Solar radiation induces the formation of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) and other UV photoproducts in the genomic DNA of epidermal keratinocytes. Although CPDs have been detected in urine from UV- and sun-exposed individuals, the pathway by which they arrive there and the mechanisms by which UV-induced DNA damage in the skin has systemic effects throughout the body are not clear. Consistent with previous reports that DNA associates with small extracellular vesicles that are released from a variety of cell types, we observed that a small fraction of CPDs formed in genomic DNA after UVB exposure can later be detected in the culture medium.
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