Site-specific mutagenesis by O(6)-[4-oxo-4-(3-pyridyl)butyl]guanine (O(6)-pobGua), a product of DNA pyridyloxobutylation by metabolites of the tobacco-specific nitrosamines N-nitrosonornicotine (NNN) and 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK), was studied in Escherichia coli strain DH10B and human kidney cells (293) when the modified base was incorporated in either a double-stranded or a gapped shuttle vector. In the repair-competent E. coli strain, less than 3% of the colonies produced by double-stranded vectors harboring the modified base were mutant whereas 96% were mutant when DH10B cells were transformed with modified gapped vectors. By contrast, transformation of DH10B cells with plasmids derived from O(6)-pobGua-containing double-stranded and gapped vectors previously replicated in 293 cells produced 7 and 16% mutant colonies, respectively. These percentages increased to 42 and 82%, respectively, when the 293 cells were pretreated with O(6)-benzylguanine to inactivate the O(6)-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase protein. These findings confirm that the adduct is readily repaired by the human O(6)-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase in both double-stranded and gapped vectors and suggest that it is also highly mutagenic in both human cells and E. coli. In the E. coli strain, the adduct produced exclusively G --> A transition mutations although in human 293 cells it also produced G --> T transversions and more complex mutations in addition to G --> A transitions. These data suggest that O(6)-[4-oxo-4-(3-pyridyl)butyl]guanine can contribute significantly to the mutagenic risk posed by exposure to both NNN and NNK in tobacco smoke.
The tobacco specific nitrosamine, 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK), a potent pulmonary carcinogen, both methylates and pyridyloxobutylates DNA. Both reaction pathways generate promutagenic O6-alkylguanine adducts. These adducts, O6-methylguanine (O6-mG) and O6-[4-oxo-4-(3-pyridyl)butyl]guanine (O6-pobG), are repaired by O6-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase (AGT). In this report, we demonstrate that pyridyloxobutyl DNA adducts are repaired by AGT in a reaction that results in pyridyloxobutyl transfer to the active site cysteine. Because minor changes within the binding pocket of AGT can alter the ability of this protein to repair bulky O6-alkylguanine adducts relative to O6-mG, we explored the ability of AGTs from different species as well as several human AGT variants and mutants to discriminate between O6-mG or O6-pobG adducts. We incubated proteins with equal molar amounts of oligodeoxynucleotides containing site specifically incorporated O6-mG or O6-pobG and measured repair. Bacterial AGTs poorly repaired O6-pobG. Mouse and rat AGT repaired both adducts at comparable rates. Wild-type human AGT, variant I143V/K178R, and mutant N157H repaired O6-mG approximately twice as fast as O6-pobG. Human variant G160R and mutants P140K, Y158H, G156A, and E166G did not repair O6-pobG until all of the O6-mG was removed. To understand the role of adduct structure on relative repair rates, the competition experiments were repeated with two other bulky O6-alkylguanine adducts, O6-butylguanine (O6-buG) and O6-benzylguanine (O6-bzG). The proteins displayed similar repair preference of O6-mG relative to O6-buG as observed with O6-pobG. In contrast, all of the mammalian proteins, except the mutant P140K, preferentially repaired O6-bzG. These studies indicate that the rate of repair of O6-pobG is highly dependent on protein structure. Inefficient repair of O6-pobG by bacterial AGT explains the high mutagenic activity of this adduct in bacterial systems. In addition, differences observed in the repair of this adduct by mammalian proteins may translate into differences in sensitivity to the mutagenic and carcinogenic effects of NNK or other pyridyloxobutylating nitrosamines.
