ABNORMAL KINETICS OF DNA-SYNTHESIS IN ULTRAVIOLET LIGHT-IRRADIATED CELLS FROM PATIENTS WITH COCKAYNES SYNDROME
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 39 (10), 4237-4241
Abstract
Cells from patients with the hereditary disorder Cockayne''s syndrome and from the sun-sensitive individual, 11961, are sensitive to the lethal effects of UV light but have no detectable defect in excision- or postreplication repair after UV irradiation. In normal cells and in Cockayne heterozygotes, UV causes a depression in the rate of DNA-replicative synthesis followed by a recovery of normal rates 5-8 h after irradiation. In Cockayne and 11961 cells, the initial depression in DNA synthesis is the same as that in normal cells, but no subsequent recovery is observed. The recovery of DNA synthesis in normal cells appears to be unaffected by fluorodeoxyuridine but inhibited by cycloheximide. This suggests a possible requirement for de novo protein synthesis, but there are a number of alternative interpretations of these data.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of DNA damaging agents on cultured fibroblasts derived from patients with Cockayne syndromeMutation Research, 1979
- DNA repair and its coupling to DNA replication in eukaryotic cellsBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Reviews on Cancer, 1978
- PYRIMIDINE DIMER SITES ASSOCIATED WITH THE DAUGHTER DNA STRANDS IN UV‐IRRADIATED HUMAN FIBROBLASTSPhotochemistry and Photobiology, 1978
- Cockayne Syndrome: A Cellular Sensitivity to Ultraviolet LightPediatrics, 1977