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The Biology Behind |
Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Requests for reprints: Aziz Sancar, Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Mary Ellen Jones Building, Campus Box #7260, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7260. Phone: 919-962-0115; Fax: 919-966-2852; E-mail: Aziz_Sancar{at}med.unc.edu.
| INTRODUCTION |
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Nucleotide excision repair is the only human system that protects against the carcinogenic effects of sunlight by removing UV light-induced DNA adducts such as (64) photoproducts and cyclobutane thymine dimers (58). Along with light-induced lesions, the excision nuclease recognizes and excises a broad spectrum of bulky lesions such as benzo(a)pyrene, acetylaminofluorene, cisplatin, and psoralen DNA adducts (5). The mechanism of excision repair is highly conserved from E. coli to man and involves a damage recognition step, dual incisions bracketing the lesion, removal of the damage in the form of a 12- to 13-nucleotide-long oligomer in E. coli and a 24- to 32-nucleotide-long oligomer in humans, repair synthesis to fill the resulting gap, and finally ligation of the repair patch.
Human nucleotide excision repair has been recently characterized at the biochemical level in considerable detail. Six repair factors, XPA, RPA, XPC, TFIIH, XPG, and XPF-ERCC1, are necessary and sufficient to remove damage from DNA. A current model for human nucleotide excision repair is as follows: XPA, RPA, and XPC locate the damage site and recruit the TFIIH transcription/repair factor, which contains six polypeptides including helicases XPB and XPD that unwind the DNA around the damage site; the XPG and XPF-ERCC1 subunits are responsible for the 3' and 5' dual incisions, respectively. Repair synthesis proteins replication factor C, proliferating cell nuclear antigen, and DNA polymerases
and
fill the gap, and in the final step, the repair patch is sealed by DNA ligase I (refs. 9, 10; Fig. 1). Mutations in any of the XP A-to-G coding sequences result in XP, a disease characterized by extreme light sensitivity and high incidence of skin cancer. Currently, all known XP cases contain mutations in the coding regions of one of the XP genes. It is conceivable that mutations in the noncoding or nontranscribed regions of the XP genes may cause slight alteration in gene expression so as not to give rise to an overt XP phenotype, but of significant magnitude that subtle repair defects may manifest.
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In the study by Zhao et al. (1), the authors propose a mechanism that involves the nucleotide excision repair pathway and its response to oxidative damage, to explain why the XPA G variant is less responsive to BCG treatment. The suggestion is that BCG therapy provokes an inflammatory cellular response, which subsequently results in the production of oxygen radicals and extensive oxidative damage to DNA followed by apoptosis. The XPA G variant was reported to have increased DNA repair capacity (4). This increase in DNA repair capacity may be responsible for removing a greater percentage of oxidative damage from DNA, preventing the apoptotic pathway, and permitting tumor cell survival, rendering BCG ineffective for patients homozygous for the XPA G variant.
This is a reasonable speculation. However, there are certain caveats to this interpretation. The report that the XPA G variant allele shows increased DNA repair capacity requires verification by more than just the reporter gene assays reported previously (4). Currently, there is no evidence that the level of XPA protein is increased constitutively or in response to damage in XPA G variant patients. Furthermore, there is no evidence by independent repair assays that there is increased excision repair activity in cells with the XPA G variant. In addition, although it has been shown that human nucleotide excision repair excises 8-oxoguanine, thymine glycol, and perhaps other oxidative stress base lesions from DNA as efficiently as the light-induced cyclobutane thymine dimer (13), 8-oxoguanine and other oxidative stress lesions are repaired very efficiently by 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase and other glycosylases (15). Therefore, the magnitude of contribution of nucleotide excision repair in the removal of oxidative damage to nucleotide bases remains to be determined. As a final caveat, previous studies (4, 16) have shown that the XPA G variant allele has a protective effect against the onset of lung cancer. Those reports predict that individuals with XPA G variant would have lower incidence of bladder cancer as well. Zhao et al. (1) did not study an unaffected sample of the population to determine if the XPA G variant allele shows a similar protective effect against superficial bladder cancer. If it does, this study reveals an interesting issue in the genetic consideration in carcinogenesis and cancer treatment: a mutation makes the carriers more resistant to cancer, but once they develop cancer, the same mutation may make them less responsive to treatment by agents that directly or indirectly damage DNA.
This is an interesting study, and in conclusion, the connection between the XPA G variant polymorphism and lack of response to BCG treatment could have significant clinical applications. However, whether or not this polymorphism is relevant to nucleotide excision repair activity needs further investigation.
| FOOTNOTES |
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Received 1/ 6/05; accepted 1/13/05.
| REFERENCES |
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