Friday 31 August 2018

Repair of DNA damaging

One of the benefits of the double stranded DNA structure is that it lends itself to repair, when structural damage or replication errors occur. Several kinds of chemical change may cause damage to DNA:

• Spontaneous hydrolysis of a nucleoside removes the heterocyclic base component.
• Spontaneous hydrolysis of cytosine changes it to a uracil.
• Various toxic metabolites may oxidize or methylate heterocyclic base components.
• Ultraviolet light may dimerize adjacent cytosine or thymine bases.

All these transformations disrupt base pairing at the site of the change, and this produces a structural deformation in the double helix.. Inspection-repair enzymes detect such deformations, and use the undamaged nucleotide at that site as a template for replacing the damaged unit. These repairs reduce errors in DNA structure from about one in ten million to one per trillion

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