Molecular Evidence for Cleavage of Intradimer Phosphodiester Linkage as a Novel Step in Excision Repair of Cyclobutyl Pyrimidine Photodimers in Cultured Human Cells
- 1 January 1987
- journal article
- Published by The Company of Biologists in Journal of Cell Science
- Vol. 1987 (Supplement) , 161-176
- https://doi.org/10.1242/jcs.1984.supplement_6.11
Abstract
A re-analysis of the metabolic fate of ultraviolet light (u.v.)-induced cyclobutyl pyrimidine dimers in the DNA of dermal fibroblasts from patients with different genetic forms of xeroderma pigmentosum (XP), a rare cancer-prone skin disorder, has provided new insight into the mode of dimer repair in normal human cells. When DNA isolated from post-u.v. incubated cultures was subjected to enzymic photoreactivation (PR) to probe dimer authenticity, single-strand scissions were produced in the damaged DNA of incubated XP group A and D cells, but not in DNA from XP group C cells or normal controls. Since enzymic PR treatment ruptures only the cyclobutane ring, these results suggested that in dimer excision-defective XP group A and D strains, the intradimer phosphodiester bond may have been cleaved without site restoration. Such a cleavage event had not previously been detected; the possibility that this reaction may be an early step in the normal excision-repair process is supported by the observed release of free thymidine (dThd) and its monophosphate (TMP), but not of thymine, upon photochemical reversal of the dimer-containing excision fragments isolated from post-u.v. incubated normal cells. The combined number of dThd and TMP molecules released was equal to ≈80% of the number of dimers photoreversed; for such release to occur, the dimer must both be at one end of an excised fragment and contain an internal phosphodiester break. Taken together, these data lead us to propose a novel model for dimer repair in human cells in which hydrolysis of the intradimer phosphodiester linkage precedes the concerted action of a generalized ‘bulky lesion-repair complex’ involving conventional strand incision/lesion excision/repair resynthesis/strand ligation reactions.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Photoreversal: dependent release of thymidine and thymidine monophosphate from pyrimidine dimer containing DNA excision fragments isolated from ultraviolet-damaged human fibroblastsBiochemistry, 1986
- Preferential repair of nuclear matrix associated DNA in xeroderma pigmentosum complementation group CMutation Research Letters, 1984
- Repair of Psoralen Adducts in Human DNA: Differences Among Xeroderma Pigmentosum Complementation GroupsJournal of Investigative Dermatology, 1984
- Nature of DNA repair synthesis resistant to inhibitors of polymerase .alpha. in human cellsBiochemistry, 1984
- Cancer predisposition, carcinogen hypersensitivity, and aberrant DNA metabolismJournal of Cellular Physiology, 1984
- Ultraviolet light repair and mutagenesis revisitedCell, 1983
- IN VIVO EXCISION OF PYRIMIDINE DIMERS IS MEDIATED BY A DNA N‐GLYCOSYLASE IN MICROCOCCUS LUTEUS BUT NOT IN HUMAN FIBROBLASTSPhotochemistry and Photobiology, 1982
- Cleavage of pyrimidine dimers in specific DNA sequences by a pyrimidine dimer DNA-glycosylase of M. luteusNature, 1980
- Repair of UV-endonuclease-susceptible sites in the 7 complementation groups of xeroderma pigmentosum a through GMutation Research - Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis, 1979
- Survival of apurinic SV40 DNA in the D-complementation group of xeroderma pigmentosumMutation Research - Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis, 1979