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DNA Dynamics and Chromosome Structure

An Antitumor Drug-Induced Topoisomerase Cleavage Complex Blocks a Bacteriophage T4 Replication Fork In Vivo

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Pages 594-603 | Received 23 Aug 1999, Accepted 20 Oct 1999, Published online: 28 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Many antitumor and antibacterial drugs inhibit DNA topoisomerases by trapping covalent enzyme-DNA cleavage complexes. Formation of cleavage complexes is important for cytotoxicity, but evidence suggests that cleavage complexes themselves are not sufficient to cause cell death. Rather, active cellular processes such as transcription and/or replication are probably necessary to transform cleavage complexes into cytotoxic lesions. Using defined plasmid substrates and two-dimensional agarose gel analysis, we examined the collision of an active replication fork with an antitumor drug-trapped cleavage complex. Discrete DNA molecules accumulated on the simple Y arc, with branch points very close to the topoisomerase cleavage site. Accumulation of the Y-form DNA required the presence of a topoisomerase cleavage site, the antitumor drug, the type II topoisomerase, and a T4 replication origin on the plasmid. Furthermore, all three arms of the Y-form DNA were replicated, arguing strongly that these are trapped replication intermediates. The Y-form DNA appeared even in the absence of two important phage recombination proteins, implying that Y-form DNA is the result of replication rather than recombination. This is the first direct evidence that a drug-induced topoisomerase cleavage complex blocks the replication fork in vivo. Surprisingly, these blocked replication forks do not contain DNA breaks at the topoisomerase cleavage site, implying that the replication complex was inactivated (at least temporarily) and that topoisomerase resealed the drug-induced DNA breaks. The replication fork may behave similarly at other types of DNA lesions, and thus cleavage complexes could represent a useful (site-specific) model for chemical- and radiation-induced DNA damage.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Michael Been, Jeffrey Dawson, Mariano Garcia-Blanco, Tao-shih Hsieh, and David Pickup for insightful discussions.

This work was supported by research grant CA60836 from National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute, and George Hong was supported in part by National Research Science Award 5 T32 CA09111.

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