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Mammalian peroxidases activate anticancer drug ellipticine to intermediates forming deoxyguanosine adducts in DNA identical to those found in vivo and generated from 12-hydroxyellipticine and 13-hydroxyellipticine

Publication at Second Faculty of Medicine |
2007

Abstract

Ellipticine is a potent antineoplastic agent, whose mode of action is considered to be based mainly on DNA intercalation, inhibition of topoisomerase II and cytochrome P450-mediated formation of covalent DNA adducts. This is the first report on the molecular mechanism of ellipticine oxidation by peroxidases (human myeloperoxidase, human and ovine cyclooxygenases, bovine lactoperoxidase, horseradish peroxidase) to species forming ellipticine-DNA adducts.

Using NMR spectroscopy, the structures of 2 ellipticine metabolites were identified; the major product is the ellipticine dimer, in which the 2 ellipticine skeletons are connected via N-6 of the pyrrole ring of one ellipticine molecule and C9 in the second one. The minor metabolite is ellipticine N-2-oxide.

Using P-32-postlabeling and [H-3]-labeled ellipticine, we showed that ellipticine binds covalently to DNA after its activation by peroxidases. The DNA adduct pattern induced by ellipticine consisted of a cluster of up to 4 adducts.

The 2 adducts are indistinguishable from the 2 major adducts generated between deoxyguanosine in DNA and either 13-hydroxy- or 12-hydroxyellipticine or in rats treated with ellipticine, or if ellipticine was activated with human hepatic and renal microsomes. The results presented here are the first characterization of the peroxidase-mediated oxidative metabolites of ellipticine and we have proposed species, 2 carbenium ions, ellipticine-13-ylium and ellipticine-12-ylium, as reactive species generating 2 major DNA adducts seen in vivo in rats treated with ellipticine.

The study forms the basis to further predict the susceptibility of human cancers to ellipticine.