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Relationship between DNA adduct levels, repair enzyme, and apoptosis as a function of DNA methylation by azoxymethane.
59
Citations
29
References
1999
Year
Dna DamageEpigenetic ChangeDna MethylationApoptosisMolecular BiologyCell DeathPathologyEpigeneticsRepair EnzymeOxidative StressToxicologyStem CellsRadiation OncologyGenome InstabilityAdduct RemovalDna Adduct LevelsBiochemistryOncogenic AgentMedicineColorectal CancerCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentNatural SciencesColon CancerOncology
DNA alkylating agent exposure results in the formation of a number of DNA adducts, with O6-methyl-deoxyguanosine (O6-medG) being the major mutagenic and cytotoxic DNA lesion. Critical to the prevention of colon cancer is the removal of O6-medG DNA adducts, either through repair, for example, by O6-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase (ATase) or targeted apoptosis. We report how rat colonocytes respond to administration of azoxymethane (a well-characterized experimental colon carcinogen and DNA-methylating agent) in terms of O6-medG DNA adduct formation and adduct removal by ATase and apoptosis. Our results are: (a) DNA damage is greater in actively proliferating cells than in the differentiated cell compartment; (b) expression of the DNA repair enzyme ATase was not targeted to the proliferating cells or stem cells but rather is confined primarily to the upper portion of the crypt; (c) apoptosis is primarily targeted to the stem cell and proliferative compartments; and (d) the increase in DNA repair enzyme expression over time in the bottom one-third of the crypt corresponds with the decrease in apoptosis in this same crypt region.
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