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1.
Small doses of ultraviolet light (UV, 265 mmu) cause Escherichia coli B to grow into long, multinucleate, nonseptate, filamentous cells. This UV-induced filament formation can be prevented by irradiating with photoprotecting light (335 mmu) prior to UV irradiation, and by irradiating with photoreactivating light (406 mmu), or by liquid holding treatment, after UV irradiation. It is concluded that UV-induced division inhibition in E. coli B is initially induced by repairable lesions in the deoxyribonucleic acid, probably pyrimidine dimers.  相似文献   

2.
Cell survival and induction of endonuclease-sensitive sites in DNA were measured in human fibroblast cells exposed to fluorescent light or germicidal ultraviolet light. Cells from a xeroderma pigmentosum patient were hypersensitive to cell killing by fluorescent light, although less so than for germicidal ultraviolet light. Xeroderma pigmentosum cells were deficient in the removal of fluorescent light-induced endonuclease sites that are probably pyrimidine dimers, and both the xeroderma pigmentosum and normal cells removed these sites with kinetics indistinguishable from those for ultraviolet light-induced sites. A comparison of fluorescent with ultraviolet light data demonstrates that there are markedly fewer pyrimidine dimers per lethal event for fluorescent than for ultraviolet light, suggesting a major role for non-dimer damage in fluorescent light lethality.  相似文献   

3.
Experiments were performed to test whether significant amounts of pyrimidine dimers are produced in cultured cells of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. var. Xanthi) and of Haplopappus gracilis by ultraviolet light in the biological dose range and whether either or both dark and light repair systems exist in these cells. Thymine-containing dimers were found to be formed quite readily in both kinds of cells, but neither kind appeared to possess the excision repair system. Results indicated that UV-induced growth inhibition of tobacco cells could be photoreactivated and that tobacco cells could monomerize UV-induced, thymine-containing dimers in the DNA. On the other hand, neither increase in growth nor monomerization of dimers was observed in the UV-irradiated Haplopappus cell culture after treatment with photoreactivating light.  相似文献   

4.
During replication of DNA after ultraviolet irradiation, gaps are left in the newly-synthesized DNA strands in both bacterial and animal cells and these gaps are subsequently sealed by a process known as postreplication repair. In order to test whether it is the ultraviolet-induced pyrimidine dimers which are responsible for the production of these daughter-strand gaps in animal cells, we have used chick embryo fibroblasts. In these cells the pyrimidine dimers are photoreactivable, i.e. they can be split by an enzymatic process dependent on visible or near ultraviolet light. Our results indicate that chick cells possess a postreplication repair system similar to that in mammalian cells; gaps are produced in the newly-synthesized strands and then filled in. If the ultraviolet-irradiated cells are first photoreactivated to remove most of the dimers, the number of daughter-strand gaps produced is much less than without photoreactivation. This suggests that the dimers are indeed responsible for the formation of many of the gaps in the newly-synthesized DNA. Ultraviolet light also inhibits the overall rate of DNA synthesis. This inhibition is, however, only partly overcome by photoreactivation.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Summary Fibroblasts from Xenopus laevis, which possess photoreactivating enzyme were used to study the influence of photoreactivating light on the frequency of pyrimidine dimers in DNA, chromosomal aberrations, sister chromatid exchanges, cell killing and the induction of gene mutations (ouabain-resistance) induced by 254 nm ultraviolet irradiation. The frequency of all biological endpoints studied were reduced following exposure to photoreactivating light parallel to the reduction in the frequencies of pyrimidine dimers (determined as endonuclease sensitive sites). However there was not always an absolute quantitative relationship between the reduction in the frequency of pyrimidine dimers and the reduction in the biological effects. This probably reflects a fast fixation process for the biological effects prior to removal of the dimers by photoreactivation.Abbreviations UV ultraviolet - PR photoreactivating - ESS endonuclease sensitive site - SCE sister chromatid exchanges - BrdUrd 5-brothodeoxyuridine  相似文献   

