Fludarabine triphosphate inhibits nucleotide excision repair of cisplatin-induced dna adducts in vitro

Lan Li, Xiao Ming Liu, Armand B. Glassman, Michael J. Keating, Michal Stros, William Plunkett, Li Ying Yang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

71 Scopus citations

Abstract

Fludarabine (9-β-arabinofuranosyl-2-fluoroadenine-5'-monophosphate) is clinically active against chronic lymphocytic leukemia and low-grade lymphomas. We reported previously that fludarabine nucleoside synergistically enhanced cisplatin (CDDP)-induced cytotoxicity in vitro, and that the synergism was concomitant with inhibition of removal of cellular CDDP- induced DNA interstrand cross-links, which are presumably repaired by homologous recombinational repair. To extend our work, we investigated whether fludarabine inhibits nucleotide excision repair (NER) of CDDP- induced DNA intrastrand adducts. The effect of fludarabine on NER was determined using a cell-free system in which a plasmid containing the DNA adducts served as the substrate for repair enzymes in whole-cell extracts from repair-competent cells. To prevent the cell-bound high mobility group box-containing proteins from interfering with repair, cell extracts were depleted with high mobility group box proteins by immunoprecipitation prior to the assay. Repair synthesis, measured by the incorporation of [32P]dATP or [32P]dCTP, was inhibited by 50% at 26 or 43 μM fludarabine triphosphate, respectively; the effect was dose dependent and may have resulted from the termination of repair-patch elongation. These results were consistent with those from pulse-chase experiments demonstrating the conversion of nicked circular plasmid to the closed circular form by cell extracts filling the repair gaps. When proliferating cell nuclear antigen- depleted cell extracts were used and aphidicolin was added in the repair assay to arrest NER at the incision/excision stage, 100 μM fludarabine triphosphate inhibited about 55% of the conversion of nicked plasmids from the closed circular damaged plasmid substrate; the inhibition was dose dependent. We conclude that fludarabine triphosphate inhibited NER at the steps of incision and repair synthesis. These results suggest that fludarabine may serve as a potential repair modulator to improve the antitumor efficacies of combination regimens containing agents that induce NER.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1487-1494
Number of pages8
JournalCancer Research
Volume57
Issue number8
StatePublished - 1997

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Oncology
  • Cancer Research

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Fludarabine triphosphate inhibits nucleotide excision repair of cisplatin-induced dna adducts in vitro'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this