996 resultados para Topoisomerase II
Resumo:
Type II topoisomerases (Topo II) are unique enzymes that change the DNA topology by catalyzing the passage of two double-strands across each other by using the energy from ATP hydrolysis. In vitro, human Topo II relaxes positive supercoiled DNA around 10-fold faster than negative supercoiled DNA. By using atomic force microscopy (AFM) we found that human Topo II binds preferentially to DNA cross-overs. Around 50% of the DNA crossings, where Topo II was bound to, presented an angle in the range of 80-90°, suggesting a favored binding geometry in the chiral discrimination by Topo II. Our studies with AFM also helped us visualize the dynamics of the unknotting action of Topo II in knotted molecules.
Resumo:
Our study reports the extraction and isolation of a new phaeophytin derivative 15¹-hydroxy-(15¹-S)-porphyrinolactone, designated anamariaine (1) herein, isolated from the chloroform fraction of aerial parts of Thyrsacanthus ramosissimus Moric. along with the known 15¹-ethoxy-(15¹-S)-porphyrinolactone (2). These compounds were identified by usual spectroscopic methods. Both compounds were subjected to in vitro (inhibitory activity) tests by means of supercoiled DNA relaxation techniques and were shown to display inhibitory activity against human DNA topoisomerase II-α at 50 µM. Interconversion of these two pigments under the mild conditions of the isolation techniques should be highly unlikely but cannot be entirely ruled out.
Resumo:
Seven natural neolignans isolated from Licaria chrysophylla and Licaria aurea along with five semisynthetic derivatives were tested for their inhibitory action on DNA-topoisomerase by relaxation assays on pBR322 plasmid DNA. All compounds tested showed strong inhibition at a concentration of 100 µM, while none showed activity between 5 and 70 µM. These results indicate that no obvious correlation can be derived between the structure of these compounds and their inhibitory effect on the DNA relaxation activity of topoisomerase II. This is the first report on DNA topoisomerase II inhibitors from Licaria chrysophylla and Licaria aurea leading to the identification of lignoids as topoisomerase II-α inhibitors.
Resumo:
Considerando não apenas a importância das antraciclinas na terapêutica do câncer, mas também os efeitos colaterais associados ao uso destas drogas, o presente estudo procurou avaliar a atividade genotóxica de seis antraciclinas em uso clínico - doxorrubicina (DOX), daunorrubicina (DNR), epirrubicina (EPI), idarrubicina (IDA), além dos análogos de última geração, pirarrubicina (THP) e aclarrubicina (ACLA). Para tanto, foi empregado o Teste de Mutação e Recombinação Somática (SMART) em Drosophila melanogaster, que permite a detecção simultânea de mutação gênica e cromossômica, assim como de eventos relacionados com recombinação mitótica - possibilitando quantificar a contribuição deste último parâmetro genético para a genotoxicidade total induzida pelas drogas em estudo. Os dados obtidos a partir desta análise demonstraram que todas as antraciclinas estudadas induziram acréscimos significativos, relacionados tanto à mutação, quanto à recombinação nas células somáticas deste inseto. Além disso, a recombinação mitótica - entre cromossomos homólogos - foi o evento responsável por, aproximadamente, 62 a 100% da toxicidade genética observada. A comparação do potencial genotóxico dos diferentes análogos, através da padronização do número de danos genéticos por unidade de tratamento (mM), caracterizou a ACLA e o THP como as drogas mais potentes – sendo cerca de 20 vezes mais efetivas, como genotoxinas, do que a DOX, o análogo menos potente. Já que a principal ação genotóxica desta família de compostos está relacionada à inibição da topoisomerase II (topo II) – uma enzima que atua no relaxamento da supertorção da dupla hélice de DNA, através da quebra e posterior religação de suas fitas - as diferenças observadas podem ser atribuídas ao mecanismo envolvido neste bloqueio Enquanto os análogos DOX, DNR, EPI, IDA e THP atuam como venenos de topo II - tornando permanentes as quebras induzidas pela enzima - a ACLA inibe a função catalítica desta enzima, impedindo a sua ligação ao DNA. Cabe ainda ressaltar que a genotoxicidade da ACLA não está restrita à sua atividade catalítica sobre a topo II, mas também à sua ação como veneno de topo I e à sua habilidade de intercalar-se na molécula de DNA. Quando a potência genotóxica destas drogas foi associada a suas estruturas químicas, observou-se que substituições no grupamento amino-açúcar levaram a uma maior atividade tóxico-genética, quando comparadas a modificações no cromóforo. Cabe ainda ressaltar que as modificações estruturais, presentes nos análogos DOX, DNR, EPI, IDA e THP, não alteraram a sua ação recombinogênica. No entanto, no que se refere a ACLA, observaram-se decréscimos significativos na indução de recombinação mitótica - que podem ser atribuídas às múltiplas substituições presentes tanto no grupamento amino-açúcar quanto no cromóforo. O conjunto destas observações evidencia que a genotoxicidade total das drogas em estudo está centrada na indução de recombinação homóloga - um evento predominantemente envolvido tanto na iniciação, quanto na progressão do câncer. A alta incidência de tumores secundários, em pacientes submetidos ao tratamento com as antraciclinas, pode, pois, ser atribuída à ação preferencial destas drogas sobre a recombinação mitótica – embora a atividade mutagênica não possa ser desconsiderada.
