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Aberrant DNA glycosylase-initiated repair pathway of free radicals induced DNA damage: implications for age-related diseases and natural aging

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dc.contributor.author Matkarimov, B.
dc.contributor.author Saparbaev, M.
dc.date.accessioned 2017-08-09T09:33:43Z
dc.date.available 2017-08-09T09:33:43Z
dc.date.issued 2017
dc.identifier.citation Matkarimov, B. Saparbaev, M. (2017) Aberrant DNA glycosylase-initiated repair pathway of free radicals induced DNA damage: implications for age-related diseases and natural aging. Vol. 33. N 1. pp.3–23 ru_RU
dc.identifier.issn 0233-7657
dc.identifier.uri doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.7124/bc.000943
dc.identifier.uri http://nur.nu.edu.kz/handle/123456789/2534
dc.description.abstract Aerobic cellular respiration generates reactive oxygen species (ROS), which can damage macro-molecules including lipids, proteins and DNA. It was proposed that aging is a consequence of accumulation of naturally occurring unrepaired oxidative DNA damage. In human cells, approximately 2000 to 8000 DNA lesions occur per hour in each cell, i.e. 40000 to 200000 per cell per day. DNA repair systems are able to discriminate between regular and modified bases. For example, DNA glycosylases specifically recognize and excise damaged bases among vast majority of regular bases in the base excision repair (BER) pathway. However, mismatched pairs between two regular bases occur due to spontaneous conversion of 5-methylcytosine to thymine and DNA polymerase errors during replication. To counteract these mutagenic threats to genome stability, cells evolved special DNA repair systems that target the non-damaged DNA strand in a duplex to remove mismatched regular DNA bases. Base excision repair (BER) and mismatch repair (MMR) pathways initiated by mismatch-specific adenine- and thymine-DNA glycosylases (MutY/MUTYH and TDG/MBD4, respectively) can recognize and remove normal DNA bases in mismatched DNA duplexes. Under certain circumstances in DNA repair deficient cells bacterial MutY and human TDG can act in an aberrant manner: MutY and TDG remove Adenine and Thymine opposite to misincorporated 8-oxoguanine and damaged Adenine, respectively. These unusual activities lead either to mutations or futile DNA repair, thus indicating that the DNA repair pathways which target non-damaged DNA strand can act in an aberrant manner and introduce genome instability in the presence of unrepaired DNA lesions. Both accumulation of oxidative DNA damage in cells and the aberrant DNA repair can contribute to cancer, brain disorders and premature senescence. ru_RU
dc.language.iso en ru_RU
dc.publisher Biopolymers and Cell. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.7124/bc.000943 ru_RU
dc.rights Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States *
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/us/ *
dc.subject oxidative DNA damage ru_RU
dc.subject crystal structure ru_RU
dc.subject base excision repair ru_RU
dc.subject nucleotide incision repair ru_RU
dc.subject AP endonuclease ru_RU
dc.title Aberrant DNA glycosylase-initiated repair pathway of free radicals induced DNA damage: implications for age-related diseases and natural aging ru_RU
dc.type Article ru_RU


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