform for uncovering activity normally confined to inside cells.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Base-excision repair; Biosensor; DNA repair; Electrochemical sensor; Oxidative damage

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26901461      PMCID: PMC4793915          DOI: 10.1016/j.bios.2016.02.026

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biosens Bioelectron        ISSN: 0956-5663            Impact factor:   12.545


  32 in total

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7.  Mdm-2 and ubiquitin-independent p53 proteasomal degradation regulated by NQO1.

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  4 in total

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2.  Following anticancer drug activity in cell lysates with DNA devices.

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Journal:  Biosens Bioelectron       Date:  2018-07-30       Impact factor: 12.545

3.  Electrochemical Sensor Based on Poly(Azure B)-DNA Composite for Doxorubicin Determination.

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4.  PCNA inhibition enhances the cytotoxicity of β-lapachone in NQO1-Positive cancer cells by augmentation of oxidative stress-induced DNA damage.

Authors:  Xiaolin Su; Jiangwei Wang; Lingxiang Jiang; Yaomin Chen; Tao Lu; Marc S Mendonca; Xiumei Huang
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