Repair of cyclobutyl pyrimidine dimers in human skin: variability among normal humans in nucleotide excision and in photorepair
- PMID: 12207672
- DOI: 10.1034/j.1600-0781.2002.00748.x
Repair of cyclobutyl pyrimidine dimers in human skin: variability among normal humans in nucleotide excision and in photorepair
Abstract
Background/aims: Photoreactivation (PR) of cyclobutyl pyrimidine dimers (CPD) in human skin remains controversial. Recently Whitmore et al. (1) reported negative results of experiments using two photorepair light (PRL) sources on UV-irradiated skin of volunteers. However, their PRL sources induced substantial levels of dimers in skin, suggesting that the additional dimers formed could have obscured PR. We met a similar problem of dimer induction by a PRL source. We designed and validated a PRL source of sufficient intensity to catalyse PR, but that did not induce CPD, and used it to measure photorepair in human skin.
Methods and results: Using a solar simulator filtered with three types of UV-filters, we found significant dimer formation in skin, quantified by number average length analysis using electrophoretic gels of isolated skin DNA. To prevent scattered UV from reaching the skin, we interposed shields between the filters and skin, and showed that the UV-filtered/shielded solar simulator system did not induce damage in isolated DNA or in human skin. We exposed skin of seven healthy human volunteers to 302 nm radiation, then to the improved PRL source (control skin areas were kept in the dark for measurement of excision repair).
Conclusions: Using a high intensity PRL source that did not induce dimers in skin, we found that three of seven subjects carried out rapid photorepair of dimers; two carried out moderate or slow dimer photorepair, and three did not show detectable photorepair. Excision repair was similarly variable in these volunteers. Subjects with slower excision repair showed rapid photorepair, whereas those with rapid excision generally showed little or no photoreactivation.
Similar articles
-
Photorepair of pyrimidine dimers in human skin in vivo.Photochem Photobiol. 1981 Oct;34(4):461-4. Photochem Photobiol. 1981. PMID: 7312952
-
Evasion of UVC-induced apoptosis by photorepair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers.Exp Cell Res. 1998 Oct 10;244(1):43-53. doi: 10.1006/excr.1998.4180. Exp Cell Res. 1998. PMID: 9770347
-
Photoreactivation of ultraviolet radiation-induced pyrimidine dimers in neonatal BALB/c mouse skin.Cancer Res. 1981 May;41(5):1829-33. Cancer Res. 1981. PMID: 7214350
-
All You Need Is Light. Photorepair of UV-Induced Pyrimidine Dimers.Genes (Basel). 2020 Nov 4;11(11):1304. doi: 10.3390/genes11111304. Genes (Basel). 2020. PMID: 33158066 Free PMC article. Review.
-
[The photorepair of pyrimidine dimers by DNA photolyase].Tanpakushitsu Kakusan Koso. 1994 Mar;39(3):221-30. Tanpakushitsu Kakusan Koso. 1994. PMID: 8153355 Review. Japanese. No abstract available.
Cited by
-
A chromatin scaffold for DNA damage recognition: how histone methyltransferases prime nucleosomes for repair of ultraviolet light-induced lesions.Nucleic Acids Res. 2020 Feb 28;48(4):1652-1668. doi: 10.1093/nar/gkz1229. Nucleic Acids Res. 2020. PMID: 31930303 Free PMC article.
-
Nucleotide excision repair and cancer.J Mol Histol. 2006 Sep;37(5-7):225-38. doi: 10.1007/s10735-006-9041-x. Epub 2006 Jul 20. J Mol Histol. 2006. PMID: 16855787 Review.
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Research Materials
Miscellaneous