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Agents that interfere with DNA replication in Escherichia coli induce physiological adaptations that increase the probability of survival after DNA damage and the frequency of mutants among the survivors (the SOS response). Such agents also increase the survival rate and mutation frequency of irradiated bacteriophage after infection of treated bacteria, a phenomenon known as Weigle reactivation. In UV-irradiated single-stranded DNA phage, Weigle reactivation is thought to occur via induced, error-prone replication through template lesions (translesion synthesis [P. Caillet-Fauquet, M: Defais, and M. Radman, J. Mol. Biol. 117:95-112, 1977]). Weigle reactivation occurs with higher efficiency in double-stranded DNA phages such as lambda, and we therefore asked if another process, recombination between partially replicated daughter molecules, plays a major role in this case. To distinguish between translesion synthesis and recombinational repair, we studied the early replication of UV-irradiated bacteriophage lambda in SOS-induced and uninduced bacteria. To avoid complications arising from excision of UV lesions, we used bacterial uvrA mutants, in which such excision does not occur. Our evidence suggests that translesion synthesis is the primary component of Weigle reactivation of lambda phage in the absence of excision repair. The greater efficiency in Weigle reactivation of double-stranded DNA phage could thus be attributed to some inducible excision repair unable to occur on single-stranded DNA. In addition, after irradiation, lambda phage replication seems to switch prematurely from the theta mode to the rolling circle mode.  相似文献   

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Nucleotide excision repair (NER), the most versatile and ubiquitous mechanism for DNA repair, operates to remove many types of DNA base lesions. We have studied the role of p53 function in modulating the repair of DNA damage following UV irradiation in normal and p53-compromised human mammary epithelial cells (HMEC). The effect of UV-induced DNA damage on cellular cytotoxicity and apoptosis was determined in conjunction with global, gene- and strand-specific repair. Cytotoxicity studies, using clonogenic survival and MTT assays, showed that HPV-16 E6-expressing HMEC were more UV sensitive than p53-WT cell lines. High apoptotic index obtained with p53-compromised cells was in conformity to both the low clonogenic survival and the low cellular viability. No discernible differences in the formation of initial UV-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPD) were observed in the cell lines of varying p53 functional status. However, the extent and the rate of damage removal from genome overall were highest for p53-WT cells. Further examination of strand-specific repair in the p53 gene revealed that the removal of CPD in the non-transcribed strand (NTS) was slower in p53-compromised cells compared to the normal p53-WT cell lines. These results suggest that loss of p53 function, in the absence of other genetic alterations, decreased both overall amount of CPD repaired and their removal rate from the genome. Additionally, normal function of p53 is required for the repair of the NTS, but not of the transcribed strand (TS) in genomic DNA in human epithelial cells. Thus, failure of quantitative removal of CPD by global genomic repair (GGR), due to loss of p53 function, causes the enhanced UV sensitivity and increased damage-induced apoptosis via a p53-independent pathway. Nevertheless, recovery of cells from UV damage requires normal p53 function and efficient GGR.  相似文献   

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Ultraviolet light (UV light) induces helix distorting DNA lesions that pose a block to replicative DNA polymerases. Recovery from this replication arrest is reportedly impaired in nucleotide excision repair (NER)-deficient xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) fibroblasts and primary fibroblasts lacking functional p53. These independent observations suggested that the involvement of p53 in the recovery from UV-induced replication arrest was related to its role in regulating the global genomic subpathway of NER (GG-NER). Using primary human fibroblasts, we confirm that the recovery from UV-induced replication arrest is impaired in cells lacking functional p53 and in primary XP fibroblasts derived from complementation groups A or C (XP-A and XP-C) that are defective in GG-NER. Surprisingly, DNA synthesis recovered normally in GG-NER-deficient XP complementation group E (XP-E) cells that carry mutations in the p53 regulated DNA repair gene DDB2 and are specifically defective in the repair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPD) but not pyrimidine (6-4) pyrimidone photoproducts. Disruption of p53 in these XP-E fibroblasts prevented the recovery from UV-induced replication arrest. Therefore, the roles of p53 and GG-NER in the recovery from UV-induced replication are separable and DDB2-independent. These results further indicate that primary human fibroblasts expressing functional p53 efficiently replicate DNA containing CPD whereas p53-deficient cells do not, consistent with a role for p53 in permitting translesion DNA synthesis of these DNA lesions.  相似文献   

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Effect of DNA lesions on transcription elongation   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Tornaletti S  Hanawalt PC 《Biochimie》1999,81(1-2):139-146
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The ability to bypass DNA lesions encountered during replication is important in order to maintain cell viability and avoid genomic instability. Exposure of mammalian cells to UV-irradiation induces the formation of DNA lesions that stall replication forks. In order to restore replication, different bypass mechanisms are operating, previously named post-replication repair. Translesion DNA synthesis is performed by low-fidelity polymerases, which can replicate across damaged sites. The nature of lesions and of polymerases involved influences the resulting frequency of mutations. Homologous recombination represents an alternative pathway for the rescue of stalled replication forks. Caffeine has long been recognized to influence post-replication repair, although the mechanism is not identified. Here, we found that caffeine delays the progress of replication forks in UV-irradiated Chinese hamster cells. The length of this enhanced delay was similar in wild-type cells and in cell deficient in either homologous recombination or nucleotide excision repair. Furthermore, caffeine attenuated the frequency of UV-induced mutations in the hprt gene, whereas the frequency of recombination, monitored in this same gene, was enhanced. These observations indicate that in cells exposed to UV-light, caffeine inhibits the rescue of stalled replication forks by translesion DNA synthesis, thereby causing a switch to bypass via homologous recombination. The biological consequence of the former pathway is mutations, while the latter results in chromosomal aberrations.  相似文献   

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