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Nucleotide excision repair disorders and the balance between cancer and aging

Journal

CELL CYCLE
Volume 5, Issue 24, Pages 2886-2888

Publisher

LANDES BIOSCIENCE
DOI: 10.4161/cc.5.24.3565

Keywords

nucleotide excision repair; xeroderma pigmentosum; Cockayne syndrome; aging; cancer; insulin-like growth factor 1

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Cancer incidence increases with age and is driven by accumulation of mutations in the DNA. In many so-called premature aging disorders, cancer appears earlier and at elevated rates. These diseases are predominantly caused by genome instability and present with symptoms, including cancer, resembling segments of aging and are thus often referred to as segmental progerias. Two related segmental progerias, Cockayne syndrome (CS) and trichothiodystrophy (TTD), don't fit this pattern. Although caused by defects in genome maintenance via the nucleotide excision DNA repair (NER) pathway and displaying severe progeroid symptoms, CS and TTD patients appear to lack any cancer predisposition. More strikingly, genetic defects in the same NER pathway, and in some cases even within the same gene, XPD, can also give rise to disorders with greatly elevated cancer rates but without progeria (xeroderma pigmentosum). In this review, we will discuss the connection between genome maintenance, aging and cancer in light of a new mouse model of XPD disease.

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