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1.
Experiments were performed to examine the role of cyclobutyl pyrimidine dimers in the process of mutagenesis by ultraviolet (u.v.) light. Lambda phage DNA was irradiated with u.v. and then incubated with an Escherichia coli photoreactivating enzyme, which monomerizes cyclobutyl pyrimidine dimers upon exposure to visible light. The photoreactivated DNA was packaged into lambda phage particles, which were used to infect E. coli uvr- host cells that had been induced for SOS functions by ultraviolet irradiation. Photoreactivation removed most toxic lesions from irradiated phage, but did not change the frequency of induction of mutations to the clear-plaque phenotype. This implies that cyclobutyl pyrimidine dimers can be lethal, but usually do not serve as sites of mutations in the phage. The DNA sequences of mutants derived from photoreactivated DNA showed that almost two-thirds (16/28) were transitions, the same fraction found for u.v. mutagenesis without photoreactivation. These results show that in this system, the lesion inducing transitions (the major type of u.v.-induced mutation) is not the cyclobutyl pyrimidine dimer; a strong candidate for a mutagenic lesion is the Pyr(6-4)Pyo photoproduct. On the other hand, photoreactivation of SOS-induced host cells before infection with u.v.-irradiated phage reduced mutagenesis substantially. In this case, photoreversal of cyclobutyl dimers serves to reduce expression of the SOS functions that are required in the process of targeted u.v. mutagenesis.  相似文献   

2.
In targeted mutagenesis of lambda phage by ultraviolet light, the mutations are caused by radiation-induced lesions in the phage DNA. Of 62 mutations in the lambda cI gene that were sequenced, 41 (63%) of the targeted mutations were transitions, with similar numbers of C X G to T X A and T X A to C X G base changes. The remaining 21 mutations were about equally divided among eight transversions, seven frameshifts (5 additions and 2 deletions), and six double events with either two nearby base changes or a base change and a nearby frameshift. Of the 62 mutations, 60 could be associated with -Pyr-Pyr- sequences in the DNA, sites of likely photoproducts. For more information on this point, lambda phage were irradiated with 313 nm light in the presence of acetophenone, for which the major photoproduct is reported to be the thymine-thymine cyclobutyl dimer, with no measurable Pyr(6-4)Pyo photoproducts. Of 22 mutations sequenced, 19 were transversions and only one was a transition, permitting the conclusion that thymine-thymine cyclobutyl dimers are not the primary cause of ultraviolet light-induced transitions. A consideration of all the data strongly suggests that Pyr(6-4)Pyo photoproducts are mutagenic lesions.  相似文献   

