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- DNA damage2
- DNA repair2
- excision repair sequencing (XR-seq)2
- nucleotide excision repair2
- carcinogenesis1
- chemoresistance1
- chronotherapy1
- circadian clock1
- cisplatin1
- colorectal cancer1
- cytotoxicity1
- damage mapping1
- damage recognition1
- DNA adduct1
- drug resistance1
- genomics1
- kinetic proofreading1
- kinetics1
- oxaliplatin resistance1
- repair mapping1
- transcription-coupled repair1
DNA and Chromosomes
3 Results
- DNA and ChromosomesOpen Access
Genome-wide single-nucleotide resolution of oxaliplatin–DNA adduct repair in drug-sensitive and -resistant colorectal cancer cell lines
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 295Issue 22p7584–7594Published online: April 16, 2020- Courtney M. Vaughn
- Christopher P. Selby
- Yanyan Yang
- David S. Hsu
- Aziz Sancar
Cited in Scopus: 11Platinum-based chemotherapies, including oxaliplatin, are a mainstay in the management of solid tumors and induce cell death by forming intrastrand dinucleotide DNA adducts. Despite their common use, they are highly toxic, and approximately half of cancer patients have tumors that are either intrinsically resistant or develop resistance. Previous studies suggest that this resistance is mediated by variations in DNA repair levels or net drug influx. Here, we aimed to better define the roles of nucleotide excision repair and DNA damage in platinum chemotherapy resistance by profiling DNA damage and repair efficiency in seven oxaliplatin-sensitive and three oxaliplatin-resistant colorectal cancer cell lines. - DNA and ChromosomesOpen Access
Long-term, genome-wide kinetic analysis of the effect of the circadian clock and transcription on the repair of cisplatin-DNA adducts in the mouse liver
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 294Issue 32p11960–11968Published online: June 19, 2019- Yanyan Yang
- Zhenxing Liu
- Christopher P. Selby
- Aziz Sancar
Cited in Scopus: 15Cisplatin is the most commonly used chemotherapeutic drug for managing solid tumors. However, toxicity and the innate or acquired resistance of cancer cells to the drug limit its usefulness. Cisplatin kills cells by forming cisplatin-DNA adducts, most commonly the Pt-d(GpG) diadduct. We recently showed that, in mice, repair of this adduct 2 h following injection is controlled by two circadian programs. 1) The circadian clock controls transcription of 2000 genes in liver and, via transcription-directed repair, controls repair of the transcribed strand (TS) of these genes in a rhythmic fashion unique to each gene’s phase of transcription. - MinireviewsOpen Access
Molecular mechanisms and genomic maps of DNA excision repair in Escherichia coli and humans
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 292Issue 38p15588–15597Published online: August 10, 2017- Jinchuan Hu
- Christopher P. Selby
- Sheera Adar
- Ogun Adebali
- Aziz Sancar
Cited in Scopus: 51Nucleotide excision repair is a major DNA repair mechanism in all cellular organisms. In this repair system, the DNA damage is removed by concerted dual incisions bracketing the damage and at a precise distance from the damage. Here, we review the basic mechanisms of excision repair in Escherichia coli and humans and the recent genome-wide mapping of DNA damage and repair in these organisms at single-nucleotide resolution.