The effect of deoxyadenosine plus deoxycoformycin on replicative and repair synthesis of DNA in human lymphoblasts and isolated nuclei

S. S. Matsumoto, J. Yu, A. L. Yu

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Abstract

Deoxyadenosine plus deoxycoformycin (dCf) causes increased DNA breaks in lymphoid cells. This study explored the possible inhibition of repair synthesis of DNA by dAdo plus dCf as a cause of DNA breakage. It was shown that DNA breaks accumulated in a human T-lymphoblast cell line, CCRF-CEM, following incubation with dAdo plus dCf and were not fully repaired 20 h after their removal. Analysis of the density distribution of radiolabeled DNA on alkaline CsCl gradient showed that incubation of CCRF-CEM cells with dAdo plus dCf caused inhibition of semiconservative, but not repair synthesis of DNA. Semiconservative synthesis of DNA was also inhibited in CCRF-CEM nuclei isolated from cells pretreated with dAdo and dCf, suggesting damage to DNA replicative machinery. However, no such inhibition was observed in the nuclei of a similarly treated CCRF-CEM mutant that was deficient in adenosine kinase and deoxycytidine kinase. This suggests that dAdo must be phosphorylated in intact cells to exert its effect. Using [3H]dTTP incorporation in isolated CCRF-CEM nuclei to measure DNA synthesis, it was found that a high concentration (>100 μM) of dATP inhibits semiconservative but not repair synthesis of DNA. The present studies thus indicate that accumulation of DNA strand breaks induced by dAdo plus dCf is not the consequence of inhibition of repair DNA synthesis. This implies the mechanism may involve perturbation of DNA ligation or activation of a certain process which causes DNA strand breaks. In addition, dATP may interfere with some steps of semiconservative DNA synthesis, but not the repair synthesis of DNA.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)7153-7158
Number of pages6
JournalJournal of Biological Chemistry
Volume263
Issue number15
StatePublished - 1988
Externally publishedYes

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