Molecular Mechanisms for Repair of DNA

Molecular Mechanisms for Repair of DNA

Philip Hanawalt

133,10 €
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Editorial:
Springer Nature B.V.
Año de edición:
2012
Materia
Zoología y ciencias animales
ISBN:
9781468428971
133,10 €
IVA incluido
Disponible

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An 'age' has passed in the 40 years since we first observed recovery from radiation damage in irradiated bacteria. During the early 1930s, we had been discussing the possibility of rapid changes after radiation exposure with Farring­ ton Daniels, Benjamin Duggar, John Curtis, and others at the University of Wisconsin. After working with living cells, we had concluded that organisms receiving massive insults must have a wide variety of repair mechanisms available for restoration of at least some of the essential properties of the cell. The problem was how to fmd and identify these recovery phenomena. At that time I was working on a problem considered to be of great importance-the existence of the so-called mitogenetic rays. Several hundred articles and a score of books had already appeared dealing with mitogenetic rays, a type of radiation that was thought to exist in the shorter ultraviolet region. Our search for mitogenetic rays necessitated the design of experiments of greatest sensitivity for the detection of ultraviolet. It was vital that conditions be kept as constant as possible during exposure. All the work was done at icewater temperature (3-5°C) during and after exposure. We knew that light was an important factor for cell recovery, so all our experiments were done in dim light, with the plated-out cells being covered with dark cloth. Our statements on the effect of visible light stimulated Kelner to search for 'photoreactivation’ (as it was later called).

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Otros libros del autor

  • Molecular Mechanisms for Repair of DNA
    Philip Hanawalt
    The excision-repair of ultraviolet-induced lesions in DNA involves a recogni­ tion and incision step which is followed by excision of the damaged material, DNA repair resynthesis, and sealing of the fmal gap by polynucleotide ligase (e.g. Howard-Flanders, 1968). The initial incision step appears to require an endo­ nuclease which is absent in the uvrA...
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