Background-Statins exert pleiotropic effects on the cardiovascular system, in part through an increase in nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability. AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) plays a central role in controlling energy and metabolism homeostasis in various organs. We therefore studied whether statins can activate AMPK, and if so, whether the activated AMPK regulates nitric oxide (NO) production and angiogenesis mediated by endothelial NO synthase, a substrate of AMPK in vascular endothelial cells. Methods and Results-Western blotting of protein extracts from human umbilical vein endothelial cells treated with atorvastatin revealed increased phosphorylation of AMPK at Thr-172 in a time-and dose-dependent manner. The AMPK activity, assessed by SAMS assay, was also increased accordingly. The phosphorylation of acetyl-CoA carboxylase at Ser-79 and of endothelial NO synthase at Ser-1177, 2 putative downstream targets of AMPK, was inhibited by an adenovirus that expressed a dominant-negative mutant of AMPK (Ad-AMPK-DN) and compound C, an AMPK antagonist. The positive effects of atorvastatin, including NO production, cGMP accumulation, and in vitro angiogenesis in Matrigel, were all blocked by Ad-AMPK-DN. Mice given atorvastatin through gastric gavage showed increased AMPK, acetyl-CoA carboxylase, and endothelial NO synthase phosphorylation in mouse aorta and myocardium. Conclusions-Statins
Reactive oxygen species can give rise to intrastrand cross-link lesions, where two neighboring nucleobases are covalently bonded. Here, we employed LC-MS/MS and demonstrated for the first time that gamma irradiation of a synthetic duplex oligodeoxyribonucleotide can give rise to an intrastrand cross-link lesion G[8-5]C, where the C8 carbon atom of guanine and the C5 carbon atom of its 3'-neighboring cytosine are covalently bonded. We also carried out in vitro replication studies of a substrate containing a site-specifically incorporated G[8-5]C, and our results showed that yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae DNA polymerase eta (pol eta) was able to replicate past the cross-link lesion. Steady-state kinetic analyses for nucleotide incorporation by pol eta showed that the 3'-cytosine moiety of the cross-link did not significantly affect either the efficiency or the fidelity of nucleotide incorporation. The 5' guanine portion of the cross-link lesion, however, markedly reduced both the efficiency and the fidelity of nucleotide incorporation; the insertion of dGMP or dAMP was slightly favored over the insertion of the correct nucleotide, dCMP, which was in turn favored over the insertion of dTMP. The above results support that the oxidative cross-link lesion, if not repaired, can be mutagenic.
Nucleotide excision repair (NER) is a repair pathway that removes a variety of bulky DNA lesions in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. The perturbation of DNA helix structure caused by the oxidative intrastrand lesions could render them good substrates for the NER pathway. Here we employed Escherichia coli NER enzymes, i.e., UvrA, UvrB, and UvrC, to examine the incision efficiency of duplex DNA carrying three different oxidative intrastrand cross-link lesions, that is, G[8-5]C, G[8-5m]mC, and G[8-5m]T, and two dithymine photoproducts, namely, the cis,syn-cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (T[c,s]T) and the pyrimidine(6-4)pyrimidone product (T[6-4]T). Our results showed that T[6-4]T was the best substrate for UvrA binding, followed by G[8-5]C, G[8-5m]mC, and G[8-5m]T, and then by T[c,s]T. The efficiencies of the UvrABC incisions of these lesions were consistent with their UvrA binding affinities: the stronger the binding to UvrA, the higher the rate of incision. In addition, flanking DNA sequences appeared to have little effect on the binding affinity of UvrA for G[8-5]C as AG[8-5]CA was only slightly preferred over CG[8-5]CG. Consistently, these two sequences exhibited almost no difference in incision rates. Furthermore, we investigated the thermal stability of dodecameric duplexes containing G[8-5m]mC or G[8-5m]T, and our results revealed that these two lesions destabilized the duplex, due to an increase in the free energy for duplex formation at 37 degrees C, by approximately 5.4 and 3.6 kcal/mol, respectively. The destabilizations to the DNA helix caused by those lesions, for the most part, are correlated with the binding affinities of UvrA and incision rates of UvrABC. Taken together, the results from this study suggest that oxidative intrastrand lesions might be substrates for NER enzymes in vivo.
We recently identified, from the gamma-irradiation mixture of duplex DNA, a new intrastrand G[8-5]C cross-link lesion, in which the C8 atom of guanine and the C5 atom of its 3' neighboring cytosine are covalently bonded, and carried out in vitro replication studies for the lesion-bearing substrate with a translesion synthesis polymerase, yeast polymerase eta. Here we extended the in vitro replication studies to two replicative polymerases, exonuclease-deficient bacteriophage T7 DNA polymerase (T7(-)) and HIV reverse transcriptase (HIV-RT). Primer extension assays showed that both polymerases stopped synthesis after incorporating a nucleotide opposite the 3'-cytosine in the G[8-5]C lesion. Steady-state kinetic measurements for nucleotide incorporation opposite the 3'-cytosine of the lesion showed that both T7(-) and HIV-RT preferentially incorporated the correct nucleotide, dGMP. We also examined the thermal stabilities and base pairing properties of G[8-5]C in d(ATGGCG[8-5]CGCTAT). The G[8-5]C lesion destabilizes the duplex form by approximately 4 kcal/mol in free energy at 25 degrees C relative to the undamaged parent duplex, and the thermally most stable duplex has natural bases opposite the lesion.
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