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Excision Repair in u.v. (254 nm) Damaged Non-dividing Human Skin Fibroblasts: A Major Biological Role for DNA Polymerase Alpha

Authors :
Tyrrell, Rex
Keyse, Stephen
Amaudruz, Françoise
Pidoux, Mireille
Source :
International Journal of Radiation Biology; 1985, Vol. 48 Issue: 5 p723-735, 13p
Publication Year :
1985

Abstract

We have used the eukaryotic DNA polymerase α inhibitor, aphidicolin, and the polymerase β inhibitor, dideoxythymidine, to examine the role of these enzymes in excision repair of ultraviolet (u.v., 254 nm) damage induced in non-dividing (arrested) human skin fibroblasts. The effects of these drugs on u.v.-treated cells have been monitored using a simple and reproducible repair synthesis assay in parallel with viability measurements to determine the degree of inhibition of repair of potentially lethal damage. In agreement with previous studies using density gradients, repair synthesis induced by low fluences of u.v. (< 3 J m-2) is relatively insensitive to inhibition by aphidicolin compared to high fluences where approximately 85 per cent inhibition is observed at the highest (20 μg/ml) aphidicolin concentration employed. However, repair of potentially lethal damage is inhibited by at least 90 per cent over the entire fluence range. Although dideoxythymidine led to considerable inhibition of repair synthesis, the result is probably an artifact under these in vivo conditions. The polymerase β inhibitor was not toxic to u.v.-treated cells nor did it add to the toxicity of aphidicolin when the drugs were used in combination. We conclude that if the β polymerase is involved in excision repair then its temporary (4 h) inhibition by dideoxythymidine is entirely reversible. In contrast, polymerase α appears to be an enzyme essential to the majority of biologically effective excision repair over the entire u.v. fluence range tested.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09553002 and 13623095
Volume :
48
Issue :
5
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
International Journal of Radiation Biology
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs11698193
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/09553008514551821