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. 1988 Jan;193(1):53-63.
doi: 10.1016/0167-8817(88)90007-7.

Repair of (6-4)photoproducts correlates with split-dose recovery in UV-irradiated normal and hypersensitive rodent cells

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Repair of (6-4)photoproducts correlates with split-dose recovery in UV-irradiated normal and hypersensitive rodent cells

D L Mitchell et al. Mutat Res. 1988 Jan.

Abstract

Chinese hamster ovary cells and two UV-hypersensitive derivatives were used to determine the importance of DNA excision repair for split-dose recovery. In the wild-type cells 75% of the maximum theoretical recovery was observed when the fractions were delivered at 2-h intervals. Very little recovery was evident in the two hypersensitive cell lines. Using radioimmunoassays specific for (6-4)photoproducts and cyclobutane dimers, the ability of UV-irradiated repair-deficient cells representing 5 complementation groups to repair these 2 photoproducts was determined. Removal of antibody-binding sites specific for (6-4)photoproducts was 80% complete in 6 h and was defective in the UV-sensitive cells. In contrast, only 20-60% of antibody-binding sites specific for cyclobutane dimers were removed 18 h post-irradiation, and the extent of removal was the same in normal and defective cell lines. We conclude that repair of (6-4)photoproducts accounts for split-dose recovery. In addition, we conclude that a consequence of DNA repair in CHO cells is modification rather than removal of cyclobutane dimers.

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