The Sensitivity of MCF10A Breast Epithelial Cells to Alkylating Drugs is Enhanced by the Inhibition of O6-Methylguanine-DNA Methyltransferase Transcription with a Synthetic Double Strand DNA Oligonucleotide

2002 
Cytoxicity of alkylating chemotherapeutic drugs is affected by the cellular content of the enzyme O6-methylguanine-DNA methyl transferase (MGMT). Since high levels of the enzyme confer the efficient repair of DNA alkylation, the chemotherapeutic potential of alkylating chemicals can be maintained either increasing drug dosage or reducing the amount of endogenous MGMT. This study strives to the latter end by competing away a transcriptional activator of the MGMT gene from its native enhancer sequence using a synthetic double strand DNA oligonucleotide (MEBP-ODN). MEBP-ODN was administered in culture medium to MCF10A human breast ep-ithelial cells expressing high level of MGMT. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction and western blotting analyses showed decrease in both MGMT mRNA and protein content. Concomitantly, MEBP-ODN exposed cells were more sensitive to the alkylating drug mitozolomide than their controls, which were not exposed to MEBP- ODN. These results indicate that the cis-acting MEBP-ODN can efficiently deplete MGMT protein by working as decoy binding site for the transcriptional activator MEBP. This approach represents a successful strategy to counteract the protective role of MGMT repair enzyme during an alkylating drug based chemotherapeutic regimen.
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