The major bacterial histone-like protein HU is a small, basic, dimeric protein composed of two closely related subunits. HU is involved in several processes in the bacterial cell such as the initiation of replication, transposition, gene inversion and cell division. It has been suggested that HU could introduce structural changes to the DNA which would facilitate or inhibit the binding of regulatory proteins to their specific sites.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have addressed the question whether the level of UV-B induced DNA damage can be accurately assessed by the measurement of the rate of unscheduled DNA synthesis (UDS). Cultured human fibroblasts were irradiated with UV radiation at 290, 313 or 365 nm. The LD50 was 85 J/m2 at 290 nm, 4500 J/m2 at 313 nm, and 70 kJ/m2 at 365 nm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Photochem Photobiol B
December 1988
Double-stranded, covalently closed, supercoiled circular DNA from phage fd (replicative form) was irradiated with increasing doses of UV light at 254 nm, 290 nm, 313 nm and 365 nm, and subjected to electrophoresis on agarose slab gels. Increasing the doses of UV light at 254 and 290 nm promotes a smooth reduction in the electrophoretic mobility of the sample, as would be expected if the major effect of light at these two wavelengths were to induce the formation of photoproducts leading to the unwinding of the double strand. At high doses, UV light at 290 nm introduces single-strand breaks (1.
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