Alkylation of Nucleic Acids by the Antitumor Agent COMC

2002 
Mass spectral data are presented indicating that the antitumor agent 2-crotonyloxymethyl-2-cyclohexenone (COMC) is capable of alkylating oligonucleotides via a mechanism involving an electrophilic exocyclic enone intermediate. Under physiological conditions, the exocyclic enone is likely the glutathionylated 2-exomethylenecyclohexenone. This supports a recent hypothesis that the antitumor activity of COMC arises from alkylation of nucleic acids and/or proteins critical to cell function and not from competitive inhibition of glyoxalase I by an adduct of COMC and glutathione.
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