Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Sequence-specific DNA Cleavage by Fe2+-mediated Fenton Reactions Has Possible Biological Implications

1999; Elsevier BV; Volume: 274; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1074/jbc.274.2.962

ISSN

1083-351X

Autores

Ernst S. Henle, Zhengxu Han, Ning Tang, Priyamvada Rai, Yongzhang Luo, Stuart Linn,

Tópico(s)

Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques

Resumo

Preferential cleavage sites have been determined for Fe2+/H2O2-mediated oxidations of DNA. In 50 mm H2O2, preferential cleavages occurred at the nucleoside 5′ to each of the dG moieties in the sequence RGGG, a sequence found in a majority of telomere repeats. Within a plasmid containing a (TTAGGG)81human telomere insert, 7-fold more strand breakage occurred in the restriction fragment with the insert than in a similar-sized control fragment. This result implies that telomeric DNA could protect coding DNA from oxidative damage and might also link oxidative damage and iron load to telomere shortening and aging. In micromolar H2O2, preferential cleavage occurred at the thymidine within the sequence RTGR, a sequence frequently found to be required in promoters for normal responses of many procaryotic and eucaryotic genes to iron or oxygen stress. Computer modeling of the interaction of Fe2+ with RTGR in B-DNA suggests that due to steric hindrance with the thymine methyl, Fe2+ associates in a specific manner with the thymine flipped out from the base stack so as to allow an octahedrally-oriented coordination of the Fe2+ with the three purine N7 residues. Fe2+-dependent changes in NMR spectra of duplex oligonucleotides containing ATGA versus those containing AUGA or A5mCGA were consistent with this model.

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