Abstract

DNA can be damaged through covalent modifications of the nucleobases by endogenous processes. These modifications, commonly referred to as DNA adducts, can persist and may lead to mutations, and ultimately to the initiation of cancer. A screening methodology for the majority of known endogenous DNA adducts would be a powerful tool for investigating the etiology of cancer and for the identification of individuals at high-risk to the detrimental effects of DNA damage. This idea led to the development of a DNA adductomic approach using high resolution data-dependent scanning, an extensive MS2 fragmentation inclusion list of known endogenous adducts, and neutral loss MS3 triggering to profile all DNA modifications. In this method, the detection of endogenous DNA adducts is performed by observation of their corresponding MS3 neutral loss triggered events and their relative quantitation using the corresponding full scan extracted ion chromatograms. The method's inclusion list consists of the majority of known endogenous DNA adducts, compiled, and reported here, as well as adducts specific to tobacco exposure included to compare the performance of the method with previously developed targeted approaches. The sensitivity of the method was maximized by reduction of extraneous background signal through the purification and minimization of the amount of commercially obtained enzymes used for the DNA hydrolysis. In addition, post-hydrolysis sample purification was performed using off-line HPLC fraction collection to eliminate the highly abundant unmodified bases, and to avoid introduction of plasticizers found in solid-phase extraction cartridges. Also, several instrument parameters were evaluated to optimize the ion signal intensities and fragmentation spectra quality. The method was tested on an animal model of lung carcinogenesis where A/J mice were exposed to the tobacco specific lung carcinogen 4-methylnitrosamino-1-3-pyridyl-1-butanone (NNK) with its effects enhanced by co-exposure to the pro-inflammatory agent lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Lung DNA were screened for endogenous DNA adducts known to result from oxidative stress and LPS-induced lipid peroxidation, as well as for adducts due to NNK exposure. The relative quantitation of the detected DNA adducts was performed using parallel reaction monitoring MS2 analysis, demonstrating a general workflow for analysis of endogenous DNA adducts.

Highlights

  • Covalent modifications of DNA, commonly referred to as DNA adducts, occur extensively due to both endogenous processes and exogenous exposures (Tretyakova et al, 2013)

  • Deoxyribonuclease I from bovine pancreas (DNase, 2,000 U/mg), DNase I recombinant expressed by Pichia pastoris (R-DNase, 10,000 U/mg), phosphodiesterase-1 extracted from Crotalus adamanteus (PDE-1, 0.4 U/mg), alkaline phosphatase extracted from calf intestine (ALP, 3,000 U/mg), recombinant alkaline phosphatase highly active expressed by Pichia pastoris (R-ALP, 7,000 U/mg), and calf thymus DNA

  • A database of endogenous DNA adducts consisting of adducts reported in the literature including those from alkylation, lipid peroxidation (LPO) and from reactive oxygen species (ROS) (Table S3) was created, and used to generate the inclusion list for our adductomic method

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Summary

Introduction

Covalent modifications of DNA, commonly referred to as DNA adducts, occur extensively due to both endogenous processes and exogenous exposures (Tretyakova et al, 2013). An extensive enzymatic repair system exists to eliminate adducts, if adduct formation persists it can lead to genomic instability and may result in mutations of the normal DNA sequence (Shrivastav et al, 2010) The persistence of these mutations can result in altered gene expression, abnormal cell growth, disruption of normal cellular function, and to the initiation of cancer (Delaney and Essigmann, 2008; Loeb and Harris, 2008). Measurement of these DNA adducts is critical to understanding cancer etiology and to assess the carcinogenic effects of specific exposures, to allow the identification of their mechanism of action and potentially recognize individuals at higher cancer risk. Methods such as 32P-postlabelling or the Comet Assay, lack the specificity and selectivity to identify specific DNA adducts, while traditional LC-MS2-based approaches are restricted to analyzing only a few modifications at a time (Beach and Gupta, 1992; Tretyakova et al, 2012, 2013)

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