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1.
It is known that cells from one class of xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) patients, called XP variants, carry out excision repair of UV-induced DNA damage at a normal rate and are only slightly more sensitive than normal cells to the cytotoxic effect of UV radiation, but are much more sensitive to the mutagenic effect of UV. To see if this hypermutability were the result of an 'error-prone', excision repair process, we irradiated fibroblasts derived from an XP variant patient, XP4BE, under conditions that allowed the cells various lengths of time for excision repair before the onset of DNA synthesis (S phase) and assayed the frequency of 6-thioguanine (TG)-resistant mutants. Cells synchronized by release from confluence (G0 state) and irradiated just prior to S phase showed a dose-dependent increase in mutants at very high frequencies; cells irradiated in early G1, approximately 12 h before the onset of S phase, showed frequencies 4 times lower. Cells irradiated in the G0 state and allowed 24 h or 48 h for excision repair before the onset of S phase showed still lower frequencies. A comparison of the relative rates of decrease in mutant frequency with time for excision repair before the onset of S phase in XP variant cells and normal human fibroblasts after a dose of 4 or 6 J/m2 showed that these were equal. However, for every time point, the frequency of mutants induced per dose of UV was significantly higher in the XP variant population than in the normal, suggesting that the XP variant cells have an abnormally error-prone process of replicating DNA on a template containing unexcised lesions or normal cells are by-passing many of such lesions using an error-free process. A similar comparative study in synchronized populations of XP4BE cells and normal cells, using the anti 7,8-diol-9,10-epoxide of benzo[a]pyrene, showed that excision repair prior to the onset of S phase also decreased the frequency of mutants induced in XP variant cells by this agent. But for every dose and time point, the frequencies induced in XP4BE cells and normal cells were identical. Thus, the hypermutability of the XP4BE cells was specific to UV radiation-induced DNA lesions.  相似文献   

2.
《Mutation Research Letters》1991,262(3):151-157
The extent of DNA-excision repair was determined in human fibroblast strains from clinically normal and xeroderma pigmentosum complementation group A (XP-A) donors after irradiation with 254-nm ultraviolet (UV) light. Repair was monitored by the use of 1-β-d-arabinofuranosylcytosine (araC), a potent inhibitor of DNA synthesis, and alkaline sucrose velocity sedimentation to quantitate DNA single-strand breaks. In this approach, the number of araC-accumulated breaks in post-UV incubated cultures becomes a measure of the efficiency of a particular strain to perform long-patch excision repair. The maximal rate of removal of araC-detectable DNA lesions equalled ∼ 1.8 sites/108 dalton/h in the normal strains (GM38, GM43), while it was more than 10-fold lower in both XP-A strains (XP4LO, XP12BE) examined. In normal fibroblasts the number of lesions removed during the first 4 h after irradiation saturated at ∼ 10 J/m2. In contrast, the residual amount of repair in the excision-deficient cells increased as a linear function of UV fluence over a range 5–120 J/m2. Thus we conclude that the repair of araC-detectable UV photoproducts in XP group A fibroblasts is limited by availability of damaged regions in the genome to repair complexes.  相似文献   

3.
《Mutation research》1977,43(2):279-290
We have used a T4 endonuclease V assay method for UV-induced pryrimidine dimers in cellular DNA in vivo to obtain evidence for recombinational DNA exchanges after UV irradiation of normal human and Xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) cells. Our data indicate that the endonuclease-sensitive sites in excision-defective XP cells are removed very slowly from the irradiated parental strands and appear concomitantly in daughter strands newly synthesized during post-UV incubation. In the defective XP cells, the extent of appearance of sensitive sites in daughter strands synthesized during a period of 24 h after 10 J/m2 appears to be small, probably less than 15% of the initial number of sensitive sites detected in cellular parental strands. Demonstration of such exchanges between normal-density parental and 5-bromodeoxyuridine-labeled daughter strands by alkaline CsCl isopycnic centrifugation was unsuccessful. Further, the extent is much lower in normal human cell because of their efficiet excision repair of the dimers before and after exchanges than in the defective XP cells.  相似文献   