7.
Summary The centromere is the region within a chromosome that is required for proper segregation during mitosis and meiosis. Lesions in this sequence represent a unique type of damage, as loss of function could result in catastrophic loss of the genetic material of an entire chromosome. We have measured the induction by ultraviolet (UV) light of pyrimidine dimers in a 2550-bp restriction fragment that includes the centromere region of chromosome III in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Yeast cells were exposed to ultraviolet light, cellular DNA was gently extracted, and subsequently treated with a UV-specific endonuclease to cleave all pyrimidine dimers. The sites of UV-specific nuclease scission within the centromere were determined by separating the DNA according to molecular weight, transferring the fragments to nitrocellulose, and hybridizing to a radiolabeled 624-bp fragment homologous to the centromere DNA from chromosome III. Several hotspots were identified in chromatin DNA from cells, as well as in irradiated deproteinized DNA. Double strand damage due to closely opposed pyrimidine dimers was also observed. At biological doses (35% survival) there are approximately 0.1 to 0.2 pyrimidine dimers per centromere. These dimers are efficiently repaired in the centromere and surrounding region.  相似文献   

8.
The decrease in integration of transforming deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) caused by ultraviolet irradiation of the DNA was found to be independent of the presence or absence of excision repair in the recipient cell. Much of the ultraviolet-induced inhibition of integration resulted from the presence in the transforming DNA of pyrimidine dimers, as judged by the photoreactivability of the inhibition with yeast photoreactivating enzyme. The inhibition of integration made only a small contribution to the inactivation of transforming ability of the DNA by ultraviolet radiation.  相似文献   

9.
Perturbations of Simian Virus 40 (SV40) DNA replication by ultraviolet (UV) light during the lytic cycle in permissive monkey CV-1 cells resemble those seen in host cell DNA replication. Formation of Form I DNA molecules (i.e. completion of SV40 DNA synthesis) was more sensitive to UV irradiation than synthesis of replicative intermediates or Form II molecules, consistent with inhibition of DNA chain elongation. The observed amounts of [3H]thymidine incorporated in UV-irradiated molecules could be predicted on the assumption that pyrimidine dimers are responsible for blocking nascent DNA strand growth. The relative proportion of labeled Form I molecules in UV-irradiated cultures rapidly increased to near-control values with incubation after 20 or 40 J/m2 of light (0.9--1.0 or 1.8--2.0 dimers per SV40 genome, respectively). This rapid increase and the failure of Form II molecules to accumulate suggest that SV40 growing forks can rapidly bypass many dimers. Form II molecules formed after UV irradiation were not converted to linear (Form III) molecules by the dimer-specific T4 endonuclease V, suggesting either that there are no gaps opposite dimers in these molecules or that T4 endonuclease V cannot use Form II molecules as substrates.  相似文献   

10.
A UV-specific endonuclease was used to detect ultraviolet light-induced pyrimidine dimers in chloroplast DNA of Chlamydomonas reinhardi that was specifically labeled with tritiated thymidine. All of the dimers induced by 100 J/m2 of 254 nm light are removed by photoreaction. Wild-type cells exposed to 50 J/m2 of UF light removed over 80% of the dimers from chloroplast DNA after 24 h of incubation in growth medium in the dark. A UV- sensitive mutant, UVS1, defective in the excision of pyrimidine dimers from nuclear DNA is capable of removing pyrimidine dimers from chloroplast DNA nearly as well as wild-type, suggesting that nuclear and chloroplast DNA dark-repair systems are under separate genetic control.  相似文献   

11.
Irradiation of human (IMR-91), mouse (10T1/2) and Chinese hamster (V79) fibroblasts with monochromatic ultraviolet light (u.v.) in the far-, mid-, and near-u.v. regions resulted in cell-strain-specific changes in sensitivity as a function of the wavelength used. The data suggested cell-strain-specific action spectra for cell killing by ultraviolet light that did not correlate with the ability of examined cells to excise pyrimidine dimers.  相似文献   

