A novel sensitive and specific assay for abasic sites, the most commonly produced DNA lesion

K Kubo, H Ide, SS Wallace, YW Kow - Biochemistry, 1992 - ACS Publications
K Kubo, H Ide, SS Wallace, YW Kow
Biochemistry, 1992ACS Publications
Revised Manuscript Received January 23, 1992 abstract: Free radicals produce a wide
spectrum of damages; among these are DNA base damages and abasic (AP) sites.
Although several methods have been used to detect and quantify AP sites, they either are
relatively laborious or require the use of radioactivity. A novel reagent for detecting abasic
sites in DNA was prepared by reacting0-(carboxymethyl) hydroxylamine with biotin
hydrazide in the presence of car-bodiimide. This reagent, called Aldehyde Reactive Probe …
Revised Manuscript Received January 23, 1992 abstract: Free radicals produce a wide spectrum of damages; among these are DNA base damages and abasic (AP) sites. Although several methods have been used to detect and quantify AP sites, they either are relatively laborious or require the use of radioactivity. A novel reagent for detecting abasic sites in DNA was prepared by reacting0-(carboxymethyl) hydroxylamine with biotin hydrazide in the presence of car-bodiimide. This reagent, called Aldehyde Reactive Probe (ARP), specificially tagged AP sites in DNA with biotin residues. The number of biotin-tagged AP sites was then determined colorimetrically by an ELISA-like assay using avidin/biotin complex conjugated to horseradish peroxidase as the indicator enzyme. With heat/acid-depurinated calf thymus or bacteriophage fl DNA, ARP detected femtomoles of AP sites in DNA. Using this assay, DNA damages generated in calf thymus, 0X174 RF, and fl single-stranded DNA, X-irradiated in phosphate buffer, were easily detectable at 10 rad (0.1 Gy). Furthermore, ARP sites were detectable in DNA isolated from heat-inactivated X-irradiated (10 Gy) and methyl methanesulfonate (MMS)-treated (5 µ) Escherichia coli cells. The rate of production of ARP sites was proportional to the X-ray dose as well as to the concentration of MMS. Thus, the sensitivity and simplicity of the ARP assay should provide a potentially powerful method for the quantitation of AP sites or other DNA lesions containing an aldehyde group.
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