Chromatin damage generated by DNA intercalators leads to degradation of RNA Polymerase II

Espinoza, Jaime A.; Kanellis, Dimitris C.; Saproo, Sheetanshu; Leal, Karla; Martinez, Johana Fernandez; Bartek, Jiri; Lindstrom, Mikael S.

Abstract

--- - In cancer therapy, DNA intercalators are mainly known for their capacity to kill cells by inducing DNA damage. Recently, several DNA intercalators have attracted much interest given their ability to inhibit RNA Polymerase I transcription (BMH-21), evict histones (Aclarubicin) or induce chromatin trapping of FACT (Curaxin CBL0137). Interestingly, these DNA intercalators lack the capacity to induce DNA damage while still retaining cytotoxic effects and stabilize p53. Herein, we report that these DNA intercalators impact chromatin biology by interfering with the chromatin stability of RNA polymerases I, II and III. These three compounds have the capacity to induce degradation of RNA polymerase II and they simultaneously enable the trapping of Topoisomerases TOP2A and TOP2B on the chromatin. In addition, BMH-21 also acts as a catalytic inhibitor of Topoisomerase II, resembling Aclarubicin. Moreover, BMH-21 induces chromatin trapping of the histone chaperone FACT and propels accumulation of Z-DNA and histone eviction, similarly to Aclarubicin and CBL0137. These DNA intercalators have a cumulative impact on general transcription machinery by inducing accumulation of topological defects and impacting nuclear chromatin. Therefore, their cytotoxic capabilities may be the result of compounding deleterious effects on chromatin homeostasis. - Graphical Abstract

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:001160171100001 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Editorial: OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Fecha de publicación: 2024
DOI:

10.1093/nar/gkae069

Notas: ISI