3.
Available evidence rules out the possibility that cyclobutane dimers are the major premutagenic lesions responsible for point mutations at sites of adjacent pyrimidine residues in the experiment systems examined to date in sufficient detail, that is, UV-induced mutations in chromosome loci in E. coli and UV-induced mutations in the cI gene of phage lambda. However, it is likely that the major cytotoxic effects of UV irradiation can be attributed to the cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer, as these lesions occur at 10 times the frequency of other UV-induced photoproducts in the dose range of 0.1-100 J/m2. The evidence also suggests that cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers are the major lesions responsible for induction of the SOS response and that as such they play an important, though indirect role, in the formation of mutations in irradiated DNA. Cyclobutane dimers may also be the major lesions responsible for other types of UV-light-induced mutations such as deletions. None of the available evidence rules out (6-4) photoproducts as a major premutagenic lesion induced by UV irradiation using these experimental systems. On the contrary, the mutation spectrum induced both in the lacI gene and the cI gene of phage lambda is that predicted for mutations induced by (6-4) photoproducts. The observation that neither the premutagenic lesions nor the (6-4) photoproduct is subject to enzymatic photoreactivation also implies that the (6-4) photoproducts are premutagenic. As reviewed above, neither the photosensitization experiments nor the action spectrum of the (6-4) photoproducts rules out such a role. Might a lesion other than the (6-4) photoproduct be the major premutagenic lesion responsible for point mutations in these experimental systems? It cannot be ruled out that another as yet undefined minor photoproduct that occurs with the same sequence distribution specificity as that of the (6-4) photoproduct and that is also not subject to the reactivating treatments is more mutagenic than the (6-4) photoproduct itself. Candidates for such a lesion might include a photohydrate of the (6-4) photoproduct itself or as yet undefined photoproducts. However, we believe these alternative possibilities to be remote.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Non-targeted mutagenesis of lambda phage by ultraviolet light is the increase over background mutagenesis when non-irradiated phage are grown in irradiated Escherichia coli host cells. Such mutagenesis is caused by different processes from targeted mutagenesis, in which mutations in irradiated phage are correlated with photoproducts in the phage DNA. Non-irradiated phage grown in heavily irradiated uvr+ host cells showed non-targeted mutations, which were 3/4 frameshifts, whereas targeted mutations were 2/3 transitions. For non-targeted mutagenesis in heavily irradiated host cells, there were one to two mutant phage per mutant burst. From this and the pathways of lambda DNA synthesis, it can be argued that non-targeted mutagenesis involves a loss of fidelity in semiconservative DNA replication. A series of experiments with various mutant host cells showed a major pathway of non-targeted mutagenesis by ultraviolet light, which acts in addition to "SOS induction" (where cleavage of the LexA repressor by RecA protease leads to din gene induction): (1) the induction of mutants has the same dependence on irradiation for wild-type and for umuC host cells; (2) a strain in which the SOS pathway is constitutively induced requires irradiation to the same level as wild-type cells in order to fully activate non-targeted mutagenesis; (3) non-targeted mutagenesis occurs to some extent in irradiated recA recB cells. In cells with very low levels of PolI, the induction of non-targeted mutagenesis by ultraviolet light is enhanced. We propose that the major pathway for non-targeted mutagenesis in irradiated host cells involves binding of the enzyme DNA polymerase I to damaged genomic DNA, and that the low polymerase activity leads to frameshift mutations during semiconservative DNA replication. The data suggest that this process will play a much smaller role in ultraviolet mutagenesis of the bacterial genome than it does in the mutagenesis of lambda phage.  相似文献   

5.
DNA sequences were determined for 56 mutations induced by ultraviolet light in the lambda cI gene of an Escherichia coli uvr+ lysogen, which should reflect those occurring in the E. coli chromosome. The spectrum of mutagenesis was similar to that found in the cI gene of irradiated phase assayed in uvr- host cells, except that the fraction of transversions is about 35% in prophage and about 15% in phage. The cause of this difference is not known. Of 17 frameshifts in phage and prophage, six have an accompanying base substitution. These double mutational events are consistent with a model in which a photoproduct in a template can cause a DNA polymerase to insert a wrong base and destabilize the next few bases added, thus leading to a frameshift by a slippage mechanism.  相似文献   

6.
Excision-deficient Escherichia coli, carrying the gene for the photolyase on a multicopy plasmid, were irradiated with ultraviolet (UV) light then photoreactivated by illumination delivered from a camera flash unit. Such instantaneous illumination monomerizes only cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers already bound by the photolyase. Whereas the lethal effect of UV light and the number of C-to-T transition-type mutations induced by UV irradiation were both significantly reduced by subsequent irradiation with a single flash of light, single-flash photoreactivation did not reverse the induction of the recA gene by UV light. The results indicate, therefore, that non-photoreactivable DNA lesions play a role in recA induction.  相似文献   

7.
The action of T4 endonuclease V on DNA containing various photoproducts was investigated. (1) The enzyme introduced strand breaks in DNA from ultraviolet-irradiated vegetative cells of Bacillus subtilis but not in DNA from irradiated spores of the same organism. DNA irradiated with long wavelength (360 nm peak) ultraviolet light in the presence of 4,5',8-trimethylpsoralen was not attacked by the enzyme. These results indicate that 5-thyminyl 5,6-dihydrothymine (spore photoproduct) and psoralen mediated cross-links in DNA are not recognized by T4 endonuclease V. (2) DNA of phage PBS1, containing uracil in place of thymine, and DNA of phage SPO1, containing hydroxymethyluracil in place of thymine, were fragmented by the enzyme when the DNA's had been irradiated with ultraviolet light. T4 endonuclease V seems to act on DNA with pyrimidine dimers whether the dimers contain thymine residues or not.  相似文献   

