DNA Methylation Reduces Binding and Cleavage by Bleomycin
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Abstract
In
a recent study, we described the enhanced double-strand cleavage
of hairpin DNAs by Fe·bleomycin (Fe·BLM) that accompanies
increasingly strong binding of this antitumor agent and suggested
that this effect may be relevant to the mechanism by which BLM mediates
its antitumor effects. Because the DNA in tumor cells is known to
be hypomethylated on cytidine relative to that in normal cells, it
seemed of interest to study the possible effects of methylation status
on BLM-induced double-strand DNA cleavage. Three hairpin DNAs found
to bind strongly to bleomycin, and their methylated counterparts,
were used to study the effect of methylation on bleomycin-induced
DNA degradation. Under conditions of limited DNA cleavage, there was
a significant overall decrease in the cleavage of methylated hairpin
DNAs. Cytidine methylation was found to result in decreased BLM-induced
cleavage at the site of methylation and to result in enhanced cleavage
at adjacent nonmethylated sites. For two of the three hairpin DNAs
studied, methylation was accompanied by a dramatic decrease in the
binding affinity for Fe·BLM, suggesting the likelihood of diminished
double-strand cleavage. The source of the persistent binding of BLM
by the third hairpin DNA was identified. Also identified was the probable
molecular mechanism for diminished binding and cleavage of the methylated
DNAs by BLM. The possible implications of these findings for the antitumor
selectivity of bleomycin are discussed