Pyrimidine Dimer Excision and Mutation Frequency Decline

Abstract
The relationship between pyrimidine dimer excision and mutation frequency decline has been clarified by obtaining quantitative data on the rates of the two processes in a single bacterial strain. We have found (a) the loss of potential revertants to be significantly faster than the removal of thymine-containing dimers, and (b) the kinetics of dimer removal to be similar whether the postirradiation environment is conducive to mutation frequency decline or not.