8.
We have used in vitro DNA replication systems from human HeLa cells and monkey CV-1 cells to replicate a UV-damaged simian virus 40-based shuttle vector plasmid, pZ189. We found that replication of the plasmid was inhibited in a UV fluence-dependent manner, but even at UV fluences which caused damage to essentially all of the plasmid molecules some molecules became completely replicated. This replication was accompanied by an increase (up to 15-fold) in the frequency of mutations detected in the supF gene of the plasmid. These mutations were predominantly G:C-->A:T transitions similar to those observed in vivo. Treatment of the UV-irradiated plasmid DNA with Escherichia coli photolyase to reverse pyrimidine cyclobutane dimers (the predominant UV-induced photoproduct) before replication prevented the UV-induced inhibition of replication and reduced the frequency of mutations in supF to background levels. Therefore, the presence of pyrimidine cyclobutane dimers in the plasmid template appears to be responsible for both inhibition of replication and mutation induction. Further analysis of the replication of the UV-damaged plasmid revealed that closed circular replication products were sensitive to T4 endonuclease V (a pyrimidine cyclobutane dimer-specific endonuclease) and that this sensitivity was abolished by treatment of the replicated DNA with E. coli photolyase after replication but before T4 endonuclease treatment. These results demonstrate that these closed circular replication products contain pyrimidine cyclobutane dimers. Density labeling experiments revealed that the majority of plasmid DNA synthesized in vitro in the presence of bromodeoxyuridine triphosphate was hybrid density whether or not the plasmid was treated with UV radiation before replication; therefore, replication of UV-damaged templates appears to occur by the normal semiconservative mechanism. All of these data suggest that replication of UV-damaged templates occurs in vitro as it does in vivo and that this replication results in mutation fixation.  相似文献   

9.
We used a simian virus 40-based shuttle vector plasmid, pZ189, to determine the role of pyrimidine cyclobutane dimers in UV light-induced mutagenesis in monkey cells. The vector DNA was UV irradiated and then introduced into monkey cells by transfection. After replication, vector DNA was recovered from the cells and tested for mutations in its supF suppressor tRNA marker gene by transformation of Escherichia coli carrying a nonsense mutation in the beta-galactosidase gene. When the irradiated vector was treated with E. coli photolyase prior to transfection, pyrimidine cyclobutane dimers were removed selectively. Removal of approximately 90% of the pyrimidine cyclobutane dimers increased the biological activity of the vector by 75% and reduced its mutation frequency by 80%. Sequence analysis of 72 mutants recovered indicated that there were significantly fewer tandem double-base changes and G X C----A X T transitions (particularly at CC sites) after photoreactivation of the DNA. UV-induced photoproducts remained (although at greatly reduced levels) at all pyr-pyr sites after photoreactivation, but there was a relative increase in photoproducts at CC and TC sites and a relative decrease at TT and CT sites, presumably due to a persistence of (6-4) photoproducts at some CC and TC sites. These observations are consistent with the fact that mutations were found after photoreactivation at many sites at which only cyclobutane dimers would be expected to occur. From these results we conclude that UV-induced pyrimidine cyclobutane dimers are mutagenic in DNA replicated in monkey cells.  相似文献   

10.
Monoadducts and interstrand cross-links are formed in DNA after psoralen plus light treatment of bacteriophage lambda . Survival and clear plaque mutation frequency of lambda after photosensitization with 8-methoxypsoralen (8-MOP) are increased when the wild type host is slightly UV-irradiated (W-reactivation and W-mutagenesis). The recA13, lexA1 and uvrA6 mutations block W-reactivation and W-mutagenesis of lambda treated with 8-MOP plus light. Using the technique of "repeated irradiation" we showed that the mutagenic effect of 8-MOP plus light treatment on phage is due mainly to formation of cross-links in DNA. The mutagenic activity of monoadducts had been studied by using angular furocoumarin, angelicin which forms mainly monoadducts in DNA. Upon W-mutagenesis of phage lambda treated with angelicin plus light a high mutagenic effect is observed. The results indicate that the mutagenic activity of monoadducts is 15-20 fold slower as compared to that of cross-links. W-reactivation and W-mutagenesis of UV-irradiated (254 nm) bacteriophage lambda are also observed after 8-MOP plus light treatment of Escherichia coli uvrA and wild type hosts. It is possible that the difference in mutagenic activity of psoralen adducts could depend on the repair mechanism of adducts: cross-links repair in bacterial and lambda DNA is controlled by lexA gene (error-prone SOS-repair mechanism), while monoadducts can be efficiently repaired by error-free excision and recombination.  相似文献   

