Author (Your Name)

Jacob Conklin, Colby College

Date of Award

2000

Document Type

Honors Thesis (Colby Access Only)

Department

Colby College. Chemistry Dept.

Advisor(s)

Julie T. Millard

Abstract

Diepoxides are widespread in nature and can act as cellular cross-linkers, leading to chromosomal aberrations and the induction of cancer. Repandiol, a diyne diol diepoxide, was isolated from the edible mushroom Hydnum repandum by Takahashi, Endo, and Nozoe in 1992 and reported to display potent cytotoxic activity, attributed to its bifunctional alkylaring capacity. We have purified repandiol from Hydnum repandum and used it for DNA interstrand cross-linking studies of defined sequence DNA oligomers. Preliminary results suggest that repandiol, like the diepoxyalkanes previously studied in our laboratory, shows a preference for alkylation at guanine residues. In addition, repandiol appears to cross-link a more biologically relevant 154mer sample of DN A, but with even less efficiency than it does the 19mer.

Comments

Full-text download restricted to Colby College campus only.

Keywords

DNA, Proteins -- Crosslinking, Alkylating agents

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