4.
Normal human and xeroderma pigmentosum (XP, excision-defective group A) cells (both SV40-transformed) pulse-labeled with [(3)H]thymidine at various times after irradiation with ultraviolet light showed a decline and recovery of both the molecular weights of newly synthesized DNA and the rates of synthesis per cell. At the same ultraviolet dose, both molecular weights and rates of synthesis were inhibited more in XP than in normal cells. This indicates that excision repair plays a role in minimizing the inhibition of chain growth, possibly by excision of dimers ahead of the growing point. The ability to synthesize normal-sized DNA recovered more rapidly than rates of synthesis in normal cells, but both parameters recovered in phase in XP cells. During recovery in normal cells there are therefore fewer actively replicating clusters of replicons because the single-strand breaks involved in the excision of dimers inhibit replicon initiation. XP cells have few excision repair events and therefore fewer breaks to interfere with initiation, but chain growth is blocked by unexcised dimers. In both cell types recovery of the ability to synthesize normal-sized DNA was prevented by growing cells in caffeine after irradiation, possibly because of competition between the DNA binding properties of caffeine and replication proteins.Our observations imply that excision repair and semiconservative replication interact strongly in irradiated cells to produce a complex spectrum of changes in DNA replication which may be confused with parts of alternative systems such as post-replication repair.  相似文献   

5.
The extent of DNA-excision repair was determined in human fibroblast strains from clinically normal and xeroderma pigmentosum complementation group A (XP-A) donors after irradiation with 254-nm ultraviolet (UV) light. Repair was monitored by the use of 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosylcytosine (araC), a potent inhibitor of DNA synthesis, and alkaline sucrose velocity sedimentation to quantitate DNA single-strand breaks. In this approach, the number of araC-accumulated breaks in post-UV incubated cultures becomes a measure of the efficiency of a particular strain to perform long-patch excision repair. The maximal rate of removal of araC-detectable DNA lesions equalled approximately 1.8 sites/10(8) dalton/h in the normal strains (GM38, GM43), while it was more than 10-fold lower in both XP-A strains (XP4LO, XP12BE) examined. In normal fibroblasts the number of lesions removed during the first 4 h after irradiation saturated at approximately 10 J/m2. In contrast, the residual amount of repair in the excision-deficient cells increased as a linear function of UV fluence over a range 5-120 J/m2. Thus we conclude that the repair of araC-detectable UV photoproducts in XP group A fibroblasts is limited by availability of damaged regions in the genome to repair complexes.  相似文献   

6.
H Slor 《Mutation research》1973,19(2):231-235
The carcinogen 7-bromomethylbenz(a)anthracene (BBA), which can bind strongly to DNA, induces unscheduled DNA synthesis (DNA repair) in normal lymphocytes but almost none in lymphocytes from patients with Xeroderma pigmentosum (XP), and inherited disease known to be defective in excision repair of ultraviolet-damaged DNA. We studied [3H]BBA's ability to bind to DNA of normal and XP lymphocytes, its influence on unscheduled DNA synthesis, and its removal from the DNA of both cell types. We found that 20–30% of the BBA is bound to macromolecules other than DNA and that its binding to DNA is essentially complete after 30 min. The induction of unscheduled DNA synthesis by the carcinogen in XP lymphocytes was approximately 10% of that induced in normal lymphocytes. While 15–20% of the BBA was removed from the DNA of normal cells 6 h after treatment, only 1–2% was removed from the DNA of XP cells. Thus, XP cells not only are defective in repairing ultraviolet-damaged DNA and excising thymine dimers but also fail to repair DNA damaged by certain carcinogens, and, most importantly, fail to remove the DNA-bound carcinogen, BBA.  相似文献   

