Microinjected photoreactivating enzymes from Anacystis and Saccharomyces monomerize dimers in chromatin of human cells
January 1985
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Photoreactivating enzymes (PRE) from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and the cyanobacterium Anacystis nidulans have been injected into the cytoplasm of repair-proficient human fibroblasts in culture. After administration of photoreactivation light, PRE-injected cells displayed a significantly lower level of UV-induced unscheduled DNA synthesis (UDS) than non-injected cells. This indicates that monomerization of the UV-induced pyrimidine dimers in the mammalian chromatin had occurred as a result of photoreactivation by the injected PRE at the expense of repair by the endogenous excision pathway. Purified PRE from yeast is able to reduce UDS to 20-25% of the UDS found in non-injected cells, whereas the in vitro more active PRE from A. nidulans gives a reduction to only 70%. This suggests that the eukaryotic enzyme is more efficient in the removal of pyrimidine dimers from mammalian chromatin than its equivalent purified from the prokaryote A. nidulans.
- Human
- Microinjections
- Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
- Cells, Cultured
- 0 (Pyrimidine Dimers)
- EC 4. (Lyases)
- EC 4.1.99.3 (Deoxyribodipyrimidine Photo-Lyase)
- Pyrimidine Dimers/*metabolism
- 0 (Chromatin)
- Chromatin/*drug effects
- Cyanobacteria/enzymology
- DNA Repair/*drug effects/radiation effects
- Deoxyribodipyrimidine Photo-Lyase/*pharmacology
- Fibroblasts/drug effects/metabolism
- Lyases/*pharmacology
- Saccharomyces cerevisiae/enzymology