DNA-protein cross-links and replication-dependent histone H2AX phosphorylation induced by aminoflavone (NSC 686288), a novel anticancer agent active against human breast cancer cells.

Ling-hua Meng, Glenda Kohlhagen, Zhi-yong Liao, Smitha Antony, Edward Sausville, Yves Pommier
Author Information
  1. Ling-hua Meng: Laboratory of Molecular Pharmacology, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, NIH, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-4255, USA.

Abstract

Aminoflavone (5-amino-2,3-fluorophenyl)-6,8-difluoro-7-methyl-4H-1-benzopyran-4-one) (NSC 686288) is a candidate for possible advancement to phase I clinical trial. Aminoflavone has a unique activity profile in the NCI 60 cell lines (COMPARE analysis; http://www.dtp.nci.nih.gov/docs/dtp_search.html), and exhibits potent cellular and animal antitumor activity. To elucidate the mechanism of action of aminoflavone, we studied DNA damage in MCF-7 cells. Aminoflavone induced DNA-protein cross-links (DPC) and DNA single-strand breaks (SSB). Aminoflavone induced high levels of DPC and much lower level of SSB than camptothecin, which induces equal levels of DPC and SSB due to the trapping topoisomerase I-DNA complexes. Accordingly, neither topoisomerase I nor topoisomerase II were detectable in the aminoflavone-induced DPC. Aminoflavone also induced dose- and time-dependent histone H2AX phosphorylation (gamma-H2AX). Gamma-H2AX foci occurred with DPC formation, and like DPC, persisted after aminoflavone removal. Aphidicolin prevented gamma-H2AX formation, suggesting that gamma-H2AX foci correspond to replication-associated DNA double-strand breaks. Accordingly, no gamma-H2AX foci were found in proliferating cell nuclear antigen-negative or in mitotic cells. Bromodeoxyuridine incorporation and fluorescence-activated cell sorting analyses showed DNA synthesis inhibition uniformly throughout the S phase after exposure to aminoflavone. Aminoflavone also induced RPA2 and p53 phosphorylation, and induced p21(Waf1/Cip1) and MDM2, demonstrating S-phase checkpoint activation. These studies suggest that aminoflavone produces replication-dependent DNA lesions and S-phase checkpoint activation following DPC formation. Gamma-H2AX may be a useful clinical marker for monitoring the efficacy of aminoflavone in tumor therapies.

MeSH Term

Breast Neoplasms
Cell Cycle Proteins
Cell Line, Tumor
Cross-Linking Reagents
Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p21
DNA Damage
DNA Replication
DNA, Neoplasm
DNA, Single-Stranded
DNA-Binding Proteins
Flavonoids
Histones
Humans
Nuclear Proteins
Phosphorylation
Proto-Oncogene Proteins
Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-mdm2
Replication Protein A
S Phase
Tumor Suppressor Protein p53

Chemicals

CDKN1A protein, human
Cell Cycle Proteins
Cross-Linking Reagents
Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p21
DNA, Neoplasm
DNA, Single-Stranded
DNA-Binding Proteins
Flavonoids
H2AX protein, human
Histones
Nuclear Proteins
Proto-Oncogene Proteins
RPA1 protein, human
Replication Protein A
Tumor Suppressor Protein p53
aminoflavone
MDM2 protein, human
Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-mdm2

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0DPCAminoflavoneaminoflavoneinducedDNAgamma-H2AXcellcellsSSBtopoisomerasephosphorylationfociformationNSC686288phaseclinicalactivityDNA-proteincross-linksbreakslevelsAccordinglyalsohistoneH2AXGamma-H2AXS-phasecheckpointactivationreplication-dependent5-amino-23-fluorophenyl-68-difluoro-7-methyl-4H-1-benzopyran-4-onecandidatepossibleadvancementtrialuniqueprofileNCI60linesCOMPAREanalysishttp://wwwdtpncinihgov/docs/dtp_searchhtmlexhibitspotentcellularanimalantitumorelucidatemechanismactionstudieddamageMCF-7single-strandhighmuchlowerlevelcamptothecininducesequalduetrappingI-DNAcomplexesneitherIIdetectableaminoflavone-induceddose-time-dependentoccurredlikepersistedremovalAphidicolinpreventedsuggestingcorrespondreplication-associateddouble-strandfoundproliferatingnuclearantigen-negativemitoticBromodeoxyuridineincorporationfluorescence-activatedsortinganalysesshowedsynthesisinhibitionuniformlythroughoutSexposureRPA2p53p21Waf1/Cip1MDM2demonstratingstudiessuggestproduceslesionsfollowingmayusefulmarkermonitoringefficacytumortherapiesnovelanticanceragentactivehumanbreastcancer

Similar Articles

Cited By