Inhibition of repair of carboplatin-induced DNA damage by 9-beta-D-arabinofuranosyl-2-fluoroadenine in quiescent human lymphocytes.

Biochem Pharmacol

First Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medical Sciences, University of Fukui, Shimoaizuki 23 Matsuoka, Fukui 910-1193, Japan.

Published: November 2004

AI Article Synopsis

  • Previous studies highlight that fludarabine targets DNA repair, and this study investigates how carboplatin and F-ara-A interact regarding DNA repair inhibition.
  • Using human quiescent lymphocytes, the research employed the alkaline comet assay to evaluate DNA damage from carboplatin, revealing a dose-dependent increase in DNA incision that was reversible after 4 hours.
  • The combination of carboplatin and F-ara-A led to enhanced apoptosis and cytotoxic effects, whereas carboplatin alone showed minimal damage, suggesting that carboplatin creates an opportunity for F-ara-A to inhibit DNA repair in dormant cells.

Article Abstract

Previous studies including ours have demonstrated that DNA repair is one of the important targets of fludarabine. The aim of this study is to clarify a mechanistic interaction of carboplatin and F-ara-A, from the perspective of F-ara-A-mediated inhibition of DNA repair initiated by carboplatin. Using human quiescent lymphocytes, we focused on DNA repair, since these cells provide a model of dormant cells. To evaluate the carboplatin-induced DNA incision and its repair, we used the alkaline comet assay. When lymphocytes were incubated with carboplatin, a dose-dependent increase in the tail-moment was observed. Then, tail-moment decreased in proportion to the incubation period in fresh media and recovered to the control level at 4 h. DNA rejoining was completely inhibited by F-ara-A at 10 microM through 0 to 6 h after washing out of these drugs and this F-ara-A-induced inhibition was concentration-dependent. Cellular damage after drug exposure was evaluated with the induction of apoptosis as well as cytotoxic effect. Exposure to carboplatin alone did not induce any apparent cellular damage in quiescent lymphocytes. In contrast, a more than additive induction of apoptosis as well as an enhancement of cytotoxic action was observed in cells treated with a combination of carboplatin and F-ara-A. In the CEM cell line, there was no enhancement of the cytotoxic action of these drugs, despite the clear demonstration of an inhibitory effect on DNA repair. These results indicate that chemotherapy with carboplatin opened a new target for F-ara-A by initiating DNA repair in quiescent cells.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bcp.2004.06.027DOI Listing

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