Theoretical Studies of Chemical Reactivity of Metabolically Activated Forms of Aromatic Amines toward DNA

Abstract

The metabolism of aromatic and heteroaromatic amines (ArNH<sub>2</sub>) results in nitrenium ions (ArNH<sup>+</sup>) that modify nucleobases of DNA, primarily deoxyguanosine (dG), by forming dG-C8 adducts. The activated amine nitrogen in ArNH<sup>+</sup> reacts with the C8 of dG, which gives rise to mutations in DNA. For the most mutagenic ArNH<sub>2</sub>, including the majority of known genotoxic carcinogens, the stability of ArNH<sup>+</sup> is of intermediate magnitude. To understand the origin of this observation as well as the specificity of reactions of ArNH<sup>+</sup> with guanines in DNA, we investigated the chemical reactivity of the metabolically activated forms of ArNH<sub>2</sub>, that is, ArNHOH and ArNHOAc, toward 9-methylguanine by DFT calculations. The chemical reactivity of these forms is determined by the rate constants of two consecutive reactions leading to cationic guanine intermediates. The formation of ArNH<sup>+</sup> accelerates with resonance stabilization of ArNH<sup>+</sup>, whereas the formed ArNH<sup>+</sup> reacts with guanine derivatives with the constant diffusion-limited rate until the reaction slows down when ArNH<sup>+</sup> is about 20 kcal/mol more stable than PhNH<sup>+</sup>. At this point, ArNHOH and ArNHOAc show maximum reactivity. The lowest activation energy of the reaction of ArNH<sup>+</sup> with 9-methylguanine corresponds to the charge-transfer π-stacked transition state (π-TS) that leads to the direct formation of the C8 intermediate. The predicted activation barriers of this reaction match the observed absolute rate constants for a number of ArNH<sup>+</sup>. We demonstrate that the mutagenic potency of ArNH<sub>2</sub> correlates with the rate of formation and the chemical reactivity of the metabolically activated forms toward the C8 atom of dG. On the basis of geometric consideration of the π-TS complex made of genotoxic compounds with long aromatic systems, we propose that precovalent intercalation in DNA is not an essential step in the genotoxicity pathway of ArNH<sub>2</sub>. The mechanism-based reasoning suggests rational design strategies to avoid genotoxicity of ArNH<sub>2</sub> primarily by preventing N-hydroxylation of ArNH<sub>2</sub>

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