Repair and genetic consequences of endogenous DNA base damage in mammalian cells

DE Barnes, T Lindahl - Annu. Rev. Genet., 2004 - annualreviews.org
DE Barnes, T Lindahl
Annu. Rev. Genet., 2004annualreviews.org
▪ Abstract Living organisms dependent on water and oxygen for their existence face the
major challenge of faithfully maintaining their genetic material under a constant attack from
spontaneous hydrolysis and active oxygen species and from other intracellular metabolites
that can modify DNA bases. Repair of endogenous DNA base damage by the ubiquitous
base-excision repair pathway largely accounts for the significant turnover of DNA even in
nonreplicating cells, and must be sufficiently accurate and efficient to preserve genome …
▪ Abstract 
Living organisms dependent on water and oxygen for their existence face the major challenge of faithfully maintaining their genetic material under a constant attack from spontaneous hydrolysis and active oxygen species and from other intracellular metabolites that can modify DNA bases. Repair of endogenous DNA base damage by the ubiquitous base-excision repair pathway largely accounts for the significant turnover of DNA even in nonreplicating cells, and must be sufficiently accurate and efficient to preserve genome stability compatible with long-term cellular viability. The size of the mammalian genome has necessitated an increased complexity of repair and diversification of key enzymes, as revealed by gene knock-out mouse models. The genetic instability characteristic of cancer cells may be due, in part, to mutations in genes whose products normally function to ensure DNA integrity.
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