The alkaline elution technique in combination with various repair endonucleases (Fpg protein, endonuclease III, exonuclease III, T4 endonuclease V) was used to quantify steady-state (background) levels of oxidative base modifications in various types of mammalian cells. In human lymphocytes the number of base modifications sensitive to Fpg protein, which include 8-hydroxyguanine, was 0.25 +/- 0.05 per 10(6) base pairs. Even lower levels (0.07 +/- 0.02 per 10(6) bp) were observed in HeLa cells. The numbers of sites sensitive to the other repair endonucleases were below the detection limit (0.05 per 10(6) bp). In a direct comparison, the background level of Fpg-sensitive modifications determined by alkaline elution was much lower than the background level of 8-hydroxydesoxyguanosine (8-oxodG) determined after enzymatic DNA hydrolysis by HPLC and electrochemical detection. However, the number of additional Fpg-sensitive modifications induced by a photosensitizer plus light was similar to the additional number of 8-oxodG residues determined by HPLC with electrochemical detection. This indicates that the enzyme assay does not systematically underestimate the number of lesions and points to an artefactual generation of 8-oxodG during DNA isolation and hydrolysis.
The effects of thiols, ascorbic acid and thermal stress on the basal (steady-state) levels of oxidative DNA base modifications were studied. In various types of untreated cultured mammalian cells, the levels of total glutathione were found to be inversely correlated with the levels of DNA base modifications sensitive to the repair endonuclease Fpg protein, which include 8-hydroxyguanine (8-oxoG). A depletion of glutathione by treatment with buthionine sulphoximine increased the steady-state level in AS52 Chinese hamster cells by~50%. However, additional thiols in the culture medium did not reduce the level of Fpgsensitive base modifications: 0-10 mM N-acetylcysteine had no effect, whereas cysteine ethylester even increased the oxidative DNA damage at concentrations >0.1 mM. Similarly, ascorbic acid (0-20 mM) failed to reduce the steadystate levels. When AS52 cells were grown at elevated temperature (41°C), the steady-state level of the oxidative DNA modifications increased by 40%, in spite of a concomitant 1.6-fold increase of the cellular level of total glutathione. Depletion of glutathione at 41°C nearly doubled the already elevated level of oxidative damage. A constitutive expression of the heat-shock protein Hsp27 in L929 mouse fibrosarcoma cells at 37°C increased the glutathione level by 60%, but had little effect on the level of oxidative DNA damage.
Purified repair endonucleases such as Fpg protein, endonuclease III and IV allow a very sensitive quantification of various types of oxidative DNA modifications in mammalian cells. By means of these assays, the numbers of base modifications sensitive to Fpg protein, which include 8-hydroxyguanine (8-oxoG), were determined to be less than 0.3 per 10(6) bp in several types of untreated cultured mammalian cells and human lymphocytes and less than 10 per 10(6) bp in mitochondrial DNA from rat and porcine liver. Oxidative 5,6-dihydropyrimidine derivatives sensitive to endonuclease III and sites of base loss sensitive to endonuclease IV or exonuclease III were much less frequent than Fpg-sensitive modifications. Here, we summarize our indications that all Fpg-sensitive modifications are recognized under the assay conditions and that on the other hand there is no artifactual generation of oxidative damage during the analysis. In addition, we show that the steady-state levels of Fpg-sensitive modifications in human lymphocytes and in two mammalian cell lines were higher in proliferating than in resting (confluent) cells. Only some of the Fpg-sensitive base modifications induced by various oxidants are 8-oxoG residues, as demonstrated for the damage under cell-free conditions. The percentage was dependent on the species ultimately responsible for the DNA damage and was approx. 40% in the case of hydroxyl radicals and peroxynitrite, 75% for type II photosensitizers (reacting via singlet oxygen) and only 20-30% in the case of type I photosensitizers such as riboflavin and acridine orange, which are assumed to react directly with the DNA.
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