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Original Research Article | OPEN ACCESS

A Qualitative and Quantitative Assay to Study DNA/Drug Interaction Based on Sequence Selective Inhibition of Restriction Endonucleases

Syed A Hassan1 , Lata Chauhan2, Ritu Barthwal2, Aparna Dixit3

1Faculty of Computing and Information Technology, King Abdul Aziz University, Rabigh-21911, Saudi Arabia; 2Department of Biotechnology, Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee, Roorkee-247667, Uttaranchal; 3School of Biotechnology, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi-110067, India.

For correspondence:-  Syed Hassan   Email: asifsrmcbt@yahoo.com   Tel:+91544894526

Received: 29 December 2011        Accepted: 21 August 2012        Published: 18 October 2012

Citation: Hassan SA, Chauhan L, Barthwal R, Dixit A. A Qualitative and Quantitative Assay to Study DNA/Drug Interaction Based on Sequence Selective Inhibition of Restriction Endonucleases. Trop J Pharm Res 2012; 11(5):721-727 doi: 10.4314/tjpr.v11i5.4

© 2012 The authors.
This is an Open Access article that uses a funding model which does not charge readers or their institutions for access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0) and the Budapest Open Access Initiative (http://www.budapestopenaccessinitiative.org/read), which permit unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited..

Abstract

Purpose: To explore the use of restriction inhibition assay (RIA) to study the binding specificity of some anticancer drugs.
Methods: A 448 bp DNA fragment derived from pBCKS+ plasmid (harboring the polylinker region with multiple restriction endonuclease sites) was used as a template for sequence selective inhibition of the test drugs. The template was incubated with different concentrations of anticancer drugs (adriamycin, daunomycin, mitoxantrone, distamycin-A, berberine and palmatine) prior to digestion with restriction endonucleases - HindIII, EcoRI and EcoRV.
Results: Mitoxantrone, adriamycin and daunomycin showed specificity for HindIII restriction site (5’-AAGCTT-3’) at 220, 100 and 100 µM concentration, respectively. Conversely, distamycin-A showed an affinity for EcoRI (5’-AAATGC-3’) restriction sites at a concentration of 10 µM. No binding was observed for berberine and palmatine at a maximum concentration of 2 mM at HindIII, EcoRI and EcoRV restriction sites, respectively.
Conclusion: The inhibition of endonucleases by mitoxantrone, adriamycin, daunomycin, distamycin-A, provides direct evidence of the co-existence of concentration and sequence specificity for drug-DNA interaction as well as the need to explore the possible use of RIA for demonstrating the binding specificity of anticancer drugs.

Keywords: Restriction endonucleases, Restriction sites, Anticancer drugs, Restriction inhibition assay (RIA), Binding specificity

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