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The UV-damaged DNA binding protein mediates efficient targeting of the nucleotide excision repair complex to UV-induced photo lesions.
Moser, Jill; Volker, Marcel; Kool, Hanneke; Alekseev, Sergei; Vrieling, Harry; Yasui, Akira; van Zeeland, Albert A; Mullenders, Leon H F.
Affiliation
  • Moser J; Department of Toxicogenetics, Leiden University Medical Center, Wassenaarseweg 72, 2333 AL Leiden, The Netherlands.
DNA Repair (Amst) ; 4(5): 571-82, 2005 May 02.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15811629
ABSTRACT
Previous studies point to the XPC-hHR23B complex as the principal initiator of global genome nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathway, responsible for the repair of UV-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPD) and 6-4 photoproducts (6-4PP) in human cells. However, the UV-damaged DNA binding protein (UV-DDB) has also been proposed as a damage recognition factor involved in repair of UV-photoproducts, especially CPD. Here, we show in human XP-E cells (UV-DDB deficient) that the incision complex formation at UV-induced lesions was severely diminished in locally damaged nuclear spots. Repair kinetics of CPD and 6-4PP in locally and globally UV-irradiated normal human and XP-E cells demonstrate that UV-DDB can mediate efficient targeting of XPC-hHR23B and other NER factors to 6-4PP. The data is consistent with a mechanism in which UV-DDB forms a stable complex when bound to a 6-4PP, allowing subsequent repair proteins--starting with XPC-hHR23B--to accumulate, and verify the lesion, resulting in efficient 6-4PP repair. These findings suggest that (i) UV-DDB accelerates repair of 6-4PP, and at later time points also CPD, (ii) the fraction of 6-4PP that can be bound by UV-DDB is limited due to its low cellular quantity and fast UV dependent degradation, and (iii) in the absence of UV-DDB a slow XPC-hHR23B dependent pathway is capable to repair 6-4PP, and to some extent also CPD.
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Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Pyrimidine Dimers / Xeroderma Pigmentosum / DNA Damage / DNA / DNA Repair Limits: Humans Language: En Year: 2005 Type: Article
Search on Google
Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Pyrimidine Dimers / Xeroderma Pigmentosum / DNA Damage / DNA / DNA Repair Limits: Humans Language: En Year: 2005 Type: Article