REVIEW: How Does a Cell Repair Damaged DNA?
N. P. Sharova
Kol'tsov Institute of Developmental Biology, Russian Academy of
Sciences, ul. Vavilova 26, 119334 Moscow, Russia; fax: (7-095)
135-8012; E-mail:
nsharova@proxima.idb.ac.ru
Received October 13, 2004
DNA in living cells is constantly subjected to different chemical and
physical factors of the environment and to cell metabolites. Some
changes altering DNA structure occur spontaneously. This raises the
potential danger of harmful mutations that could be transmitted to
offspring. To avoid the danger of mutations and changing genetic
information, a cell is capable to switch on multiple mechanisms of DNA
repair that remove damage and restore native structure. In many cases,
removal of the same damage may involve several alternative pathways;
this is very important for DNA repair under the most unfavorable
conditions. This review summarizes data about all known mechanisms of
eukaryotic DNA repair including excision repair (base excision repair
and nucleotide excision repair), mismatch repair, repair of
double-strand breaks, and cross-link repair. Special attention is given
to the regulation of excision repair by different
proteins--proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), p53, and
proteasome. The review also highlights problem of bypassing irremovable
lesions in DNA.
KEY WORDS: DNA damage, DNA repair, lesion bypass