Cancer 6: DNA damage & Repair Flashcards

1
Q

What can damage the DNA?

A

Chemicals (carcinogens)
Radiation

DNA damage can lead to mutation –> may lead to cancer

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2
Q

What are the different types of DNA damage by carcinogens

A
  • DNA adducts & alkylation
  • Base hydroxylations & abasic sites formed
  • Base dimers & chemical cross-links
  • Double & single strand breaks (double strand breaks very damaging)
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3
Q

What are the two phases of metabolism?

A

Phase I

  • addition of functional groups
    e. g. oxidations, reductions, hydrolysis
  • mainly cytochrome p450-mediated

Phase II

  • conjugation of Phase I functional groups
    e. g. sulphation, glucuronidation, acetylation, methylation, amino acid and glutathione conjugation
  • Generates polar (water soluble) metabolites.
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4
Q

What are polycyclic aromatic hyrdocarbons?

A

Common environmental pollutants
Formed from combustion of fossil fuels
Formed from combustion of tobacco

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5
Q

What does the two step epoxidation of B[a]P cause?

A

See slides
Benzo[a]pyrene –> converted to benzo[a]pyrene-7,8-oxide with P450

Epoxide hydroxylase converts to another compound then it is converted again by p450 to a group with a positive charge

This molecule DNA adducts

Epoxides are very reactive –> generating positive charge carbon atoms.

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6
Q

Describe the epoxidation of aflatoxin B1?

A
  • Formed by Aspergillus flavus mould
  • Common on poorly stored grains and peanuts
  • Aflatoxin B1 is a potent human liver carcinogen, especially in Africa and Far-East

Aflatoxin B1 converted to aflatoxin B1,2,3-epoxide by P450

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7
Q

Describe the metabolism of 2-naphthylamine?

A

Past components of dye-stuffs
Include 2-naphthylamine and benzidine (potent carcinogen)
Potent human bladder carcinogens - DNA reactive electrophile

P450 produces a toxic product but in the liver the glucuronyl transferase removes this toxicity by adding a glucuronide group. However when it is excreted in the urine the pH means it gains a Nitrenium ion –> electrophile

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8
Q

What does solar (UV) radiation do?

A
Forms pyrimidine (thymine) dimers
Skin cancer
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9
Q

What does ionising radiation do?

A
  • Generates free radicals in cells
  • Includes oxygen free radicals
    1) super oxide radical: O2•
    2) hydroxyl radical: HO•
  • These possess unpaired electrons
    1) electrophilic and therefore seek out electron-rich DNA
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10
Q

Describe oxygen free radical attack on DNA??

A

Double and single strand breaks. Double strand breaks more damaging.

Apurinic & apyrimidinic sites

Base modification

  • ring-opened guanine & adenine
  • thymine & cytosine glycols (two hydroxys on the molecules)
  • 8-hydroxyadenine & 8-hydroxyguanine (mutagenic)
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11
Q

What are the different types of DNA repair?

A

Direct reversal of DNA damage

  • photolyase splits cyclobutane pyrimidine-dimers
  • methyltransferases and alkyltransferases remove alkyl groups from DNA bases

Base excision repair (mainly for apurinic/apyrimidinic damage - damage where there is a loss of base)

  • DNA glycosylases and apurinic/apyrimidinic endonucleases + other enzyme partners
  • A repair polymerase (e.g. Polb) fills the gap and DNA ligase completes the repair.

Nucleotide excision repair (mainly for bulky DNA adducts)

  • Xeroderma pigmentosum proteins (XP proteins) assemble at the damage. A stretch of nucleotides either side of the damage are excised.
  • Repair polymerases (e.g. Pold/b) fill the gap and DNA ligase completes the repair.

During- or post-replication repair

  • mismatch repair
  • recombinational repair
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12
Q

Describe the process of DNA excision repair?

A

Base excision repair pathway

1) Mutagen exposure
2) DNA-glycosylase
3) AP-endonuclease
4) DNA polymerase
5) DNA ligase

Nucleotide excision repair pathway

1) Mutagen exposure
2) Endonuclease (cuts large parts of DNA)
3) Helicase
4) DNA polymerase
5) DNA Ligase

See slides

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13
Q

Describe the rate of endogenous damage and repair?

A

The greater the persistence of damage then the greater the chance of a mutagenic event

The cell has good repair capability. It only struggles when you throw carcinogens at it.

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14
Q

Describe the different fates of carcinogen-DNA damage?

A

See slides

Carcinogen damage leading to altered DNA –>

1) Efficient repair
2) Normal cell

1) Apoptosis
2) Cell death

1) Incorrect repair/altered primary seqeuence
2) DNA replication and cell division: fixed mutations
3) Transcription/translation giving aberrant proteins
3) Carcinogenesis if critical targets are mutated: Oncogenes, tumour suppressor genes.

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15
Q

How do you test for DNA damage

A

See slides

1) Look at the structures
2) In vitro BACTERIAL gene mutation assay e.g. Ames test with S. typhimurium. See if the chemical can damage the bacterial DNA.
3) In vitro MAMMALIAN CELL assay
e.g. chromosome aberration,
TK mutation in mouse lymphoma cell
Micronucleus assay
4) In vivo MAMMALIAN assay
e.g. Bone marrow micronucleus test
transgenic rodent mutation assay
5) Investigative in vivo MAMMALIAN assays

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16
Q

Describe the bacterial (Ames) test for mutagenicity of chemicals

A

You have a chemical to be tested

1) + rat liver enzyme preparation (s9) - which could convert the chemical to reactive metabolite.

We use bacteria that do not synthesise histidine e.g Salmonella strain. Which means it fails to grow. Unless the chemical mutates its DNA so it does synthesie histidine you get growth.

On histidine-free media: if mutations occur in bacterial genome then bacteria acquire ability to synthesis histidine = colonies.

17
Q

How do you detect DNA damage in mammalian cells. Chromosomal abberations

A

Treat mammalian cells with chemical in presence of liver S9. Look for chromosomal damage

1) Chromatid exchnage
2) Chromsome gap
3) Double minutes
4) Chromosome interchanges
5) Acentric ring
6) Chromosome break

18
Q

Describe the in vitro micronucleus assay

A

Cells treated with chemical and allowed to divide
Binucleate cells assessed for presence of micronuclei
Can stain the kinetochore proteins to determine if chemical treatment caused clastgenicity (chromosomal breakage) or aneuploidy (chromosomal loss)

19
Q

Describe the bone marrow micronucleus assay in mice or rats?

A

Treat animals with chemical and examine bone marrow cells or peripheral blood erythrocytes for micronulei.

They shouldn’t have nuclei