Science, Vol.263, No.5152, 1436-1438, 1994
Slow Repair of Pyrimidine Dimers at p53 Mutation Hotspots in Skin-Cancer
Ultraviolet light has been linked with the development of human skin cancers. Such cancers often exhibit mutations in the p53 tumor suppressor gene. Ligation-mediated polymerase chain reaction was used to analyze at nucleotide resolution the repair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers along the p53 gene in ultraviolet-irradiated human fibroblasts. Repair rates at individual nucleotides were highly variable and sequence-dependent. Slow repair was seen at seven of eight positions frequently mutated in skin cancer, suggesting that repair efficiency may strongly contribute to the mutation spectrum in a cancer-associated gene.
Keywords:TUMOR SUPPRESSOR GENE;LIGATION MEDIATED PCR;UV-INDUCED MUTATIONS;ESCHERICHIA-COLI;TRANSCRIBED STRAND;CELL CARCINOMAS;MAMMALIAN-CELLS;DHFR GENE;PHOTOPRODUCTS;MUTAGENESIS