DNA–protein crosslinks are relatively common DNA lesions that form during the physiological processing of DNA by replication and recombination proteins, by side reactions of base excision repair enzymes, and by cellular exposure to bifunctional DNA-damaging agents such as platinum compounds. The mechanism by which pathological DNA–protein crosslinks are repaired in humans is not known. In this study, we investigated the mechanism of recognition and repair of protein–DNA and oligopeptide–DNA crosslinks by the human excision nuclease. Under our assay conditions, the human nucleotide excision repair system did not remove a 16-kDa protein crosslinked to DNA at a detectable level. However, 4- and 12-aa-long oligopeptides crosslinked to the DNA b...
The assembly and composition of human excision nuclease were investigated by electrophoretic mobilit...
Xeroderma pigmentosum is a hereditary disease caused by defective DNA repair. Somatic cell genetics ...
Human DNA repair excision nuclease removes DNA damage by incising on both sides of the lesion in a p...
DNA–protein crosslinks are relatively common DNA lesions that form during the physiological processi...
Nucleotide excision repair consists of removal of the damaged nucleotide(s) from DNA by dual incisio...
Most DNA repair mechanisms rely on the redundant information inherent to the duplex to remove damage...
DNA-protein crosslinks (DPCs)(DPCS) arise in biological systems as a result of exposure to a variety...
Nucleotide excision repair in humans is a complex reaction involving 14 polypeptides in six repair f...
SummaryToxic DNA-protein crosslinks (DPCs) arise by ionizing irradiation and UV light, are particula...
DNA-protein cross-links (DPCs) present a formidable obstacle to cellular processes because they are ...
DNA interstrand cross-links are induced by many carcinogens and anticancer drugs. It was previously ...
By using a human cell-free system capable of nucleotide excision repair, a synthetic substrate consi...
SummaryDNA-protein crosslinks (DPCs) are caused by environmental, endogenous, and chemotherapeutic a...
Stability of DNA largely depends on accuracy of repair mechanisms, which remove structural anomalies...
Human nucleotide excision repair is initiated by six repair factors (XPA, RPA, XPC-HR23B, TFIIH, XPF...
The assembly and composition of human excision nuclease were investigated by electrophoretic mobilit...
Xeroderma pigmentosum is a hereditary disease caused by defective DNA repair. Somatic cell genetics ...
Human DNA repair excision nuclease removes DNA damage by incising on both sides of the lesion in a p...
DNA–protein crosslinks are relatively common DNA lesions that form during the physiological processi...
Nucleotide excision repair consists of removal of the damaged nucleotide(s) from DNA by dual incisio...
Most DNA repair mechanisms rely on the redundant information inherent to the duplex to remove damage...
DNA-protein crosslinks (DPCs)(DPCS) arise in biological systems as a result of exposure to a variety...
Nucleotide excision repair in humans is a complex reaction involving 14 polypeptides in six repair f...
SummaryToxic DNA-protein crosslinks (DPCs) arise by ionizing irradiation and UV light, are particula...
DNA-protein cross-links (DPCs) present a formidable obstacle to cellular processes because they are ...
DNA interstrand cross-links are induced by many carcinogens and anticancer drugs. It was previously ...
By using a human cell-free system capable of nucleotide excision repair, a synthetic substrate consi...
SummaryDNA-protein crosslinks (DPCs) are caused by environmental, endogenous, and chemotherapeutic a...
Stability of DNA largely depends on accuracy of repair mechanisms, which remove structural anomalies...
Human nucleotide excision repair is initiated by six repair factors (XPA, RPA, XPC-HR23B, TFIIH, XPF...
The assembly and composition of human excision nuclease were investigated by electrophoretic mobilit...
Xeroderma pigmentosum is a hereditary disease caused by defective DNA repair. Somatic cell genetics ...
Human DNA repair excision nuclease removes DNA damage by incising on both sides of the lesion in a p...