Crosstalk between repair pathways elicits double-strand breaks in alkylated DNA and implications for the action of temozolomide

Author:

Fuchs Robert P1ORCID,Isogawa Asako2,Paulo Joao A3,Onizuka Kazumitsu4,Takahashi Tatsuro5,Amunugama Ravindra1,Duxin Julien P1,Fujii Shingo2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, United States

2. Cancer Research Center of Marseille, UMR7258, CNRS, Marseille, France

3. Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, United States

4. Institute of Multidisciplinary Research for Advanced Materials, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan

5. Faculty of Science, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan

Abstract

Temozolomide (TMZ), a DNA methylating agent, is the primary chemotherapeutic drug used in glioblastoma treatment. TMZ induces mostly N-alkylation adducts (N7-methylguanine and N3-methyladenine) and some O6-methylguanine (O6mG) adducts. Current models propose that during DNA replication, thymine is incorporated across from O6mG, promoting a futile cycle of mismatch repair (MMR) that leads to DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). To revisit the mechanism of O6mG processing, we reacted plasmid DNA with N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU), a temozolomide mimic, and incubated it in Xenopus egg-derived extracts. We have shown that in this system, MMR proteins are enriched on MNU-treated DNA and we observed robust, MMR-dependent, repair synthesis. Our evidence also suggests that MMR, initiated at O6mG:C sites, is strongly stimulated in cis by repair processing of other lesions, such as N-alkylation adducts. Importantly, MNU-treated plasmids display DSBs in extracts, the frequency of which increases linearly with the square of alkylation dose. We suggest that DSBs result from two independent repair processes, one involving MMR at O6mG:C sites and the other involving base excision repair acting at a nearby N-alkylation adduct. We propose a new, replication-independent mechanism of action of TMZ, which operates in addition to the well-studied cell cycle-dependent mode of action.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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