7.
We studied DNA repair synthesis after ultraviolet irradiation in human fibroblasts cultured in vitro by measuring the ultraviolet-stimulated incorporation of [3H]thymidine into cells in which the semi-conservative DNA replication was inhibited by hydroxyurea. Experiments performed with five fibroblasts lines derived from healthy donors showed a relatively fast initial process ( that is completed within 1 h for 100 erg/mm2 and within 2 h for 500 erg/mm2) and a subsequent slower process, evident between 2 and 6 h after irradiation. The repair capacity of normal cells is expressed by the difference between the values of incorporation (in presence of hydroxyurea) of irradiated and control cells. The pattern of repair was similar in all five cell lines: repair capacity was positive and the amount of repair synthesis increased with incubation time after UV irratiation. Similar experiments were performed with fibroblasts derived from five patients with the classical xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) and from one patient with the De Sanctis-Cacchione syndrome. Normal and XP cells could be distinguished according to whether they displayed a positive or negative value of repair synthesis and/or according to the degree of the slope of the repair synthesis curve as a function of the incubation time after irradiation. We conclude that the technique used in our experiments can demonstrate in a rapid and simple way a defect in the repair capacity in fibroblast cultures; the data are in good agreement with those obtained in the same XP cell lines by other authors [9], who have measured unscheduled DNA synthesis in autoradiographs and repair replication after addition of BUdR.  相似文献   

8.
Fusion of chick erythrocytes with human primary fibroblasts results in the formation of heterokaryons in which the inactive chick nuclei become reactivated. The expression of chick DNA repair functions was investigated by the analysis of the DNA repair capacity after exposure to ultraviolet (UV) irradiation of such heterokaryons obtained after fusion of chick erythrocytes with normal human or xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) cells of complementation groups A, B, C and D. Unscheduled DNA synthesis (UDS) in normal human nuclei in these heterokaryons is suppressed during the first 2–4 days after fusion. The extent and duration of this suppression is positively correlated with the number of chick nuclei in the heterokaryons. Suppression is absent in heterokaryons obtained after fusion of chicken embryonic fibroblasts with XP cells (complementation group A and C).Restoration of DNA repair synthesis is found after fusion in XP nuclei of all complementation groups studied. It occurs rapidly in XP group A nuclei, starting one day after fusion and reaching near normal human levels after 5–8 days. In nuclei of the B, C and D group increased levels of UDS are found 5 days after fusion. At 8 days after fusion the UDS level is about 50% of that found in normal human nuclei. The pattern of UDS observed in the chick nuclei parallels that of the human counterpart in the fusion. A fast complementation pattern is also observed in chick fibroblast-XP group A heterokaryons resulting within 24 h in a UDS level comparable with that in chick fibroblast-normal human heterokaryons. In heterokaryons obtained after fusion of chick fibroblasts with XP group C cells UDS remains at the level of chick cells. These data suggest that reactivation of chick erythrocyte nuclei results in expression of repair functions which are able to complement the defects in the XP complementation groups A, B, C and D.  相似文献   

9.
We have examined the ability of normal fibroblasts and of excision-deficient xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) and XP variant fibroblasts to perform postreplication DNA repair after increasing doses of either ultraviolet (UV) irradiation or mutagenic benzo(a)pyrene derivatives. XP cells defective in the excision of both UV-induced pyrimidine dimers and guanine adducts induced by treatment with the 7,8-diol-9,10-epoxides of benzo(a)pyrene were partially defective in their ability to synthesize high molecular weight DNA after the induction of both classes of DNA lesions. This defect was more marked in XP variant cells, despite their ability to remove by excision repair both pyrimidine dimers and the diol epoxide-induced lesions to the same degree as observed in normal cells. The benzo(a)pyrene 9,10-oxide had no effect in any of the 3 cell lines. The response of the excision and postreplication DNA repair mechanisms operating in human fibroblasts treated with benzo(a)pyrene 7,8-diol-9,10-epoxides, therefore, appears to resemble closely that seen after the induction of pyrimidine dimers by UV irradiation.  相似文献   

