Effects of alkylating agents on the DNA replication of cultured Yoshida sarcoma cells.
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Logarithmically growing Yoshida sarcoma cells were treated for 1 h with low (2 decades cell kill) or high (more than 6 decades cell kill) doses of alkylating agents. Pulse and chase labelled DNA from treated cells were studied by alkaline sucrose gradient centrifugation. Nitrogen mustard (HN-2), 4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide (CY-OOH), melphalan (L-PAM) and chlorambucil (CA) had no effect on the elongation rate of newly replicated DNA, both at low and high doses, although per cell the rate of DNA synthesis declined as inferred from the rates of [3H]thymidine incorporation compared to the increase in numbers of S phase cells in the treated populations. It is concluded that these drugs act specifically on the initiation step of the DNA replication, leaving chain elongation undisturbed. At low doses the chemically related sulphur mustard (SM) had also no effect on the maturation of new DNA but at high doses a decreased elongation rate was observed. A transient inhibition of chain growth was observed following treatment with a low dose of 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU). In contrast, the intercalating agent adriamycin showed a severe but delayed effect resulting in an almost complete block of the maturation.