Resumo:
Resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae to all available therapeutic antimicrobials has emerged and new efficacious drugs for treatment of gonorrhea are essential. The topoisomerase II inhibitor ETX0914 (also known as AZD0914) is a new spiropyrimidinetrione antimicrobial that has different mechanisms of action from all previous and current gonorrhea treatment options. In this study, the N. gonorrhoeae resistance determinants for ETX0914 were further described and the effects of ETX0914 on the growth of N. gonorrhoeae (ETX0914 wild type, single step selected resistant mutants, and efflux pump mutants) were examined in a novel in vitro time-kill curve analysis to estimate pharmacodynamic parameters of the new antimicrobial. For comparison, ciprofloxacin, azithromycin, ceftriaxone, and tetracycline were also examined (separately and in combination with ETX0914). ETX0914 was rapidly bactericidal for all wild type strains and had similar pharmacodynamic properties to ciprofloxacin. All selected resistant mutants contained mutations in amino acid codons D429 or K450 of GyrB and inactivation of the MtrCDE efflux pump fully restored the susceptibility to ETX0914. ETX0914 alone and in combination with azithromycin and ceftriaxone was highly effective against N. gonorrhoeae and synergistic interaction with ciprofloxacin, particularly for ETX0914-resistant mutants, was found. ETX0914, monotherapy or in combination with azithromycin (to cover additional sexually transmitted infections), should be considered for phase III clinical trials and future gonorrhea treatment.
Resumo:
DNA topoisomerase II is a homodimeric molecular machine that couples ATP usage to the transport of one DNA segment through a transient break in another segment. In the presence of a nonhydrolyzable ATP analog, the enzyme is known to promote a single turnover of DNA transport. Current models for the enzyme’s mechanism based on this result have hydrolysis of two ATPs as the last step, used only to reset the enzyme for another round of reaction. Using rapid-quench techniques, topoisomerase II recently was shown to hydrolyze its two bound ATPs in a strictly sequential manner. This result is incongruous with the models based on the nonhydrolyzable ATP analog data. Here we present evidence that hydrolysis of one ATP by topoisomerase II precedes, and accelerates, DNA transport. These results indicate that important features of this enzyme’s mechanism previously have been overlooked because of the reliance on nonhydrolyzable analogs for studying a single reaction turnover. A model for the mechanism of topoisomerase II is presented to show how hydrolysis of one ATP could drive DNA transport.
Resumo:
Psorospermin is a plant natural product that shows significant in vivo activity against P388 mouse leukemia. The molecular basis for this selectivity is unknown, although psorospermin has been demonstrated to intercalate into DNA and alkylate N7 of guanine. Significantly, the alkylation reactivity of psorospermin at specific sites on DNA increased 25-fold in the presence of topoisomerase II. In addition, psorospermin trapped the topoisomerase II-cleaved complex formation at the same site. These results imply that the efficacy of psorospermin is related to its interaction with the topoisomerase II–DNA complex. Because thermal treatment of (N7 guanine)–DNA adducts leads to DNA strand breakage, we were able to determine the site of alkylation of psorospermin within the topoisomerase II gate site and infer that intercalation takes place at the gate site between base pairs at the +1 and +2 positions. These results provide not only additional mechanistic information on the mode of action of the anticancer agent psorospermin but also structural insights into the design of an additional class of topoisomerase II poisons. Because the alkylation site for psorospermin in the presence of topoisomerase II can be assigned unambiguously and the intercalation site inferred, this drug is a useful probe for other topoisomerase poisons where the sites for interaction are less well defined.
Resumo:
Topoisomerase II is able to break and rejoin double-strand DNA. It controls the topological state and forms and resolves knots and catenanes. Not much is known about the relation between the chromosome segregation and condensation defects as found in yeast top2 mutants and the role of topoisomerase II in meiosis. We studied meiosis in a heat-sensitive top2 mutant of Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Topoisomerase II is not required until shortly before meiosis I. The enzyme is necessary for condensation shortly before the first meiotic division but not for early meiotic prophase condensation. DNA replication, prophase morphology, and dynamics of the linear elements are normal in the top2 mutant. The top2 cells are not able to perform meiosis I. Arrested cells have four spindle pole bodies and two spindles but only one nucleus, suggesting that the arrest is nonregulatory. Finally, we show that the arrest is partly solved in a top2 rec7 double mutant, indicating that topoisomerase II functions in the segregation of recombined chromosomes. We suggest that the inability to decatenate the replicated DNA is the primary defect in top2. This leads to a loss of chromatin condensation shortly before meiosis I, failure of sister chromatid separation, and a nonregulatory arrest.
