Minor products of reaction of DNA with α-acetoxytamoxifen

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Abstract

The drug tamoxifen shows evidence of genotoxicity and induces liver tumours in rats. Covalent DNA adducts have been detected in the liver of rats treated with tamoxifen and these arise, at least in part, from its metabolite α-hydroxytamoxifen. This probably undergoes conjugation in the liver tissue to give an ester, which alkylates DNA. We have prepared α-acetoxytamoxifen as a model for this reactive intermediate and studied its reaction with DNA in vitro. The products of this reaction were chromatographically identical to DNA adducts found in the liver of rats treated with tamoxifen. We have isolated three of these products as the nucleosides TG1, TG2 and TA1 and identified them by ultraviolet, mass and proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy. TG1 and TG2 were tamoxifen-deoxyguanosine adducts in which the α-position of tamoxifen was linked to the amino group of guanine; TG1, (E)-4-{4-[2-(dimethylamino)ethoxy]phenyl}-3,4-diphenyl-2-(9β -deoxyribofuranosyl-6-oxopurin-2-ylamino)-3-butene; TG2, (Z) isomer of TG1. In TG2, the tamoxifen group had undergone trans-cis isomerization. The minor product TA1 was a tamoxifen-deoxyadenosine adduct, where linkage was through the amino group of adenine: (E)-4-{4-[2-(dimethylamino) ethoxy]phenyl}-3,4-diphenyl-2-(9β-deoxyribofuranosylpurin-6-ylanlino)-3 -butene. These three adducts accounted for > 90% of the reaction products (~ 67% TG1, 18% TG2 and 7% TA1); trace products included other stereoisomers of these and dinucleotide adducts which resisted enzymatic digestion.

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Osborne, M. R., Hardcastle, I. R., & Phillips, D. H. (1997). Minor products of reaction of DNA with α-acetoxytamoxifen. Carcinogenesis, 18(3), 539–543. https://doi.org/10.1093/carcin/18.3.539

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