4.8 Article

The sacrificial role of easily oxidizable sites in the protection of DNA from damage

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 33, Issue 16, Pages 5133-5138

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gki801

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It has been suggested that DNA contains sacrificial nucleobase sequences that protect sensitive regions of the genome from oxidative damage. Oxidation of DNA by loss of an electron generates a radical cation that can migrate long distances by hopping. The radical cation can be trapped irreversibly at certain sites (GG steps) by reaction with H2O or O-2 leading to the formation of lesions (oxidative damage). A series of DNA oligomers that contain regularly spaced GG steps and an 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine (8-oxoG), which serves as a proxy for possibly sacrificial protective low oxidation potential sites, was prepared and analyzed. We find that in certain special sequences of DNA nucleobases that 8-oxoG protects remote GG steps from oxidative damage but that this is not a general phenomenon extending to normal mixed sequence DNA. This is a consequence of the change in the relative rate of charge hopping compared with trapping of the radical cation. When hopping is relatively slow, 8-oxoG exerts no protective effect. Thus, it seems unlikely that low oxidation potential sequences play a meaningful part in protecting mixed sequence DNA from damage.

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