Homologous Recombination Is the Principal Pathway for the Repair of DNA Damage Induced by Tirapazamine in Mammalian Cells

Tirapazamine (3-amino-1,2,4-benzotriazine-1,4-dioxide) is a promising hypoxia-selective cytotoxin that has shown significant activity in advanced clinical trials in combination with radiotherapy and cisplatin. The current study aimed to advance our understanding of tirapazamine-induced lesions and t...

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Published inCancer research (Chicago, Ill.) Vol. 68; no. 1; pp. 257 - 265
Main Authors EVANS, James W, CHERNIKOVA, Sophia B, WILSON, William R, POMMIER, Yves, OLIVE, Peggy L, POWELL, Simon N, BROWN, J. Martin, KACHNIC, Lisa A, BANATH, Judit P, SORDET, Olivier, DELAHOUSSAYE, Yvette M, TRESZEZAMSKY, Alejandro, CHON, Brian H, ZHIHUI FENG, YONGCHUAN GU
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Philadelphia, PA American Association for Cancer Research 2008
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Summary:Tirapazamine (3-amino-1,2,4-benzotriazine-1,4-dioxide) is a promising hypoxia-selective cytotoxin that has shown significant activity in advanced clinical trials in combination with radiotherapy and cisplatin. The current study aimed to advance our understanding of tirapazamine-induced lesions and the pathways involved in their repair. We show that homologous recombination plays a critical role in repair of tirapazamine-induced damage because cells defective in homologous recombination proteins XRCC2, XRCC3, Rad51D, BRCA1, or BRCA2 are particularly sensitive to tirapazamine. Consistent with the involvement of homologous recombination repair, we observed extensive sister chromatid exchanges after treatment with tirapazamine. We also show that the nonhomologous end-joining pathway, which predominantly deals with frank double-strand breaks (DSB), is not involved in the repair of tirapazamine-induced DSBs. In addition, we show that tirapazamine preferentially kills mutants both with defects in XPF/ERCC1 (but not in other nucleotide excision repair factors) and with defects in base excision repair. Tirapazamine also induces DNA-protein cross-links, which include stable DNA-topoisomerase I cleavable complexes. We further show that gamma H2AX, an indicator of DNA DSBs, is induced preferentially in cells in the S phase of the cell cycle. These observations lead us to an overall model of tirapazamine damage in which DNA single-strand breaks, base damage, and DNA-protein cross-links (including topoisomerase I and II cleavable complexes) produce stalling and collapse of replication forks, the resolution of which results in DSB intermediates, requiring homologous recombination and XPF/ERCC1 for their repair.
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ISSN:0008-5472
1538-7445
DOI:10.1158/0008-5472.can-06-4497