Title of article
DNA breakage induced by 1,2,4-benzenetriol: relative contributions of oxygen-derived active species and transition metal ions
Author/Authors
Anna Shun-Hua Li، نويسنده , , Brian Bandy، نويسنده , , Siu-Sing Tsang، نويسنده , , Allan J. Davison، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
14
From page
943
To page
956
Abstract
We report here the relative roles of metals and selected reactive oxygen species in DNA damage by the genotoxic benzene metabolite 1,2,4-benzenetriol, and the interactions of antioxidants in affording protection. 1,2,4-Benzenetriol induces scission in supercoiled phage DNA in neutral aqueous solution with an effective dose (ED50) of 6.7 μM for 50% cleavage of 2.05 μg/ml supercoiled PM2 DNA. In decreasing order of effectiveness: catalase (20 U/ml), formate (25 mM), superoxide dismutase (20 U/ml), and mannitol (50 mM) protected, from 85 to 28%. Evidently, H2O2 is the dominant active species, with O2•− and √OH playing subordinate roles. Desferrioxamine or EDTA inhibited DNA breakage by 81–85%, despite accelerating 1,2,4-benzenetriol autoxidation. Consistent with this suggestion of a crucial role for metals, addition of cupric, cuprous, ferric, or ferrous ions enhanced DNA breakage, with copper being more active than iron. Combinations of scavengers protected more effectively than any single scavenger alone, with implications for antioxidants acting in concert in living cells. Synergistic combinations were superoxide dismutase with √OH scavengers, superoxide dismutase with desferrioxamine, and catalase with desferrioxamine. Antagonistic (preemptive) combinations were catalase with superoxide dismutase, desferrioxamine with √OH scavengers, and catalase with √OH scavengers. The most striking aspect of synergism was the extent to which metal chelation (desferrioxamine) acted synergistically with either catalase or superoxide dismutase to provide virtually complete protection. Concluding, 1,2,4-benzenetriol-induced DNA damage occurs mainly by site-specific, Fenton-type mechanisms, involving synergism between several reactive intermediates. Multiple antioxidant actions are needed for effective protection.
Keywords
Fenton reaction , antioxidant , Desferrioxamine , Site-specific DNA damage , 2 , Iron , 4-Benzenetriol , Oxygen-derived active species , copper , 1 , free radicals
Journal title
Free Radical Biology and Medicine
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Free Radical Biology and Medicine
Record number
518812
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