10.
The roles of DNA crosslink and its repair in the induction of sister-chromatid exchanges (SCEs) were studied in normal, xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) complementation group A, and Fanconi's anemia (FA) fibroblasts after treatment with mitomycin C (MC) or decarbamoyl mitomycin C (DMC) for 1 h. FA strains were 5—30-fold more sensitive to MC killing than normal cells, but normally responded to DMC killing. XP group-A cells were twice and only slightly more sensitive to DMC and MC killings, respectively, than normal cells. The induction rate of immediate SCEs by MC was 1.7 times higher, despite a normal SCE rate by DMC, in FA strains than that in normal cells. Alternatively, SCE rates by DMC and MC were 6 times and only 1.3 times higher, respectively, in XP cells than in normal cells. In normal cells, the reduction of MC-induced SCEs as a function of repair time followed a biphasic curve of the first rapid (half-life, 2 h) and the second slow (half-life, 14 h) components. Such components corresponded exactly to the first half-excision and the second slow repair processes of molecular crosslink repair. In MC-induced SCEs, FA17JTO cells exhibited only the slow reduction component without the first rapid component and a higher saturation level in the time-dependent reduction in SCEs. This indicates that SCEs are produced by crosslinks remaining unrepaired for long times (24—48 h) after treatment of FA cells. Conversely, XP group-A cells capable of the first half-excision manifested the first rapid reduction in SCEs, although the second component declined at the slowest rate (half-life, 48 h) owing to a defect in the second mono-adduct repair. The reduction in DMC-induced SCEs followed only the slow component. Thus, these results demonstrate that crosslink can be the lesion leading to SCE, and the MC-induced SCE frequency is higher in FA cells than in normal cells. In the FA20JTO strain, such a repair defect seemed to be less than in FA17JTO cells, judged from the survival and SCE characteristics.  相似文献   

11.
The ability of DNA excision-repair processes in diploid human fibroblasts to eliminate potentially cytotoxic and mutagenic lesions induced by UV radiation (254 nm) was demonstrated in two ways: (1) Cells with normal rates of excision were compared with cells with an intermediate rate of excision (XP2BE) and cells with an excision rate less than or equal to 1% that of normal (XP12BE) for sensitivity to the killing and mutagenic action of UV radiation. The normal cells proved resistant to doses of UV which reduced the survival of the XP cells to 14% and 0.7%, respectively, and increased the frequency of mutations to 8-azaguanine resistance in the XP cells 5- to 10-fold over background. (2) Cells in confluence were irradiated with cytotoxic and mutagenic doses of UV and allowed to carry out excision repair. After various lengths of time they were replated at lower densities to allow for expression of mutations to 6-thioguanine resistance and/or at cloning densities to assay survival. Normal cells and XP cells with reduced rates of excision repair (from complementation groups C and D) exhibited a gradual increase in survival from an initial level of 15--20% to 100% if held approximately 20 h in confluence. In contrast, XP12BE cells showed no increase from an initial survival of 20% even when held for 7 days. Normal cells irradiated in confluence but prevented from replicating for 7 days exhibited background mutation frequencies, whereas the mutation frequency in XP12BE cells did not change with the time in confluence.  相似文献   

12.
Ataxia telangiectasia (AT) and normal cells immortalized with the human telomerase gene were irradiated in non-proliferative conditions with high- (2 Gy/min) or low-dose-rate (0.3 mGy/min) radiation. While normal cells showed a higher resistance after irradiation at a low dose rate than a high dose rate, AT cells showed virtually the same survival after low- and high-dose-rate irradiation. Although the frequency of micronuclei induced by low-dose-rate radiation was greatly reduced in normal cells, it was not reduced significantly in AT cells. The number of gamma-H2AX foci increased in proportion to the dose in both AT and normal cells after high-dose-rate irradiation. Although few gamma-H2AX foci were observed after low-dose-rate irradiation in normal cells, significant and dose-dependent numbers of gamma-H2AX foci were observed in AT cells even after low-dose-rate irradiation, indicating that DNA damage was not completely repaired during low-dose-rate irradiation. Significant phosphorylation of ATM proteins was detected in normal cells after low-dose-rate irradiation, suggesting that the activation of ATM plays an important role in the repair of DNA damage during low-dose-rate irradiation. In conclusion, AT cells may not be able to repair some fraction of DNA damage and are severely affected by low-dose-rate radiation.  相似文献   