12.
DNA synthesis was examined in ultraviolet (uv)-irradiated ICR 2A frog cells in which either pyrimidine dimers or nondimer photoproducts represented the major class of DNA lesions. Dimers were induced by exposure of cells to 254 nm uv, while nondimer photoproducts were induced by irradiation of cells with uv produced by a fluorescent sunlamp (FSL) that was filtered through 48A Mylar (removes wavelengths less than 310 nm). The FSL-irradiated cultures were also treated with photoreactivating light (PRL) which removed most of the small number of dimers induced by the irradiation, leaving a relatively pure population of nondimer photoproducts. In addition, cells were exposed to 60Co gamma rays. The cultures were pulse-labeled and the size distribution of the DNA synthesized was estimated using both sucrose gradient sedimentation and alkaline step elution. Using either of these techniques, it was found that the presence of dimers resulted in a reduction principally in the synthesis of high molecular weight (MW) DNA. In contrast, nondimer photoproducts caused a strong inhibition in the synthesis of low MW DNA, as was also observed in gamma-irradiated cells. Hence the induction of pyrimidine dimers in DNA mainly affected the elongation of replicons, whereas nondimer lesions primarily caused an inhibition of replicon initiation.  相似文献   

13.
A technique which allows the measurement of small numbers of pyrimidine dimers in the deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) of cells of Bacillus subtilis irradiated with ultraviolet light has been used to show that a strain mutant at the uvr-1 locus is able to excise pyrimidine dimers. Excision repair in this strain was slow, but incision may not be rate limiting because single-strand breaks in DNA accumulate under some conditions. Excision repair probably accounted for a liquid-holding recovery previously reported to occur in this strain. Recombinational exchange of pyrimidine dimers into newly replicated DNA was readily detected in uvr-1 cells, but this exchange did not account for more than a minor fraction of the dimers removed from parental DNA. Excision repair in the uvr-1 strain was inhibited by a drug which complexes DNA polymerase III with DNA gaps. This inhibition may be limited to a number of sites equal to the number of DNA polymerase III molecules, and it is inferred that large gaps are produced by excision of dimers. Because the uvr-1 mutation specifically interferes with excision of dimers at incision sites, it is concluded that the uvr-1 gene product may be an exonuclease which is essential for efficient dimer excision.  相似文献   

14.
Xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) is a recessively transmitted disorder of man characterized by increased sensitivity to ultraviolet light. Homozygous, affected individuals, upon exposure to sunlight, sustain severe damage to the skin; this damage is characteristically followed by multiple basal and squamous cell carcinomas and not uncommonly by other malignant neoplasia. A tissue culture cell line was derived from the skin of a man with XP. Our measurements of ultraviolet-induced pyrimidine dimers in cellular DNA show that normal diploid human skin fibroblasts excise up to 70 per cent of the dimers 24 hours, but that fibroblasts derived from the individual with XP excise less than 20 per cent in 48 hours. Alkaline gradient sedimentation experiments show that during the 24 hours after irradiation of normal cells a large number of single-stranded breaks appear and then disappear. Such changes are not observed in XP cells. XP cells apparently fail to start, the excision process because they lack the required function of an ultraviolet-specific endonuclease. These findings, plus earlier ones of Cleaver on the lack of repair replication in XP cells, raise the possibility that unexcised pyrimidine dimers can be implicated in the oncogenicity of ultraviolet radiation.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Exposure of ICR 2A frog cells to 265 nm, 289 nm, 302 nm or 313 nm monochromatic ultraviolet (UV) wavelengths induced the formation of sister-chromatid exchanges (SCEs). However, treatment of cells with photoreactivating light (PRL) following the UV irradiations resulted in a lower level of SCEs compared with cells incubated in the dark. Hence, it can be concluded that pyrimidine dimers are the principal photoproducts responsible for the induction of SCEs in cells exposed to 265-313 nm UV due to the specificity of DNA photolyase for the light-dependent monomerization of dimers in DNA. It was also found that the maximum yield of induced SCEs in 313 nm-irradiated cells was only about 7 SCEs per cell whereas the plateau values for the shorter wavelengths were approximately 15-20 SCEs per cell. In addition, treatment of cells with 313 nm plus 265 nm light resulted in a lower level of SCEs than in cells exposed to 265 nm UV alone. These results can be interpreted in the context of a replication model for SCE, in which the high level of non-dimer damages produced in the DNA of 313 nm-irradiated cells inhibits the induction of SCEs by the pyrimidine dimers that are also produced by this wavelength.  相似文献   

