Abstract

The chemistry of the photoactivation of daunomycin–DNA complexes is reported and the mechanism is elucidated. We quantitatively assessed the type of DNA damage, such as strand breaks, oxidized bases, and abasic sites, that arise using a plasmid relaxation assay coupled with DNA repair endonucleases. Photoexcitation of daunomycin leads to oxidative DNA damage in a dose- and irradiation time-dependent manner and guanine-specific oxidized purines are substantially produced under these conditions. Oxidative DNA base damage was also inhibited by argon degassing, indicating that guanine-specific damage arises from an oxygen-dependent mechanism. In addition, photoexcitation of daunomycin–DNA complexes leads to superoxide anion radical formation. From these studies of the actual product formed, we conclude that a charge transfer is a main driving force of the mechanism.

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