Lucanthone and Its Derivative Hycanthone Inhibit
Apurinic Endonuclease-1 (APE1) by Direct Protein
Binding
Abstract:
Lucanthone and hycanthone are thioxanthenone DNA intercalators
used in the 1980s as antitumor agents.
Lucanthone is in Phase I clinical trial, whereas hycanthone was
pulled out of Phase II trials.
Their potential mechanism of action includes DNA intercalation,
inhibition of nucleic acid biosyntheses, and inhibition of enzymes
like topoisomerases and the dual function base excision repair enzyme
apurinic endonuclease 1 (APE1).
Lucanthone inhibits the endonuclease activity of APE1,
without affecting its redox activity.
Our goal was to decipher the precise mechanism of APE1 inhibition
as a prerequisite towards development of improved therapeutics that
can counteract higher APE1 activity often seen in tumors.
The IC50 values for inhibition of APE1 incision of
depurinated plasmid DNA by lucanthone and hycanthone were 5 mM and 80 nM,
respectively.
The KD values (affinity constants) for APE1,
as determined by BIACORE binding studies, were 89 nM for
lucanthone/10 nM for hycanthone.
APE1 structures reveal a hydrophobic pocket where hydrophobic
small molecules like thioxanthenones can bind,
and our modeling studies confirmed such docking.
Circular dichroism spectra uncovered change in the helical structure of APE1
in the presence of lucanthone/hycanthone, and notably,
this effect was decreased (Phe266Ala or Phe266Cys or Trp280Leu) or
abolished (Phe266Ala/Trp280Ala) when hydrophobic site mutants were employed.
Reduced inhibition by lucanthone of the diminished endonuclease activity
of hydrophobic mutant proteins (as compared to wild type APE1)
supports that binding of lucanthone to the hydrophobic pocket dictates
APE1 inhibition.
The DNA binding capacity of APE1 was marginally inhibited by lucanthone,
and not at all by hycanthone, supporting our hypothesis that
thioxanthenones inhibit APE1, predominantly, by direct interaction.
Finally, lucanthone-induced degradation was drastically reduced
in the presence of short and long lived free radical scavengers,
e.g., TRIS and DMSO, suggesting that the mechanism of APE1 breakdown
may involve free radical-induced peptide bond cleavage.