17.
DNA Repair in Potorous tridactylus   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
The DNA synthesized shortly after ultraviolet (UV) irradiation of Potorous tridactylis (PtK) cells sediments more slowly in alkali than that made by nonirradiated cells. The size of the single-strand segments is approximately equal to the average distance between 1 or 2 cyclobutyl pyrimidine dimers in the parental DNA. These data support the notion that dimers are the photoproducts which interrupt normal DNA replication. Upon incubation of irradiated cells the small segments are enlarged to form high molecular weight DNA as in nonirradiated cells. DNA synthesized at long times (~ 24 h) after irradiation is made in segments approximately equal to those synthesized by nonirradiated cells, although only 10-15% of the dimers have been removed by excision repair. These data imply that dimers are not the lesions which initially interrupt normal DNA replication in irradiated cells. In an attempt to resolve these conflicting interpretations, PtK cells were exposed to photoreactivating light after irradiation and before pulse-labeling, since photoreactivation repair is specific for only one type of UV lesion. After 1 h of exposure ~ 35% of the pyrimidine dimers have been monomerized, and the reduction in the percentage of dimers correlates with an increased size for the DNA synthesized by irradiated cells. Therefore, we conclude that the dimers are the lesions which initially interrupt DNA replication in irradiated PtK cells. The monomerization of pyrimidine dimers correlates with a disappearance of repair endonuclease-sensitive sites, as measured in vivo immediately after 1 h of photoreactivation, indicating that some of the sites sensitive to the repair endonuclease (from Micrococcus luteus) are pyrimidine dimers. However, at 24 h after irradiation and 1 h of photoreactivation there are no endonuclease-sensitive sites, even though ~ 50% of the pyrimidine dimers remain in the DNA. These data indicate that not all pyrimidine dimers are accessible to the repair endonuclease. The observation that at long times after irradiation DNA is made in segments equal to those synthesized by nonirradiated cells although only a small percentage of the dimers have been removed suggests that an additional repair system alters dimers so that they no longer interrupt DNA replication.  相似文献   

18.
Development of UV defense mechanisms during growth of spinach seedlings   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Changes in UV defense mechanisms were studied during the growth periods of spinach seedlings grown under the white light, which did not contain UV-B light. DNA photolyase activity in the photorepair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers in spinach seedlings was high in the early growth phase (cell division phase) and declined thereafter, whereas UV-absorbing substances accumulated throughout the growth period acted as a major UV-defense mechanism in the cell expansion phase.  相似文献   

19.
Within 12-24 hr after human cells were irradiated with ultraviolet light, approximately 50% of the ultraviolet-induced pyrimidine dimers were lost from the DNA. Pyrimidine dimers were found in the TCA-soluble fraction of ultraviolet-irradiated cells at 24 hr. Excess thymidine, caffeine, or hydroxyurea had no effect on the loss of pyrimidine dimers from the DNA of ultraviolet-irradiated cells.  相似文献   

20.
The relative contribution of respiration photoinhibition and DNA damage in the lethal effect induced by 313 nm ultraviolet light (UV) has been investigated in some strains of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. It has been shown that cells inactivation is essentially due to photo-induced damage to DNA. By photoreactivation experiments it has been found that dimers of the pyrimidine bases are the main lethal photoproducts induced in the DNA by 313 nm ultraviolet light.  相似文献   

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