International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Mar 2021)

Genotoxicity and Epigenotoxicity of Carbazole-Derived Molecules on MCF-7 Breast Cancer Cells

  • Claudio Luparello,
  • Ilenia Cruciata,
  • Andreas C. Joerger,
  • Cory A. Ocasio,
  • Rhiannon Jones,
  • Raysa Khan Tareque,
  • Mark C. Bagley,
  • John Spencer,
  • Martin Walker,
  • Carol Austin,
  • Tiziana Ferrara,
  • Pietro D′Oca,
  • Rossella Bellina,
  • Rossella Branni,
  • Fabio Caradonna

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22073410
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 7
p. 3410

Abstract

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The carbazole compounds PK9320 (1-(9-ethyl-7-(furan-2-yl)-9H-carbazol-3-yl)-N-methylmethanamine) and PK9323 (1-(9-ethyl-7-(thiazol-4-yl)-9H-carbazol-3-yl)-N-methylmethanamine), second-generation analogues of PK083 (1-(9-ethyl-9H-carbazol-3-yl)-N-methylmethanamine), restore p53 signaling in Y220C p53-mutated cancer cells by binding to a mutation-induced surface crevice and acting as molecular chaperones. In the present paper, these three molecules have been tested for mutant p53-independent genotoxic and epigenomic effects on wild-type p53 MCF-7 breast adenocarcinoma cells, employing a combination of Western blot for phospho-γH2AX histone, Comet assay and methylation-sensitive arbitrarily primed PCR to analyze their intrinsic DNA damage-inducing and DNA methylation-changing abilities. We demonstrate that small modifications in the substitution patterns of carbazoles can have profound effects on their intrinsic genotoxic and epigenetic properties, with PK9320 and PK9323 being eligible candidates as “anticancer compounds” and “anticancer epi-compounds” and PK083 a “damage-corrective” compound on human breast adenocarcinoma cells. Such different properties may be exploited for their use as anticancer agents and chemical probes.

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