- Degradation of structurally modified DNAs by bleomycin group antibiotics.
Degradation of structurally modified DNAs by bleomycin group antibiotics.
Bleomycin-mediated DNA strand scission has been shown to be diminished at certain sequences in proximity to 5-methylcytidines. We have investigated the molecular basis of this observed diminution using selective bleomycin (BLM) modifications at the C-terminus. Of the four different bleomycin congeners investigated, only bleomycin A2 and bleomycin BAPP were substantially affected by cytidine methylation. We have also examined the effect of other DNA modifications on bleomycin-mediated strand scission. Methylation at the N6 position of adenosine resulted in diminution of DNA cleavage by all four bleomycin congeners. The presence of bulky 5-(glucosyloxy)methyl groups in the major groove of T4 DNA had little effect on the efficiency of DNA strand scission mediated by bleomycin A2 or B2, suggesting the absence of important steric interactions between Fe(II).BLM and DNA in the major groove. In contrast, DNA cleavage mediated by bleomycin congeners was very sensitive to a major DNA conformational change, the B----Z transition. Salt and MgCl2 titrations of the DNA copolymers poly(dG-dC).poly(dG-dC) and poly(dG-MedC).poly(dG-MedC) demonstrated that bleomycin A2 and B2 did not cleave Z-DNA efficiently. In addition, circular dichroism titrations of these copolymers revealed that both bleomycin congeners increased the cation concentration necessary to induce the B----Z transition, implying that bleomycin preferentially binds to and stabilizes B-form DNA. These results are consistent with a model in which cytidine methylation at appropriate sequences of DNA is sufficient to induce subtle conformational changes that render the helix unreceptive to cleavage by some bleomycin congeners.