8 DNA Excision Repair Pathways
Abstract
The repair of altered bases in DNA is frequently classified into two major categories that have important mechanistic distinctions. A relatively limited group of lesions in DNA can be repaired in single-step reactions that directly reverse the damage. The light-dependent monomerization of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers by DNA photolyase is a well-characterized example (Kim and Sancar 1993). DNA photolyases have been extensively characterized from many prokaryotes and fungi, and from vertebrates, including fish (Yasuhira and Yasui 1992) and marsupials (Yasui et al. 1994). However, this mode for the repair of the quantitatively major form of DNA damage induced by ultraviolet (UV) radiation seems to have been lost in placental mammals (Li et al. 1993). The direct removal of small alkyl groups (such as...
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PDFDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/0.249-269