Double-stranded and gapped shuttle vectors were used to study mutagenesis in human cells by O(6)-methyl (m(6)G)-, O(6)-ethyl (e(6)G)-, and O(6)-benzylguanine (b(6)G), and O(4)-methylthymine (m(4)T) when these bases were incorporated site-specifically in the ATG initiation codon of a lacZ' gene. Vectors were transfected into either human kidney cells (293) or colon tumor cells (SO) or into mismatch repair defective human colon tumor cells (H6 and LoVo). Cellular O(6)-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase (alkyltransferase) was optionally inactivated by treating cells with O(6)-benzylguanine prior to transfection. In alkyltransferase competent cells, the mutagenicity of all the modified bases was substantially higher in gapped plasmids than in double-stranded plasmids. Alkyltransferase inactivation increased mutagenesis by the three O(6)-substituted guanines in both double-stranded and gapped plasmids but did not affect m(4)T mutagenesis. In the absence of alkyltransferase, mutagenesis by m(6)G and to a lesser extent e(6)G in double-stranded vectors was higher in the mismatch repair defective H6 and LoVo cells than in SO or 293 cells indicating that e(6)G as well as m(6)G were subject to mismatch repair processing in these cells. The level of mutagenesis by m(4)T and b(6)G was not affected by mismatch repair status. When incorporated in gapped plasmids and in the absence of alkyltransferase, the order of mutagenicity for the modified bases was m(4)T > e(6)G congruent with m(6)G > b(6)G. The O(6)-substituted guanines primarily produced G-->A transitions while m(4)T primarily produced T-->C transitions. However, m(4)T also produced a significant number of T-->A transversion mutations in addition to T-->C transitions in mismatch repair deficient LoVo cells.
Brain metastases are devastating complications of cancer. The blood–brain barrier (BBB), which protects the normal brain, morphs into an inadequately characterized blood–tumor barrier (BTB) when brain metastases form, and is surrounded by a neuroinflammatory response. These structures contribute to poor therapeutic efficacy by limiting drug uptake. Here, we report that experimental breast cancer brain metastases of low- and high permeability to a dextran dye exhibit distinct microenvironmental gene expression patterns. Astrocytic sphingosine-1 phosphate receptor 3 (S1P3) is upregulated in the neuroinflammatory response of the highly permeable lesions, and is expressed in patients’ brain metastases. S1P3 inhibition functionally tightens the BTB in vitro and in vivo. S1P3 mediates its effects on BTB permeability through astrocytic secretion of IL-6 and CCL2, which relaxes endothelial cell adhesion. Tumor cell overexpression of S1P3 mimics this pathway, enhancing IL-6 and CCL-2 production and elevating BTB permeability. In conclusion, neuroinflammatory astrocytic S1P3 modulates BTB permeability.
Plasmids were constructed with guanine (G) or O6-methyl- (m6G), O6-ethyl-(e6G), or O6-benzyl- (b6G) guanine in the initiation codon (ATG) of the lacZ' gene. Four deoxyuridine residues were incorporated near the modified guanine in the complementary strand. The deoxyuridine-containing plasmids exhibited similarly high transformation efficiencies in ung- Escherichia coli, although the frequency of mutations induced by m6G, e6G, and b6G residues was relatively low. Treatment of the plasmids with uracil-DNA glycosylase (UDG), to remove the uracil residues, or UDG and exonuclease III, to create a gap in the deoxyuridine-containing strand, reduced transformation efficiency for adduct-containing plasmids but did not affect transformation efficiency for control plasmids. However, the same treatments dramatically enhanced mutagenesis by m6G, e6G, and b6G. These results were consistent with blockage of replication by the modified guanines in double-stranded plasmids resulting in preferential replication of the complementary strand. Replication past the modified guanines was forced in the gapped plasmids. The frequency of modified guanine-induced mutations in gapped vectors was similar in strains of E. coli that were proficient in DNA polymerase III but deficient in either DNA polymerase I or II or both polymerase I and II suggesting either that polymerase III was primarily responsible for adduct bypass in all strains or that the probability of base misinsertion during bypass by either polymerase I or II was similar to that for polymerase III. Repair studies with gapped plasmids indicated that m6G was subject to repair by Ada methyltransferase and to postreplication processing by methylation-directed mismatch repair. Neither e6G nor b6G were similarly repaired.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
