2020
DOI: 10.3390/genes11010099
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Clustered DNA Double-Strand Breaks: Biological Effects and Relevance to Cancer Radiotherapy

Abstract: Cells manage to survive, thrive, and divide with high accuracy despite the constant threat of DNA damage. Cells have evolved with several systems that efficiently repair spontaneous, isolated DNA lesions with a high degree of accuracy. Ionizing radiation and a few radiomimetic chemicals can produce clustered DNA damage comprising complex arrangements of single-strand damage and DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). There is substantial evidence that clustered DNA damage is more mutagenic and cytotoxic than isolated… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
101
0
3

Year Published

2020
2020
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
4
2
1
1

Relationship

0
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 127 publications
(104 citation statements)
references
References 143 publications
0
101
0
3
Order By: Relevance
“…Significant genotype effects on MN frequency and/or its net balance were observed for HR (NBN) and MMR (MLH1, MSH3, MSH4) repair pathway SNPs across different time points. This was expected because (1) IR exposure results in increased DNA damage, most notably, single-and double-strand breaks, oxidative lesions (e.g., 8-oxoG), DNA-protein crosslinks (DPCs) and clustered DNA lesions [62][63][64][65][66][67]; (2) the HR pathway, acting in the S/G2 stages of the cell cycle, is the major DNA repair pathway involved in the error-free correction of DSBs [11,33,35,68]; (3) MMR proteins, besides their canonical actions on the post-replication repair of mispaired nucleotides and insertion-deletion loops, have also been demonstrated to play an important role on the damage response to IR-induced DSBs, either through cooperation with HR or through signaling for cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis [64,[69][70][71]; (4) DSBs, if left unrepaired, e.g., due to the presence of SNPs that reduce the DNA repair capacity, may give rise to chromosome breakage and MN formation upon replication [28,33,35,72]. The potential influence of functional DSB repair SNPs on 131 I-induced BNMN frequency is, therefore, fully justified.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Significant genotype effects on MN frequency and/or its net balance were observed for HR (NBN) and MMR (MLH1, MSH3, MSH4) repair pathway SNPs across different time points. This was expected because (1) IR exposure results in increased DNA damage, most notably, single-and double-strand breaks, oxidative lesions (e.g., 8-oxoG), DNA-protein crosslinks (DPCs) and clustered DNA lesions [62][63][64][65][66][67]; (2) the HR pathway, acting in the S/G2 stages of the cell cycle, is the major DNA repair pathway involved in the error-free correction of DSBs [11,33,35,68]; (3) MMR proteins, besides their canonical actions on the post-replication repair of mispaired nucleotides and insertion-deletion loops, have also been demonstrated to play an important role on the damage response to IR-induced DSBs, either through cooperation with HR or through signaling for cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis [64,[69][70][71]; (4) DSBs, if left unrepaired, e.g., due to the presence of SNPs that reduce the DNA repair capacity, may give rise to chromosome breakage and MN formation upon replication [28,33,35,72]. The potential influence of functional DSB repair SNPs on 131 I-induced BNMN frequency is, therefore, fully justified.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The formation of clusters indicates that about half of microirradiation regions contain several sites of DNA damage in very close proximity, indicative of complex DNA damage. Tissue culture cells exposed to high-linear energy transfer (LET) irradiation shift the repair pathway utilized from NHEJ to a combination of NHEJ and HR repair (Nickoloff et al, 2020). It could be interpreted in two ways: clustered DSBs are shifted towards HR, or clustered DSBs are repaired by mixed HR/NHEJ model.…”
Section: Proteins From Hr and Nhej Repair Pathways Show Recruitment Tmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, DSBs are more deleterious and require repair prior to cell division. The mechanism of DSB formation is common to all forms of ionizing radiation including heavy particle radiation used in cancer therapy, gamma irradiation, and microirradiation (Nickoloff et al, 2020). However, these forms of radiation differ in the relative abundance of clustered DSBs, with high LET exposure (heavy ion) producing more clustered DSBs than low LET exposure (gamma irradiation).…”
Section: Repair Of Clustered Dsbs In the Germline Involves The Recruimentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…As a consequence, these approaches tend to measure bulk repair products, lack the time resolution to monitor events occurring immediately after DNA damage, and may represent responses to persistent damage, rather than acute damage-repair. Further, while endonucleases induce clean, enzymatic DSBs which can be readily resected, they lack the complexity of clustered DNA damage generated by ROS or radiation (30).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%