DNA repair in skin of lupus erythematosus following in vivo exposure to ultraviolet radiation
- PMID: 6631057
- DOI: 10.1111/1523-1747.ep12522651
DNA repair in skin of lupus erythematosus following in vivo exposure to ultraviolet radiation
Abstract
The in vivo repair of pyrimidine dimers induced in the DNA of skin of 9 patients diagnosed as systemic or discoid lupus erythematosus (LE) was measured. A small area of the buttock was exposed to radiation emitted from a Burdick UV-800 sunlamp. The number of pyrimidine dimers was measured by incubating the epidermal skin DNA with UV-specific endonuclease and sedimenting the DNA through alkaline sucrose gradients. The initial number of dimers induced following sunlamp exposure was 7.6 +/- 1.8 per 10(8) daltons DNA. The level of photorepair was measured by illuminating an area of the skin with greater than 450-nm radiation immediately following sunlamp exposure. We found that 56.5 +/- 9.5% of the dimers are photorepaired with 5 min of illumination. Excision repair was measured in an area of the skin covered for 2 and 24 h postirradiation. Approximately 44 and 81% of the dimers induced immediately following sunlamp exposure were removed at these respective times. These observations in LE are similar to those observed in the skin of normal individuals.
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical