Wang Ping, Guliaev Anton B, Hang Bo
Department of Molecular Biology, Life Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA.
Toxicol Lett. 2006 Oct 25;166(3):237-47. doi: 10.1016/j.toxlet.2006.06.647. Epub 2006 Jul 31.
Cadmium (Cd2+), nickel (Ni2+) and cobalt (Co2+) are human and/or animal carcinogens. Zinc (Zn2+) is not categorized as a carcinogen, and rather an essential element to humans. Metals were recently shown to inhibit DNA repair proteins that use metals for their function and/or structure. Here we report that the divalent ions Cd2+, Ni2+, and Zn2+ can inhibit the activity of a recombinant human N-methylpurine-DNA glycosylase (MPG) toward a deoxyoligonucleotide with ethenoadenine (varepsilonA). MPG removes a variety of toxic/mutagenic alkylated bases and does not require metal for its catalytic activity or structural integrity. At concentrations starting from 50 to 1,000 microM, both Cd2+ and Zn2+ showed metal-dependent inhibition of the MPG catalytic activity. Ni2+ also inhibited MPG, but to a lesser extent. Such an effect can be reversed with EDTA addition. In contrast, Co2+ and Mg2+ did not inhibit the MPG activity in the same dose range. Experiments using HeLa cell-free extracts demonstrated similar patterns of inactivation of the varepsilonA excision activity by the same metals. Binding of MPG to the substrate was not significantly affected by Cd2+, Zn2+, and Ni2+ at concentrations that show strong inhibition of the catalytic function, suggesting that the reduced catalytic activity is not due to altered MPG binding affinity to the substrate. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations with Zn2+ showed that the MPG active site has a potential binding site for Zn2+, formed by several catalytically important and conserved residues. Metal binding to such a site is expected to interfere with the catalytic mechanism of this protein. These data suggest that inhibition of MPG activity may contribute to metal genotoxicity and depressed repair of alkylation damage by metals in vivo.
镉(Cd2+)、镍(Ni2+)和钴(Co2+)是人类和/或动物致癌物。锌(Zn2+)未被归类为致癌物,而是人类必需的元素。最近研究表明,金属可抑制那些在功能和/或结构上需要金属的DNA修复蛋白。在此我们报告,二价离子Cd2+、Ni2+和Zn2+可抑制重组人N-甲基嘌呤-DNA糖基化酶(MPG)对含乙烯腺嘌呤(εA)的脱氧寡核苷酸的活性。MPG可去除多种有毒/致突变的烷基化碱基,其催化活性和结构完整性不需要金属。从50到1000微摩尔浓度开始,Cd2+和Zn2+均表现出对MPG催化活性的金属依赖性抑制。Ni2+也抑制MPG,但程度较小。添加乙二胺四乙酸(EDTA)可逆转这种效应。相比之下,在相同剂量范围内,Co2+和Mg2+不抑制MPG活性。使用HeLa细胞无细胞提取物进行的实验表明,相同金属对εA切除活性的失活模式相似。在对催化功能有强烈抑制作用的浓度下,Cd2+、Zn2+和Ni2+对MPG与底物的结合没有显著影响,这表明催化活性降低并非由于MPG与底物的结合亲和力改变所致。用Zn2+进行的分子动力学(MD)模拟表明,MPG活性位点有一个Zn2+的潜在结合位点,由几个具有催化重要性的保守残基形成。金属与该位点的结合预计会干扰该蛋白的催化机制。这些数据表明,抑制MPG活性可能有助于金属的遗传毒性以及体内金属对烷基化损伤修复的抑制。