- Synthesis of Mitomycin C and decarbamoylmitomycin C N6 deoxyadenosine-adducts
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Mitomycin C (MC), an anti-cancer drug, and its analog, decarbamoylmitomycin C (DMC), are DNA-alkylating agents. MC is currently used in the clinics and its cytotoxicity is mainly due to its ability to form Interstrand Crosslinks (ICLs) which impede DNA replication and, thereby, block cancer cells proliferation. However, both MC and DMC are also able to generate monoadducts with DNA. In particular, we recently discovered that DMC, like MC, can form deoxyadenosine (dA) monoadducts with DNA. The biological role played by these monoadducts is worthy of investigation. To probe the role of these adducts and to detect them in enzymatic digests of DNA extracted from culture cells treated by both drugs, we need access to reference compounds i.e. MC and DMC dA-mononucleoside adducts. Previous biomimetic methods used to generate MC and DMC mononucleoside adducts are cumbersome and very low yielding. Here, we describe the diastereospecific chemical synthesis of both C-1 epimers of MC and DMC deoxyadenosine adducts. The key step of the synthesis involves an aromatic substitution reaction between a 6-fluoropurine 2′-deoxyribonucleoside and appropriately protected stereoisomeric triaminomitosenes to form protected-MC-dA adducts with either an S or R stereochemical configuration at the adenine-mitosene linkage. Fluoride-based deprotection methods generated the final four reference compounds: the two stereoisomeric MC-dA adducts and the two stereoisomeric DMC-dA adducts. The MC and DMC-dA adducts synthesized here will serve as standards for the detection and identification of such adducts formed in the DNA of culture cells treated with both drugs.
- Zheng, Maggie,Hwang, Seokjin,Snyder, Timothy,Aquilina, Jake,Proni, Gloria,Paz, Manuel M.,Pradhan, Padmanava,Cheng, Shu-Yuan,Champeil, Elise
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- Reductive activation of mitomycins A and C by vitamin C
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The anticancer drug mitomycin C produces cytotoxic effects after being converted to a highly reactive bis-electrophile by a reductive activation, a reaction that a number of 1-electron or 2-electron oxidoreductase enzymes can perform in cells. Several reports in the literature indicate that ascorbic acid can modulate the cytotoxic effects of mitomycin C, either potentiating or inhibiting its effects. As ascorbic acid is a reducing agent that is known to be able to reduce quinones, it could be possible that the observed modulatory effects are a consequence of a direct redox reduction between mitomycin C and ascorbate. To determine if this is the case, the reaction between mitomycin C and ascorbate was studied using UV/Vis spectroscopy and LC/MS. We also studied the reaction of ascorbate with mitomycin A, a highly toxic member of the mitomycin family with a higher redox potential than mitomycin C. We found that ascorbate is capable to reduce mitomycin A efficiently, but it reduces mitomycin C rather inefficiently. The mechanisms of activation have been elucidated based on the kinetics of the reduction and on the analysis of the mitosene derivatives formed after the reaction. We found that the activation occurs by the interplay of three different mechanisms that contribute differently, depending on the pH of the reaction. As the reduction of mitomycin C by ascorbate is rather inefficiently at physiologically relevant pH values we conclude that the modulatory effect of ascorbate on the cytotoxicity of mitomycin C is not the result of a direct redox reaction and therefore this modulation must be the consequence of other biochemical mechanisms.
- Paz, Manuel M.
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