11.
We have examined the mutagenic properties in E. coli of single stranded vectors containing a uniquely placed cis-syn or trans-syn uracil-uracil cyclobutane dimer in the sequence 5' GCAAGUUGGAG 3', and compared these with the properties of the corresponding T-T dimers in the same sequence context. The frequencies with which U-U and T-T photoproducts were bypassed were similar in SOS induced cells, and each induced similar frequencies of mutations. However, although both U-U and T-T cis-syn dimers showed a preference for misincorporation in about 5-7% of the replication products, with T or G being incorporated in place of A, the ratios of these events differed, being > 4:1 for T-T cis-syn, but only 2:1 for U-U cis-syn. A shift towards G insertion opposite dimerized uracil was also found with the trans-syn dimers, but the difference was greater; T and G were misincorporated opposite the U-U trans-syn dimer in a ratio of 1:2, compared with 4:1 for its T-T counterpart. In addition, the U-U dimer induced only nucleotide substitutions, unlike the T-T photoproduct which induced single nucleotide deletions as well as substitutions. We conclude that even relatively minor differences in photoproduct structure, such as the presence of a methyl group at C-5, can alter mutational properties, and that such properties cannot depend only on the attributes of the DNA polymerase. Neither the efficiency of bypass, the error frequency nor the mutation spectrum of either U-U isomer is influenced by DNA uracil glycosylase. In vitro, the U-U cis-syn dimer is a substrate for DNA photolyase, but not for the glycosylase.  相似文献   

12.
We have analyzed the DNA sequence changes in a total of 409 ultraviolet light-induced mutations in the lacI gene of Escherichia coli: 227 in a Uvr+ and 182 in a UvrB- strain. Both differences and similarities were observed. In both strains the mutations were predominantly (60 to 75%) base substitutions, followed by smaller contributions of single-base frameshifts, deletions and frameshift hotspot mutations. The base substitutions proved largely similar in the two strains but differences were observed among the single-base frameshifts, the deletions and the hotspot mutations. Among the base substitutions, both transitions (72.5%) and transversions (27.5%) were observed. The largest single group was G.C----A.T (60% of all base substitutions). The sites where G.C----A.T changes occurred were strongly correlated (97.5%) with sequences of adjacent pyrimidines, indicating mutation targeted ultraviolet photoproducts. Comparable amounts of mutation occurred at cytosine/cytosine and (mixed) cytosine/thymine sites. From an analysis of the prevalence of mutation at either the 5' or 3' side of a dipyrimidine, we conclude that both cyclobutane dimers and (6-4) lesions may contribute to mutation. Despite the general similarity of the base-substitution spectra between the wild-type and excision-defective strains, a number of sites were uniquely mutable in the UvrB- strain. Analysis of their surrounding DNA sequences suggested that, in addition to damage directly at the site of mutation, the potential for nearby opposite-strand damage may be important in determining the mutability of a site. The ultraviolet light-induced frameshift mutations were largely single-base losses. Inspection of the DNA sequences at which the frameshifts occurred suggested that they resulted from targeted mutagenesis, probably at cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers. The prevalence of frameshift mutations at homodimers (TT or CC) suggests that their formation involves local misalignment (slippage) and that base-pairing properties are partially retained in cyclobutane dimers. While the frameshift mutations in the Uvr+ strain were distributed over many different sites, more than half in the UvrB- strain were concentrated at a single site. Ultraviolet light-induced deletions as well as frameshift hotspot mutations (+/- TGGC at positions 620 to 632) are considered to be examples of untargeted or semitargeted mutagenesis. Hotspot mutations in the Uvr+ strain showed an increased contribution by (-)TGGC relative to (+)TGGC, indicating that ultraviolet light may specifically promote the loss of the four bases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Ultraviolet light induces damage to DNA, with the majority of the damage expressed as the formation of cyclobutane dimers and pyrimidine-pyrimidone (6-4) photoproducts. The (6-4) photoproducts have been implicated as important UV light-induced premutagenic DNA lesions. The most abundant of the (6-4) products is the thymine-cytosine pyrimidine-pyrimidone (6-4) photoproduct, or TC (6-4) product. The structure of the TC (6-4) product was deduced by proton NMR, IR, and fast atom bombardment mass spectroscopy, and the product was found to differ from the previously described photoadduct, Thy(6-4)Pyo, by the presence of an amino group at the 5 position of the 5' pyrimidine. The implications of this structure on DNA base pairing and the induction of ultraviolet light-induced mutations are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
K. R. Tindall  J. Stein    F. Hutchinson 《Genetics》1988,118(4):551-560
Mutations in the cI (repressor) gene were induced by gamma-ray irradiation of lambda phage and of prophage, and 121 mutations were sequenced. Two-thirds of the mutations in irradiated phage assayed in recA host cells (no induction of the SOS response) were G:C to A:T transitions; it is hypothesized that these may arise during DNA replication from adenine mispairing with a cytosine product deaminated by irradiation. For irradiated phage assayed in host cells in which the SOS response had been induced, 85% of the mutations were base substitutions, and in 40 of the 41 base changes, a preexisting base pair had been replaced by an A:T pair; these might come from damaged bases acting as AP (apurinic or apyrimidinic) sites. The remaining mutations were 1 and 2 base deletions. In irradiated prophage, base change mutations involved the substitution of both A:T and of G:C pairs for the preexisting pairs; the substitution of G:C pairs shows that some base substitution mechanism acts on the cell genome but not on the phage. In the irradiated prophage, frameshifts and a significant number of gross rearrangements were also found.  相似文献   

