Three conjugates of imidazole (Im)-pyrrole (Py) diamide and a DNA-alkylating moiety derived from the antibiotic duocarmycin A were synthesized, and their sequence specificity, reactivity, and antitumor activity comparatively examined. Sequencing gel analysis indicated that ImPyDu (1) alkylates DNA at the 3' end of AT-rich sequences at micromolar concentration. ImPyDu86 (2) reacts with DNA at AT-rich sites together with dialkylation sites at micromolar concentration. ImPyLDu86 (3) efficiently alkylates dialkylation sites at nanomolar concentration. Average values of log IC(50) against a 39 cancer cell line panel of 1-3 were -4.59, -5.95, and -8.25, respectively. The differential growth inhibition pattern of 1-3 varied with relatively low correlation coefficients. Array-based gene expression monitoring was performed for 3 in a human lung cancer cell line. Substantial downregulation of expression was seen for genes involved in DNA damage response, transcription, and signal transduction.
The bleomycin (BLM) group of antitumor antibiotics effects DNA cleavage in a sequence-selective manner. Previous studies have indicated that the metal-binding and bithiazole moieties of BLM are both involved in the binding of BLM to DNA. The metal-binding domain is normally the predominant structural element in determining the sequence selectivity of DNA binding, but it has been shown that replacement of the bithiazole moiety with a strong DNA binder can alter the sequence selectivity of DNA binding and cleavage. To further explore the mechanism by which BLM and DNA interact, a trithiazole-containing deglycoBLM analogue was synthesized and tested for its ability to relax supercoiled DNA and cleave linear duplex DNA in a sequence-selective fashion. Also studied was cleavage of a novel RNA substrate. Solid-phase synthesis of the trithiazole deglycoBLM A(5) analogue was achieved using a TentaGel resin containing a Dde linker and elaborated from five key intermediates. The ability of the resulting BLM analogue to relax supercoiled DNA was largely unaffected by introduction of the additional thiazole moiety. Remarkably, while no new sites of DNA cleavage were observed for this analogue, there was a strong preference for cleavage at two 5'-GT-3' sites when a 5'-(32)P end-labeled DNA duplex was used as a substrate. The alteration of sequence selectivity of cleavage was accompanied by some decrease in the potency of DNA cleavage, albeit without a dramatic diminution. In common with BLM, the trithiazole analogue of deglycoBLM A(5) effected both hydrolytic cleavage of RNA in the absence of added metal ion and oxidative cleavage in the presence of Fe(2+) and O(2). In comparison with BLM A(5), the relative efficiencies of hydrolytic cleavage at individual sites were altered.
The solid-phase synthesis of bleomycin A5 (BLM A5) and three monosaccharide analogues is presented. The monosaccharide analogues incorporated alpha-d-mannose, alpha-l-gulose, and alpha-l-rhamnose moieties in lieu of the disaccharide normally present in BLM A5. Also explored were the abilities of each of the monosaccharide congeners to cleave a 53-nt RNA. The elaboration of these carbohydrate-modified bleomycin analogues helps to define the role of the disaccharide moiety during the RNA cleavage event. The relatively facile solid-phase synthesis of bleomycin A5 and each of the carbohydrate analogues constitutes an important advance in the continuing mechanistic studies of bleomycin.
The antitumor antibiotic bleomycin has long been believed to exert its therapeutic effects at the level of DNA cleavage. Recently, evidence has been presented to suggest that RNA cleavage may also be important and that one or more transfer RNAs may be involved. To define those tRNAs that may represent important loci for the action of bleomycin, we have fractionated chicken liver tRNAs and identified those isoacceptors most susceptible to oxidative cleavage by Fe(II).BLM. Two chicken liver tRNAs, tRNA3Lys and tRNAPhe, were found to be cleaved with exceptional facility by Fe(II).BLM, and both were cleaved predominantly at U66. The cleavage of tRNA3Lys was shown to be minimally affected by physiological concentrations of Mg2+. Chicken liver tRNA3Lys is identical in sequence with human tRNA3Lys. These findings support a possible role for a critical tRNA such as tRNA3Lys in the mechanism by which bleomycin mediates its antitumor activity.
[structure in text] To explore the possibility of modifying bleomycin in a fashion that could alter its physiological distribution in a therapeutic setting, a new analogue of bleomycin has been prepared. This analogue is intended to target the asialoglycoprotein receptor on liver cells. Critically, despite the large C-substituent, the bleomycin conjugate was found to degrade DNA in the same fashion as bleomycin A(5) itself, and with only modestly decreased efficiency.
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