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AbstractAbstract
[en] Studies in progress on cultured frog and fish cells, exploring the relation between the frequency of mutation after ultraviolet irradiation and the pathway through which DNA repair takes place are reported. The rationale is that the mutation frequency induced by a uv exposure is determined not only by the dose delivered but by the fidelity of the DNA repair process. Since frog cells express photoreversal enzyme, whether repair takes place by error-free photoreversal or by other, error-prone, mechanisms can be determined experimentally. An important question is whether an inducible, error-prone mutagenic form of repair is demonstrable. During the past year, methods necessary to determine uv survival and mutation frequency over a range of uv exposures were worked out. Using these methods, we have tested for alteration of the uv survival curve by previous conditioning exposures in frog cells was studied and uv survival and photoreversal capacity in fish cells were determined. The relation between uv survival and induction of ouabain resistance by an alkylating agent (MNNG) was examined as a background for further studies with uv. A procedure intended to accomplish DNA-mediated transfer of frog DNA photolyase enzyme to Chinese hamster cells is described
Original Title
Role of DNA repair mechanisms in uv mutagenesis in cultured frog and fish cells
Primary Subject
Source
Sep 1978; 25 p; Available from NTIS., PC A02/MF A01
Record Type
Report
Literature Type
Progress Report
Report Number
Country of publication
BIOLOGICAL RADIATION EFFECTS, BIOLOGICAL REPAIR, CELL CULTURES, DNA, DOSE-RESPONSE RELATIONSHIPS, ERRORS, FISHES, FROGS, GENETIC RADIATION EFFECTS, GENETICS, IRRADIATION, MUTAGENESIS, MUTATION FREQUENCY, MUTATIONS, RADIATION EFFECTS, RADIOSENSITIVITY, SOMATIC CELLS, STRAND BREAKS, SURVIVAL TIME, ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION
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