15.
Treatment of intact lambda phage with the nonprotein chromophore of neocarzinostatin resulted in efficient phage inactivation and generation of clear-plaque mutants. Both effects required a preincubation at low pH to allow diffusion of chromophore into the phage head. Chromophore activation was then effected by addition of a sulfhydryl cofactor, followed by a shift to neutral pH. Sequence analysis of mutations mapped to the DNA-binding region of the cI gene revealed that nearly all were single base substitutions. Significant numbers of all possible base changes were found, with A:T to G:C transitions being the most frequent events. Of 11 G:C to A:T transitions, 7 were found at C residues in the trinucleotide sequence AGC, which has previously been shown to be a hotspot for chromophore-induced depyrimidination. This result, as well as the SOS dependence of mutagenesis and the overall distribution of various types of base substitutions, is consistent with the hypothesis that apurinic/apyrimidinic sites are important mutagenic lesions.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Non-photoreactivable endonuclease V-sensitive sites have been detected in the DNA of wild type bacteriophage T4 irradiated with near UV light (320 nm). Such sites were not detected in the DNA of (a) wild type T4 irradiated with far UV (254 nm) or (b) in T4 mutants in which non-glucosylated 5-hydroxy-methylcytosine (5HMC) or cytosine replaces glucosylated 5HMC normally present in T4, irradiated with 320 nm or 254 nm light. Although the non-photoreactivable sites accounted for 50% of the endonuclease V-sensitive sites in the DNA of glucosylated T4 irradiated with near UV, there was very little difference in the sensitivities of T4 containing glucosylated 5HMC, non-glucosylated 5HMC and cytosine to near UV (313 nm). We propose that the photoproduct responsible for the non-photoreactivable, but endonuclease V-sensitive, sites in glucosylated DNA is formed from glucosylated 5HMC and that a similar photoproduct is formed from non-glucosylated 5HMC or cytosine in the appropriate phage strains. We further propose that the glucosylated 5HMC photoproduct is non-photoreactivable whereas the cytosine and non-glucosylated 5HMC photoproducts are photoreactivable and are therefore possibly cyclobutane dimers.AECL Refence No. 6370Communicated by B.A. Bridges  相似文献   

17.
The yeast RAD30-encoded DNA polymerase eta (Poleta) bypasses a cis-syn thymine-thymine dimer efficiently and accurately. Human DNA polymerase eta functions similarly in the bypass of this lesion, and mutations in human Poleta result in the cancer prone syndrome, the variant form of xeroderma pigmentosum. UV light, however, also elicits the formation of cis-syn cyclobutane dimers and (6-4) photoproducts at 5'-CC-3' and 5'-TC-3' sites, and in both yeast and human DNA, UV-induced mutations occur primarily by 3' C to T transitions. Genetic studies presented here reveal a role for yeast Poleta in the error-free bypass of cyclobutane dimers and (6-4) photoproducts formed at CC and TC sites. Thus, by preventing UV mutagenesis at a wide spectrum of dipyrimidine sites, Poleta plays a pivotal role in minimizing the incidence of sunlight-induced skin cancers in humans.  相似文献   