13.
Repair of UV-irradiated plasmid DNA microinjected into frog oocytes was measured by two techniques: transformation of repair-deficient (delta uvrB delta recA delta phr) bacteria, and removal of UV endonuclease-sensitive sites (ESS). Transformation efficiencies relative to unirradiated plasmids were used to estimate the number of lethal lesions; the latter were assumed to be Poisson distributed. These estimates were in good agreement with measurements of ESS. By both criteria, plasmid DNA was efficiently repaired, mostly during the first 2 h, when as many as 2 x 10(10) lethal lesions were removed per oocyte. This rate is about 10(6) times the average for removal of ESS from repair-proficient human cells. Repair was slower but still significant after 2 h, but some lethal lesions usually remained after overnight incubation. Most repair occurred in the absence of light, in marked contrast to differentiated frog cells, previously shown to possess photoreactivating but no excision repair activity. There was no increase in the resistance to DpnI restriction of plasmids (methylated in Escherichia coli at GATC sites) incubated in oocytes; this implies no increase in hemimethylated GATC sites, and hence no semiconservative DNA replication. Plasmid substrates capable of either intramolecular or intermolecular homologous recombination were not recombined, whether UV-irradiated or not. Repair of Lac+ plasmids was accompanied by a significant UV-dependent increase in the frequency of Lac- mutants, corresponding to a repair synthesis error frequency on the order of 10(-4) per nucleotide.  相似文献   

14.
The relative importance of DNA-DNA cross-links and bulky monoadducts in sister chromatid exchange (SCE) formation was investigated in three human fibroblast cell lines with different repair capabilities. These cell lines included normal cells, which can repair both classes of lesions; xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) cells, which cannot repair either psoralen-induced cross-links or monoadducts; and an XP revertant that repairs only cross-links and not monoadducts. SCEs were induced by two psoralen derivatives, 4'-hydroxymethyl-4,5',8-trimethylpsoralen (HMT) and 5-methylisopsoralen (5-MIP). After activation with long-wave ultraviolet light, HMT produces cross-links and monoadducts in DNA, whereas 5-MIP produces only monoadducts. In normal human cells both psoralens induced SCEs, but if cells were allowed to repair for 18 h before bromodeoxyuridine (BrdUrd) was added for SCE analysis, the SCE frequency was significantly reduced. XP cells showed an SCE frequency that remained high regardless of whether SCEs were analyzed immediately after psoralen exposure or 18 h later. In the XP revertant that repairs only cross-links, both psoralens induced a high yield of SCEs when BrdUrd was added immediately after psoralen treatment. When XP revertant cells were allowed 18 h to repair before addition of BrdUrd, the SCEs induced by HMT were greatly reduced, whereas those induced by 5-MIP were only slightly reduced. These observations indicate that both cross-links and monoadducts are lesions in DNA that can lead to SCE formation.  相似文献   

15.
Host-cell reactivation, that is, the degree of survival of Herpes simplex virus after UV irradiation, was high in African green monkey BSC-1 cells, intermediate in normal human fibroblasts and human FL cells, and low in both xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) cells and mouse L cells. However, colony-forming ability after UV was high for FL, normal human fibroblasts and L cells, slightly low for BSC-1 cells and extremely low for XP cells. During the 24-h post-UV incubation period, up to about 50% of the thymine-containing dimers in the acid-insoluble DNA fraction disappeared at an almost equal rate for BSC-1, FL and normal human cells but remained unaltered for the XP cells. Alkaline sucrose gradient centrifugation of DNA after UV irradiation revealed only a slight difference between FL and BSC-1 cells in the kinetics of formation of single-strand breaks and their apparent repair. From these and the previously known characters of L cells possessing reduced excision-repair ability, if any, we may conclude that, if the survival of UV-irradiated Herpes simplex virus on a test line of human or other mammalian cells is as low as that on excisionless XP cells, then it is very probable that the test cell line is defective in excision repair. This reasoning leads to the presumptive conclusion that mouse L cells have an enhanced post-replication repair other than excision repair to deal with UV damage responsible for inactivation of colony-forming ability.  相似文献   

