Etoposide quinone is a redox-dependent topoisomerase II poison.

Biochemistry

Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Lipscomb University College of Pharmacy, Nashville, Tennessee 37204-3951, USA.

Published: June 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • Etoposide is a chemotherapy drug that can cause treatment-related leukemias in 2-3% of patients due to its association with chromosomal rearrangements.
  • The metabolism of etoposide via the enzyme CYP3A4 produces metabolites like etoposide quinone, which may play a significant role in this leukemogenesis.
  • Research shows that etoposide quinone is more effective than etoposide itself at inducing DNA cleavage and does not require ATP for activity, suggesting it may be a key factor in the drug's leukemia risk.

Article Abstract

Etoposide is a topoisomerase II poison that is used to treat a variety of human cancers. Unfortunately, 2-3% of patients treated with etoposide develop treatment-related leukemias characterized by 11q23 chromosomal rearrangements. The molecular basis for etoposide-induced leukemogenesis is not understood but is associated with enzyme-mediated DNA cleavage. Etoposide is metabolized by CYP3A4 to etoposide catechol, which can be further oxidized to etoposide quinone. A CYP3A4 variant is associated with a lower risk of etoposide-related leukemias, suggesting that etoposide metabolites may be involved in leukemogenesis. Although etoposide acts at the enzyme-DNA interface, several quinones poison topoisomerase II via redox-dependent protein adduction. The effects of etoposide quinone on topoisomerase IIα-mediated DNA cleavage have been examined previously. Although findings suggest that the activity of the quinone is slightly greater than that of etoposide, these studies were carried out in the presence of significant levels of reducing agents (which should reduce etoposide quinone to the catechol). Therefore, we examined the ability of etoposide quinone to poison human topoisomerase IIα in the absence of reducing agents. Under these conditions, etoposide quinone was ∼5-fold more active than etoposide at inducing enzyme-mediated DNA cleavage. Consistent with other redox-dependent poisons, etoposide quinone inactivated topoisomerase IIα when incubated with the protein prior to DNA and lost activity in the presence of dithiothreitol. Unlike etoposide, the quinone metabolite did not require ATP for maximal activity and induced a high ratio of double-stranded DNA breaks. Our results support the hypothesis that etoposide quinone contributes to etoposide-related leukemogenesis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3119725PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi200438mDOI Listing

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