Oxidative DNA damage & repair: an introduction

J Cadet, KJA Davies - Free Radical Biology and Medicine, 2017 - Elsevier
J Cadet, KJA Davies
Free Radical Biology and Medicine, 2017Elsevier
This introductory article should be viewed as a prologue to the Free Radical Biology &
Medicine Special Issue devoted to the important topic of Oxidatively Damaged DNA and its
Repair. This special issue is dedicated to Professor Tomas Lindahl, co-winner of the 2015
Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his seminal discoveries in the area repair of oxidatively
damaged DNA. In the past several years it has become abundantly clear that DNA oxidation
is a major consequence of life in an oxygen-rich environment. Concomitantly, survival in the …
Abstract
This introductory article should be viewed as a prologue to the Free Radical Biology & Medicine Special Issue devoted to the important topic of Oxidatively Damaged DNA and its Repair. This special issue is dedicated to Professor Tomas Lindahl, co-winner of the 2015 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his seminal discoveries in the area repair of oxidatively damaged DNA. In the past several years it has become abundantly clear that DNA oxidation is a major consequence of life in an oxygen-rich environment. Concomitantly, survival in the presence of oxygen, with the constant threat of deleterious DNA mutations and deletions, has largely been made possible through the evolution of a vast array of DNA repair enzymes. The articles in this Oxidatively Damaged DNA & Repair special issue detail the reactions by which intracellular DNA is oxidatively damaged, and the enzymatic reactions and pathways by which living organisms survive such assaults by repair processes.
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