16.
Excision repair-proficient diploid fibroblasts from normal persons (NF) and repair-deficient cells from a xeroderma pigmentosum patient (XP12BE, group A) were grown to confluence and allowed to enter the G0 state. Autoradiography studies of cells released from G0 after 72 h and replated at lower densities (3?9 × 103 cells/cm2) in fresh medium containing 15% fetal bovine serum showed that semiconservative DNA synthesis (S phase) began ~24 h after the replating. To determine whether the time available for DNA excision repair between ultraviolet irradiation (254 nm) and the onset of DNA synthesis was critical in determining the cytotoxic and/or mutagenic effect of UV in human fibroblasts, we released cultures of NF or XP12BE cells from G0, allowed them to reattach at lower densities, irradiated them in early G1 (~18 h prior to the onset of S) or just prior to S phase, and assayed the frequency of mutations to 6-thioguanine resistance and the survival of colony-forming ability. The XP12BE cells, which are virtually incapable of excising UV-induced DNA lesions, showed approximately the same frequency of mutations and survival regardless of the time of UV irradiation. In NF cells, the slope of the dose response for mutations induced in cells irradiated just prior to S was about 7-fold steeper than that of cells irradiated 18 h earlier. However, the two sets of NF cells showed no significant difference in survival. Neither were there significant differences in the survival of NF cells released from G0, plated at cloning densities and irradiated as soon as they had attached and flattened out (~20 h prior to S) or 4, 8, 12, 16, 20 or 24 h later. We conclude that the frequency of mutations induced by UV is dependent upon the number of unexcised lesions remaining at the time of semi-conservative DNA replication. However, the amount of time available for excision of potentially cytotoxic lesions is not determined primarily by the period between irradiation and the onset of S phase.  相似文献   

17.
The frequency of sister chromatid exchanges (SCEs), both spontaneous and induced by UV-light, X-rays, mitomycin C and ethylmetansulphonate (EMS), has been investigated in cultured human peripheral blood lymphocytes. Besides, frequency of spontaneous and induced SCEs was studied under the action of the inhibitors of topoisomerase II, polymerase poly(ADP-ribose), and DNA repair, i. e. novobiocin, 3-metoxybenzamide, and caffeine, respectively. It is shown that the base-line SCEs in lymphocytes of the patient with xeroderma pigmentosum II (XP2LE) is dramatically higher compared to that in normal and pigmented xerodermoid cells (XP3LE). The above inhibitors of DNA synthesis and repair enhance the rate of spontaneous SCEs in normal, XP2LE and XP3LE cells. UV-, X-ray and chemical mutagens induced an increased frequency of SCEs in these cells. Simultaneous treatment with mutagenes and inhibitors of DNA synthesis and DNA repair enhanced the rate of SCEs in lymphocytes of healthy donors and in the XP3LE patient. The frequency of the XP2LE cells. Novobiocin, 3-MBA and caffeine significantly decreased the frequency of SCEs in mitomycin C- and EMS-treated XP2LE lymphocyte, which nevertheless was much higher than that in normal cells treated with the same agents.  相似文献   

18.
We investigated the differential repair of DNA lesions induced by bifunctional mitomycin C, monofunctional decarbamoyl mitomycin C and ultraviolet irradiation in normal human, Xeroderma pigmentosum and Fanconi's anemia cells using assays for the survival of clone-forming ability, alkaline sucrose sedimentation and hydroxyapatite chromatography of DNA. Four FA cell lines exhibited about 5 to 15 times higher sensitivity to MC killing, despite normal resistance to u.v. and DMC, than did normal human cells. The XP cells, however, were highly sensitive to u.v. and DMC killings due to their deficiency in excision repair, but the cells unexpectedly had an almost normal capacity for surviving MC and repairing the MC interstrand cross-links.In experiments to determine the sedimentation velocity of the DNA in alkaline sucrose gradients, normal and XP cells showed evidence for single-strand cutting following MC treatment. The sedimentation velocity of the DNA covalently cross-linked by MC in an FA strain was 2.5 times faster than that of the untreated control, and remained unaltered during post-incubation due to the lack of half-excision4 of cross-links. However, FA cells, but not XP cells, had the normal ability to incise DNA with the DMC monoadducts. Hydroxyapatite chromatography revealed the reversibly bihelical property of MC cross-linked DNA after denaturation. Normal and XP cells lost such reversibility during post-MC incubation as the result of cross-link removal with first-order kinetics (half-life = 2 h). The three FA lines studied exhibited two- to eightfold reduced rates of cross-link removal than normal and XP cells, indicating a difference in the repair deficiency of the FA strain. Thus we have been led to conclude that FA cells may have different levels of deficiency in half-excision repair of interstrand cross-links induced by MC, despite having normal mechanisms for repair of u.v.-induced pyrimidine dimers and DMC monoadducts, and vice versa in XP cells.  相似文献   

19.
The cytotoxicity of the “K-region” epoxides as well as several other reactive metabolites or chemical derivatives of polycyclic hydrocarbons was compared in normally-repairing human diploid skin fibroblasts and in fibroblasts from a classical xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) patient (XP2BE) whose cells have been shown to carry out excision repair of damage induced in DNA by ultraviolet (UV) radiation at a rate approx. 20% that of normal cells. Each compound tested exhibited a 2- to 3-fold greater cytotoxicity in this XP strain than in the normal strain. To determine whether this difference in survival reflected a difference in the capacity of the strains to repair DNA damage caused by such hydrocarbon derivatives, we compared the cytotoxic effect of several “K-region” epoxides in two additional XP strains, each with a different capacity for repair of UV damage. The ration of the slopes of the survival curves for each of the XP strains to that of the normal strain, following exposure to each epoxide, was very similar to that which we had previously determined for their respective UV curves, suggesting that human cells repair damage induced in DNA by exposure to hydrocarbon derivatives with the same system used for UV-induced lesions.To determine whether the deficiency in rate of excision repair in this classical XP strain (XP2BE) causes such cells to be abnormally susceptible to mutations induced by “K-region” epoxides of polycyclic hydrocarbons, we compared them with normal cells for the frequency of induced mutations to 8-azaguanine resistance. The XP cells were two to three times more susceptible to mutations induced by the “K-region” epoxide of benzo(a)pyrene (BP), 7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene (DMBA), and dibenz(a,h)anthracene (DBA). Evidence also was obtained that cells from an XP variant patient are abnormally susceptible to mutations induced by hydrocarbon epoxides and, as is the case following exposure to UV, are abnormally slow in converting low molecular weight DNA, synthesized from a template following exposure to hydrocarbon epoxides, into large-size DNA.  相似文献   

20.
DNA repair after UV exposure was studied in multinucleate cells, obtained after fusion of excision-defective and variant xeroderma pigmentosum fibroblasts. Optimal fusion conditions were determined, facilitating the measurement of DNA replication in heterokaryons. In unirradiated multikaryons, entry into the S phase was depressed, when compared with unfused cells. The extent of the depression of S phase entry was dependent on the fusion conditions. In heterokaryons obtained after fusion of XP variant (6 different strains) with excision-defective XP (three cell strains from complementation groups A, C and D) both unscheduled DNA synthesis and postreplication repair after UV irradiation were restored to normal levels. In contrast, complementation was not observed after pairwise fusion of the XP variant cell strains. These results suggest that the XP variants comprise a single complementation group, different from complementation groups A, C and D.  相似文献   

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