Adenosine Kinase Expression Determines DNA Methylation in Cancer Cell Lines

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Abstract

DNA methylation has a major role in cancer, and its inhibitors are used therapeutically. DNA methylation depends on methyl group flux through the transmethylation pathway, which forms adenosine. We hypothesized that an adenosine kinase isoform with nuclear expression (ADK-L) determines global DNA methylation in cancer cells. We quantified ADK-L expression (Western Blot) and global DNA methylation as percent 5-methyldeoxycytidine (5mdC, LC-MS/MS) in three cancer lines (HeLa, HepG2, and U373). ADK-L expression and global DNA methylation correlated positively with the highest levels in HeLa cells compared to U373 and HepG2 cells. To determine whether ADK increases global DNA methylation and to validate its potential therapeutics, we treated HeLa cells with potent ADK inhibitors MRS4203 and MRS4380 (IC50 88 and 140 nM, respectively). Both nucleosides, but not a structurally related poor ADK inhibitor, significantly reduced global DNA methylation in HeLa cells in a concentration-dependent manner. Thus, ADK-L is a potential target for the therapeutic manipulation of DNA methylation levels in cancer.

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Wahba, A. E., Fedele, D., Gebril, H., Alharfoush, E., Toti, K. S., Jacobson, K. A., & Boison, D. (2021). Adenosine Kinase Expression Determines DNA Methylation in Cancer Cell Lines. ACS Pharmacology and Translational Science, 4(2), 680–686. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsptsci.1c00008

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