O6-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase (AGT) repairs O6-alkylguanine residues at different rates depending on the identity of the alkyl group as well as the sequence context. To elucidate the mechanism(s) underlying the differences in rates, we examined the repair of five alkyl groups in three different sequence contexts. The kinact and Km values were determined by measuring the rates of repair of oligodeoxynucleotide duplexes containing the O6-alkylguanine residues with various concentrations of AGT in excess. The time course of the reactions all followed pseudo-first-order kinetics except for one of the O6-ethylguanine substrates, which could be analyzed in a two-phase exponential equation. The differences in rates of repair between the different alkyl groups and the different sequence contexts are dependent on rates of alkyl transfer and not substrate recognition. The relative rates of reaction are in general benzyl>methyl>ethyl>2-hydroxyethyl>4-(3-pyridyl)-4-oxobutyl, but the absolute rates are dependent on sequence. The kinact values between benzyl and 4-(3-pyridyl)-4-oxobutyl range from 2300 to 350000 depending on sequence. The sequence-dependent variation in kinact varied the most for O6-[4-(3-pyridyl)-4-oxobutyl]guanine, which ranged from 0.022 to 0.000016 s(-1). The results are consistent with a mechanism in which the O6-alkylguanine can bind to AGT in either a reactive or an unreactive orientation, the proportion of which depends on the sequence context.
Concomitant with the release of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) particles from the infected cell, the viral protease cleaves the Gag polyprotein precursor at a number of sites to trigger virus maturation. We previously reported that a betulinic acid-derived compound, bevirimat (BVM), blocks HIV-1 maturation by disrupting a late step in protease-mediated Gag processing: the cleavage of the capsid-spacer peptide 1 (CA-SP1) intermediate to mature CA. BVM was shown in multiple clinical trials to be safe and effective in reducing viral loads in HIV-1-infected patients. However, naturally occurring polymorphisms in the SP1 region of Gag (e.g., SP1-V7A) led to a variable response in some BVM-treated patients. The reduced susceptibility of SP1-polymorphic HIV-1 to BVM resulted in the discontinuation of its clinical development. To overcome the loss of BVM activity induced by polymorphisms in SP1, we carried out an extensive medicinal chemistry campaign to develop novel maturation inhibitors. In this study, we focused on alkyl amine derivatives modified at the C-28 position of the BVM scaffold. We identified a set of derivatives that are markedly more potent than BVM against an HIV-1 clade B clone (NL4-3) and show robust antiviral activity against a variant of NL4-3 containing the V7A polymorphism in SP1. One of the most potent of these compounds also strongly inhibited a multiclade panel of primary HIV-1 isolates. These data demonstrate that C-28 alkyl amine derivatives of BVM can, to a large extent, overcome the loss of susceptibility imposed by polymorphisms in SP1.
Summary Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) is a lethal brain disease caused by uncontrolled replication of JC polyomavirus (JCV). JCV strains recovered from the brains of PML patients carry mutations that prevent the engagement of sialylated glycans, which are thought to serve as receptors for the infectious entry of wild-type JCV. In this report, we show that non-sialylated glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) can serve as alternative attachment receptors for the infectious entry of both wild-type and PML-mutant JCV strains. After GAG-mediated attachment, PML-mutant strains engage non-sialylated non-GAG co-receptor glycans, such as asialo-GM1. JCV-neutralizing monoclonal antibodies isolated from patients who recovered from PML appear to block infection by preventing the docking of post-attachment co-receptor glycans in an apical pocket of the JCV major capsid protein. Identification of the GAG-dependent/sialylated glycan-independent alternative entry pathway should facilitate the development of infection inhibitors, including recombinant neutralizing antibodies.
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