We have developed and used a simple technique to estimate the quantity of pyrimidine dimers in unlabeled cellular DNA. DNA is extracted from cells, treated with an endonuclease specific for dimers, and its molecular weight estimated by its electrophoretic mobility on alkaline agarose slab gels. The technique is used to show that cells from thyroid tissue of the fish Poecilia formosa have photoreactivating activity towards dimers in the cellular DNA.
The susceptibility to inducible SOS repair of 5,6-dihydroxy-dihydrothymine (t') damage in single-stranded phi X174 DNA has been measured. Following exposure to osmium tetroxide, which introduces t' damage in DNA under the conditions used, biological survival of the DNA infected into spheroplasts of Escherichia coli which had received prior exposure to ultraviolet light was higher than in unexposed spheroplasts. From our results, we conclude that approximately 63% of the biological damage from t' products, which is one of the classes of damage present in DNA following ionizing radiation, is susceptible to repair by the inducible SOS repair system.
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