| Literature DB >> 7510368 |
S K Mauldin1, T M Freeland, R A Deering.
Abstract
The repair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers was measured under non-replicating conditions in a 2054-bp fragment of a cAMP-inducible cysteine proteinase (CP2) gene in D. discoideum. Overall genomic repair was unaffected by cAMP. The removal of dimers from CP2 in the wild-type NP2 cells as quantified using T4 endonuclease V was independent of transcription and was the same as in the overall genome. In a UV-sensitive radC mutant in which the rate of overall dimer removal was previously shown to be reduced, the initial rate of dimer removal in the uninduced CP2 gene (-cAMP) was 3-fold lower compared to the induced gene (+cAMP), in which repair was identical to that for the induced and uninduced states of NP2. D. discoideum may have two pathways for repairing dimers. One, effective in the wild-type strain but of reduced efficiency in radC repairs dimers equally well independent of transcription and at about the same rate as in the overall genome. A second pathway, retained in radC, repairs dimers more slowly in the overall genome and in the uninduced CP2 gene while undergoing the wild-type rate of repair in the transcriptionally active gene. Hence radC has reduced ability to repair transcriptionally inactive DNA, a defect similar to that of xeroderma pigmentosum group C.Entities:
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Year: 1994 PMID: 7510368 DOI: 10.1016/0921-8777(94)90082-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mutat Res ISSN: 0027-5107 Impact factor: 2.433