PLoS Biology (Apr 2009)

Base excision by thymine DNA glycosylase mediates DNA-directed cytotoxicity of 5-fluorouracil.

  • Christophe Kunz,
  • Frauke Focke,
  • Yusuke Saito,
  • David Schuermann,
  • Teresa Lettieri,
  • Jim Selfridge,
  • Primo Schär

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1000091
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 4
p. e91

Abstract

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5-Fluorouracil (5-FU), a chemotherapeutic drug commonly used in cancer treatment, imbalances nucleotide pools, thereby favoring misincorporation of uracil and 5-FU into genomic DNA. The processing of these bases by DNA repair activities was proposed to cause DNA-directed cytotoxicity, but the underlying mechanisms have not been resolved. In this study, we investigated a possible role of thymine DNA glycosylase (TDG), one of four mammalian uracil DNA glycosylases (UDGs), in the cellular response to 5-FU. Using genetic and biochemical tools, we found that inactivation of TDG significantly increases resistance of both mouse and human cancer cells towards 5-FU. We show that excision of DNA-incorporated 5-FU by TDG generates persistent DNA strand breaks, delays S-phase progression, and activates DNA damage signaling, and that the repair of 5-FU-induced DNA strand breaks is more efficient in the absence of TDG. Hence, excision of 5-FU by TDG, but not by other UDGs (UNG2 and SMUG1), prevents efficient downstream processing of the repair intermediate, thereby mediating DNA-directed cytotoxicity. The status of TDG expression in a cancer is therefore likely to determine its response to 5-FU-based chemotherapy.