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Biophysical Journal 8: 775-791 (1968)
© 1968 the Biophysical Society

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Repair Replication and Degradation of Bromouracil-Substituted DNA in Mammalian Cells after Irradiation with Ultraviolet Light

J. E. Cleaver

ABSTRACT

Ultraviolet (UV) light irradiation of HeLa cells in which bromouracil (BU) is substituted for thymine in one strand of the DNA, elicits a number of responses that occur predominantly in the BU strand. A small amount of degradation of both strands occurs, but the BU strand is degraded to a greater extent than the normal strand. Large UV doses (1000 erg/mm2) induce degradation of about 1.7% of the DNA within 6 hr of irradiation of unsubstituted cells; in BU-substituted cells under these conditions about 1.9% of the normal strand is degraded but 17.5% of the BU strand. After irradiation fresh bases are inserted into the BU strands at infrequent intervals throughout the DNA and this is presumed to represent repair of UV damage in the BU strands. After 1000 erg/mm2 the majority (70%) of the thymidine incorporated enters the BU strand. Inhibitors of normal DNA synthesis, hydroxyurea and arabinosyl cytosine, do not appear to inhibit the repair of DNA. The increased sensitivity of mammalian cells that contain BU to irradiation may consequently be due to damage of the BU strand. A specific interference between BU and repair of DNA which leads to large amounts of DNA degradation in bacteria, does not seem to be important in the sensitization of mammalian cells with BU.







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Copyright © 1968 by the Biophysical Society.