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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 266, Issue 3, 1509-1515, 01, 1991
K Yamamoto and S Kawanishi
The mechanism of DNA damage by hydrazine in the presence of metal ions was
investigated by DNA sequencing technique and ESR-spin trapping method.
Hydrazine caused DNA damage in the presence of Mn(III), Mn(II), Cu(II),
Co(II), and Fe(III). The order of inducing effect on hydrazine- dependent
DNA damage (Mn(III) greater than Mn(II) approximately Cu(II) much greater
than Co(II) approximately Fe(III)) was related to that of the accelerating
effect on the O2 consumption rate of hydrazine autoxidation. DNA damage by
hydrazine plus Mn(II) or Mn(III) was inhibited by hydroxyl radical
scavengers and superoxide dismutase, but not by catalase. On the other
hand, bathocuproine and catalase completely inhibited DNA damage by
hydrazine plus Cu(II), whereas hydroxyl radical scavengers and superoxide
dismutase did not. Hydrazine plus Mn(II) or Mn(III) caused cleavage at
every nucleotide with a little weaker cleavage at adenine residues, whereas
hydrazine plus Cu(II) induced piperidine-labile sites frequently at thymine
residues, especially of the GTC sequence. ESR-spin trapping experiments
showed that hydroxyl radical is generated during the Mn(III)-catalyzed
autoxidation of hydrazine, whereas hydrogen atom adducts of spin trapping
reagents are generated during Cu(II)-catalyzed autoxidation. The results
suggest that hydrazine plus Mn(II) or Mn(III) generate hydroxyl free
radical not via H2O2 and that this hydroxyl free radical causes DNA damage.
A possibility that the hydrogen atom releasing compound participates in
hydrazine plus Cu(II)-induced DNA damage is discussed.
Site-specific DNA damage induced by hydrazine in the presence of manganese and copper ions. The role of hydroxyl radical and hydrogen atom
Department of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, Kyoto University, Japan.
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