Reductive activation of mitomycin C leads to its co-guanine. When pSP189 was exposed to monofuncvalent binding to DNA, forming monoadducts and tionally activated mitomycin C, increases in adduct cross-links. The cytotoxicity of mitomycin C has been levels and mutation frequency were found to be reat
Mutations in a shuttle vector exposed to activated mitomycin C
โ Scribed by Nadadur S. Srikanth; Anuradha Mudipalli; Alexander E. Maccubbin; Hira L Gurtoo
- Book ID
- 102947754
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 721 KB
- Volume
- 10
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0899-1987
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
The cytotoxicity of the potent antibiotic and antitumor agent mitomycin C (MMC) is due to its irreversible binding to DNA. Alkylating species generated by bioreductive activation of MMC are known to cause monoadducts and crossโlinks in DNA by specifically binding to guanine residues. To gain insight into how these lesions lead to baseโ and sequenceโspecific mutations, shuttle vector pSP189 was treated with MMC chemically reduced by treatment with sodium borohydride, replicated in human Ad293 cells, rescued in bacteria, and analyzed for mutations in the supF tRNA gene sequence. The MMCโinduced mutations were predominantly base substitutions. Eightyโfour percent of the base substitutions were transversions, with G:CโT:A the major transversion. Single base deletions were the other major mutational event, and 77% of these were G:C deletions. Base positions 115, 123, and 163 were mutational hot spots based on the frequency of independent mutations. Identification of a single MMC adduct (presumed to be a modified G on the basis of its R~f~ value) and clustering of MMCโinduced mutations at three GCโrich areas (nt 100โ123, 152โ163, and 168โ176) suggested that the mutational spectrum we found was due to binding of MMC to guanine on either strand of the plasmid DNA. ยฉ 1994 WileyโLiss, Inc.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES