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Excision of Oxidatively Generated Guanine Lesions by Competitive DNA Repair Pathways

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22052698

Keywords

DNA damage; base excision repair; nucleotide excision repair; oxidative stress; reactive oxygen species; guanine oxidation

Funding

  1. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences [R01 ES-027059, R21 ES-028546]

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Base excision repair (BER) and nucleotide excision repair (NER) are two major mechanisms that remove DNA lesions. Experimental evidence shows that oxidatively generated DNA lesions can be repaired by both competitive BER and NER pathways. The interaction between BER and NER pathways in repairing oxidatively generated DNA lesions is crucial for understanding DNA repair mechanisms.
The base and nucleotide excision repair pathways (BER and NER, respectively) are two major mechanisms that remove DNA lesions formed by the reactions of genotoxic intermediates with cellular DNA. It is generally believed that small non-bulky oxidatively generated DNA base modifications are removed by BER pathways, whereas DNA helix-distorting bulky lesions derived from the attack of chemical carcinogens or UV irradiation are repaired by the NER machinery. However, existing and growing experimental evidence indicates that oxidatively generated DNA lesions can be repaired by competitive BER and NER pathways in human cell extracts and intact human cells. Here, we focus on the interplay and competition of BER and NER pathways in excising oxidatively generated guanine lesions site-specifically positioned in plasmid DNA templates constructed by a gapped-vector technology. These experiments demonstrate a significant enhancement of the NER yields in covalently closed circular DNA plasmids (relative to the same, but linearized form of the same plasmid) harboring certain oxidatively generated guanine lesions. The interplay between the BER and NER pathways that remove oxidatively generated guanine lesions are reviewed and discussed in terms of competitive binding of the BER proteins and the DNA damage-sensing NER factor XPC-RAD23B to these lesions.

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