Resumo:
DNA topoisomerase II is a nuclear enzyme essential for chromosome dynamics and DNA metabolism. In mammalian cells, two genetically and biochemically distinct topoisomerase II forms exist, which are designated topoisomerase II alpha and topoisomerase II beta. In our studies of human topoisomerase II, we have found that a substantial fraction of the enzyme exists as alpha/beta heterodimers in HeLa cells. The ability to form heterodimers was verified when human topoisomerases II alpha and II beta were coexpressed in yeast and investigated in a dimerization assay. Analysis of purified heterodimers shows that these enzymes maintain topoisomerase II specific catalytic activities. The natural existence of an active heterodimeric subclass of topoisomerase II merits attention whenever topoisomerases II alpha and II beta function, localization, and cell cycle regulation are investigated.
Resumo:
Type II DNA topoisomerases, which create a transient gate in duplex DNA and transfer a second duplex DNA through this gate, are essential for topological transformations of DNA in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells and are of interest not only from a mechanistic perspective but also because they are targets of agents for anticancer and antimicrobial chemotherapy. Here we describe the structure of the molecule of human topoisomerase II [DNA topoisomerase (ATP-hydrolyzing), EC 5.99.1.3] as seen by scanning transmission electron microscopy. A globular approximately 90-angstrom diameter core is connected by linkers to two approximately 50-angstrom domains, which were shown by comparison with genetically truncated Saccharomyces cerevisiae topoisomerase II to contain the N-terminal region of the approximately 170-kDa subunits and that are seen in different orientations. When the ATP-binding site is occupied by a nonhydrolyzable ATP analog, a quite different structure is seen that results from a major conformational change and consists of two domains approximately 90 angstrom and approximately 60 angstrom in diameter connected by a linker, and in which the N-terminal domains have interacted. About two-thirds of the molecules show an approximately 25 A tunnel in the apical part of the large domain, and the remainder contain an internal cavity approximately 30 A wide in the large domain close to the linker region. We propose that structural rearrangements lead to this displacement of an internal tunnel. The tunnel is likely to represent the channel through which one DNA duplex, after capture in the clamp formed by the N-terminal domains, is transferred across the interface between the enzyme's subunits. These images are consistent with biochemical observations and provide a structural basis for understanding the reaction of topoisomerase II.
Resumo:
A covalently cross-linked dimer of yeast DNA topoisomerase II was created by fusing the enzyme with the GCN4 leucine zipper followed by two glycines and a cysteine. Upon oxidation of the chimeric protein, a disulfide bond forms between the two carboxyl termini, covalently and intradimerically cross-linking the two protomers. In addition, all nine of the cysteines naturally occurring in topoisomerase II have been changed to alanines in this construct. This cross-linked, cysteine-less topoisomerase II is catalytically active in DNA duplex passage as indicated by ATP-dependent DNA supercoil relaxation and kinetoplast DNA decatenation assays. However, these experiments do not directly distinguish between a "one-gate" and a "two-gate" mechanism for the enzyme.
Resumo:
Chemotherapeutic drugs can in many ways disrupt the replication machinery triggering apoptosis in cancer cells: some act directly on DNA and others block the enzymes involved in preparing DNA for replication. Cisplatin-based drugs are common as first-line cancer chemotherapics. Another example is etoposide, a molecule that blocks topoisomerase II α leading to the inhibition of dsDNA replication. Despite their efficacy, cancer cells can respond to these treatments over time by overtaking their effects, leading to drug resistance. Chemoresistance events can be triggered by the action of enzymes like DNA polymerase ƞ (Pol η). This polymerase helps also to bypass drug-induced damage in cancer cells, allowing DNA replication and cancer cells proliferation even when cisplatin-based chemotherapeutic drugs are in use. Pol ƞ is a promising drug discovery target, whose inhibition would help in overcoming of drug resistance. This study aims to identify a potent and selective Pol ƞ inhibitor able to improve the efficacy of platinum-based chemotherapeutic drugs. We report the discovery of compound 64 (ARN24964), after an extensive SAR reporting 35 analogs. We evaluated compound 64 on four different cell lines. Interestingly, the molecule is a Pol η inhibitor able to act synergistically with cisplatin. Moreover, we also synthesized a prodrug form that allowed us to improve its stability and the bioavailability. This compound represents an advanced scaffold featuring good potency and DMPK properties. In addition to this central theme, this thesis also describes our efforts in developing and characterize a novel hybrid inhibitor/poison for the human topoisomerase II α enzyme. In particular, we performed specific assays to study the inhibiton of Topoisomesare II α and we evaluated compounds effect on three cancer cell lines. These studies allowed us to identify a compound that is able to inhibit the enzyme with a good pK and a good potency.