isopropylmethanesulfonate has been researched along with DNA-Damage* in 3 studies
1 review(s) available for isopropylmethanesulfonate and DNA-Damage
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Strange goings-on in the mouse germ line.
It is a conventional paradigm that mutagens lead to changes in nucleotide sequence when the cell attempts to repair or replicate lesions in DNA (such as adducts or strand breaks) that have been produced by the mutagens or their metabolites. The resulting changes are located at (or very near) the sites of the initial damage. This is the underlying theory behind mutational spectra work, but how general is it in vivo? Work with ionising radiation has shown that there are interesting things going on in the mouse germ line that do not fall within the conventional paradigm. Mutations occur at certain sites remote from initial DNA damage and in greater than expected number. Bryn Bridges discusses some recent papers on mutational changes in the germ line of mice following exposure to chemical mutagens that suggest that such phenomena may not be confined to radiation. Topics: Alkylating Agents; Animals; DNA Damage; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Ethylnitrosourea; Etoposide; Germ Cells; Germ-Line Mutation; Humans; Male; Mesylates; Mice; Mutagens; Mutation; Nucleic Acid Synthesis Inhibitors; Radiation, Ionizing; Spermatogonia; Tandem Repeat Sequences | 2003 |
2 other study(ies) available for isopropylmethanesulfonate and DNA-Damage
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Poor recognition of O6-isopropyl dG by MGMT triggers double strand break-mediated cell death and micronucleus induction in FANC-deficient cells.
Isopropyl methanesulfonate (IPMS) is the most potent genotoxic compound among methanesulfonic acid esters. The genotoxic potential of alkyl sulfonate esters is believed to be due to their alkylating ability of the O6 position of guanine. Understanding the primary repair pathway activated in response to IPMS-induced DNA damage is important to profile the genotoxic potential of IPMS. In the present study, both chicken DT40 and human TK6 cell-based DNA damage response (DDR) assays revealed that dysfunction of the FANC pathway resulted in higher sensitivity to IPMS compared to EMS or MMS. O6-alkyl dG is primarily repaired by methyl guanine methyltransferase (MGMT), while isopropyl dG is less likely to be a substrate for MGMT. Comparison of the cytotoxic potential of IPMS and its isomer n-propyl methanesulfonate (nPMS) revealed that the isopropyl moiety avoids recognition by MGMT and leads to higher cytotoxicity. Next, the micronucleus (MN) assay showed that FANC deficiency increases the sensitivity of DT40 cells to MN induction by IPMS. Pretreatment with O6-benzyl guanine (OBG), an inhibitor of MGMT, increased the MN frequency in DT40 cells treated with nPMS, but not IPMS. Lastly, IPMS induced more double strand breaks in FANC-deficient cells compared to wild-type cells in a time-dependent manner. All together, these results suggest that IPMS-derived O6-isopropyl dG escapes recognition by MGMT, and the unrepaired DNA damage leads to double strand breaks, resulting in MN induction. FANC, therefore, plays a pivotal role in preventing MN induction and cell death caused by IPMS. Topics: Animals; B-Lymphocytes; Cell Death; Cell Line; Chickens; DNA Breaks, Double-Stranded; DNA Damage; DNA Modification Methylases; DNA Repair; DNA Repair Enzymes; Fanconi Anemia; Fanconi Anemia Complementation Group Proteins; Guanine; Humans; Mesylates; Micronuclei, Chromosome-Defective; RNA, Small Interfering; Signal Transduction; Tumor Suppressor Proteins | 2016 |
Germline mutation induction at mouse repeat DNA loci by chemical mutagens.
Mutation rates at two expanded simple tandem repeat (ESTR) loci were studied in the germline of male mice exposed to two monofunctional alkylating agents, ethylnitrosourea (ENU) and isopropyl methanesulfonate (iPMS), and a topoisomerase II inhibitor, etoposide. Pre-meiotic exposure to the alkylating agents resulted in a highly significant increase in ESTR mutation rate, but did not alter post-meiotically exposed cells. Pre-meiotic mutation induction by ENU and iPMS was linear within the interval of doses from 12.5 to 25mg/kg and reached a plateau at higher concentrations. Paternal exposure to etoposide resulted in ESTR mutation induction at meiotic stages but did not affect post- or pre-meiotic cells. The pattern of ESTR mutation induction after pre-meiotic and meiotic exposure to chemical mutagens was similar to that previously obtained by various traditional approaches for monitoring germline mutation in mice. The results of this study show that ESTR loci provide a new efficient experimental system for monitoring the genetic effects of chemical mutagens, capable of detecting increases in mutation rates at low doses of exposure. Topics: Alkylating Agents; Animals; Antineoplastic Agents, Phytogenic; Crossing Over, Genetic; DNA; DNA Damage; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Ethylnitrosourea; Etoposide; Female; Germ-Line Mutation; Male; Meiosis; Mesylates; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Inbred CBA; Spermatogenesis; Tandem Repeat Sequences; Topoisomerase II Inhibitors | 2003 |