18.
Summary A large increase in the incidence of bacteriophage mutants is found after photoreactivation of UV-irradiated phage S13. The increase was seen only when the irradiated phage were stored before they were photoreactivated; the maximum mutation frequency was achieved after storage for 2 h at 4° C or 30 min at 37° C. The mutations can be attributed entirely to deamination of cytosine in cyclobutane dimers. Naked S13 DNA was stored for 2 h at 37° C after being irradiated with wavelengths ≥290 nm in the presence of 0.2% acetophenone, which sensitizes the formation of thymine-thymine but not cytosine-containing dimers; the specific mutation frequency was 7.2-fold lower compared to the frequency produced by irradiation in the absence of the photosensitizer, confirming that cytosine dimers are a major source of mutations. These results undermine the basis for the two-step model of UV mutagenesis in which a distinctly separate misincorporation step is supposed to precede the lesion bypass step; instead the results support a different two-step model, in which a deamination step precedes the bypass. The S13 capsid appears to completely inhibit the putative deamination reaction at about 75% of the dimer sites.  相似文献   

19.
Ultraviolet light irradiation of DNA results in the formation of two major types of photoproducts, cyclobutane dimers and 6-4' [pyrimidin-2'-one] -pyrimidine photoproducts. The enzyme T4 DNA polymerase possesses a 3' to 5' exonuclease activity and hydrolyzes both single and double stranded DNA in the absence of deoxynucleotide triphosphate substrates. Here we describe the use of T4 DNA polymerase associated exonuclease for the detection and quantitation of UV light-induced damage on both single and double stranded DNA. Hydrolysis of UV-irradiated single or double stranded DNA by the DNA polymerase associated exonuclease is quantitatively blocked by both cyclobutane dimers and (6-4) photoproducts. The enzyme terminates digestion of UV-irradiated DNA at the 3' pyrimidine of both cyclobutane dimers and (6-4) photoproducts. For a given photoproduct site, the induction of cyclobutane dimers was the same for both single and double stranded DNA. A similar relationship was also found for the induction of (6-4) photoproducts. These results suggest that the T4 DNA polymerase proofreading activity alone cannot remove these UV photoproducts present on DNA templates, but instead must function together with enzymes such as the T4 pyrimidine dimer-specific endonuclease in the repair of DNA photoproducts. The T4 DNA polymerase associated exonuclease should be useful for the analysis of a wide variety of bulky, stable DNA adducts.  相似文献   

20.
The mutagenic effects of ultraviolet and solar irradiation are thought to be due to the formation of DNA photoproducts, most notably cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) and pyrimidine (6-4) pyrimidone photoproducts ((6-4)PPs). Experimental systems for determining the levels and sequence dependence of photoproduct formation in DNA have often used high doses of short-wave (UVC) irradiation. We have re-assessed this issue by using DNA sequencing technologies and different doses of UVC as well as more physiologically relevant doses of solar irradiation emitted from a solar UV simulator. It has been questioned whether hot alkali treatment can detect (6-4)PPs at all sequence positions. With high UVC doses, the sequence distribution of (6-4)PPs was virtually identical when hot alkali or UV damage endonuclease (UVDE) were used for detection, which appears to validate both methods. The (6-4)PPs form at 5'-TpC and 5'CpC sequences but very low levels are seen at all other dipyrimidines including 5'-TpT. Contrary to expectation, we find that (6-4) photoproducts form at almost undetectable levels under conditions of irradiation for up to five hours with the solar UV simulator. The same treatment produces high levels of CPDs. In addition, DNA glycosylases, which recognize oxidized and ring-opened bases, did not produce significant cleavage of sunlight-irradiated DNA. From these data, we conclude that cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers are at least 20 to 40 times more frequent than any other DNA photoproduct when DNA or cells are irradiated with simulated sunlight.  相似文献   

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