DNA Repair Mechanisms
Transcript of DNA Repair Mechanisms
BRCA1-DEFICIENT CANCER CELLS TAKE ADVANTAGE OF DNA.
SILIBININ KILLS SKIN CELLS MUTATED BY UVA RADIATION.
REPAIR MECHANISM.
Tatiana Gil Franco
Medicine Student
3° semestre
U.P.B
The BRCA1 protein helps to mend double-strand DNA breaks by promoting homologous recombination.
Silibinin, kills skin cells mutated by UVA radiation and protects against damage by UVB radiation.
Introduction
BRCA1-deficient cancer cells take
advantage of DNA repair mechanism.
The Journal of Cell Biology.
(Jan 22, 2013)
BRCA1-DEFICIENT CANCER CELLS TAKE ADVANTAGE OF DNA REPAIR MECHANISM
BRCA1
It’s a human caretaker gene that produces a protein called breast cancer type 1 susceptibility protein, responsible for repairing DNA.
The BRCA1 protein helps to mend double-strand DNA breaks by promoting homologous recombination.
BRCA1-DEFICIENT CANCER CELLS TAKE ADVANTAGE OF DNA REPAIR MECHANISM
53BPA1
It’s a protein that helps orchestrate a different DNA repair mechanism, nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ)
Cells lacking BRCA1 compensate by cutting back on 53BP1.
Cathepsin L
It’s a protease that destroys 53BP1 by entering the nucleus.
vitamin D is a cathepsin L inhibitor
BRCA1-DEFICIENT CANCER CELLS TAKE ADVANTAGE OF DNA REPAIR MECHANISM
When they cultured breast cancer cells that were missing BRCA1, the cells stopped growing. After two weeks of lethargy, however, BOGA cells (BRCA1-deficient cells that overcome growth arrest), began to divide again.
These cells showed increased levels of cathepsin L and reduced amounts of 53BP1.
Eliminating cathepsin L from BOGA cells or dosing them with vitamin D, a cathepsin L inhibitor, prevented the decline in 53BP1 abundance.
PERSONAL OPINION
This article explains how cancer cells by cathepsin, 53BP1
attack, inhibiting DNA repair mechanism. I think this is very important because the authors are proposing a treatment for
breast cancer.
Silibinin kills skin cells
mutated by UVA radiation and
protects against cancer.
Photochemistry and photobiology. (Jan. 31, 2013 )
SILIBININ KILLS SKIN CELLS MUTATED BY UVA RADIATION AND PROTECTS AGAINST CÁNCER
Silibinin, also known as silybin, is the major active constituent of silymarin, a standardized extract of the milk thistle seeds containing mixture of flavonolignans.
Silibinin has also demonstrated in vitro anti-cancer effects, estrogen dependent and independent human breast carcinoma cells.
SILIBININ KILLS SKIN CELLS MUTATED BY UVA RADIATION AND PROTECTS AGAINST CÁNCER
The first study, published in the journal Photochemistry and Photobiology worked with human skin cells subjected to UVA radiation.
The Agarwal Lab treated these UVA-affected cells with silibinin. With silibinin, the rate at which these damaged cells died increased dramatically.
SILIBININ KILLS SKIN CELLS MUTATED BY UVA RADIATION AND PROTECTS AGAINST CÁNCER
The second study shows that instead of beneficially killing cells damaged by UVA radiation, treatment with silibinin protects human skill cells from damage by UVB radiation.
The UVB radiation makes up about 5 percent of the sun's radiation reaching Earth.
PERSONAL OPINION
I think that it’s a very important new because this tell us about the great damage that UV light causes us and show us how with the help of the silibinin and a DNA repair
mechanism can prevent this damage.
MEDICAL UTILITY
Knowing about the mechanisms of DNA repair is very important in the field of medicine as these mechanisms are closely linked to health problems such as cancer.
MEDICAL UTILITY
In the first news tell us about breast cancer
and the BRCA1 protein function in this
pathology.
MEDICAL UTILITY
The second new describe us the
operation of silibinin killing cells damaged
by UV rays.
REFERENCES News medical “Silibinin kills skin cells mutated by UVA radiation and
protects against cáncer”
Jan 31, 2013. Photochemistry and photobiology.
< http://www.news-medical.net/news/20130131/Silibinin-kills-skin-cells-mutated-by-UVA-radiation-and-protects-against-cancer.aspx>
News medical “BRCA1-deficient cancer cells take advantage of DNA repair mechanism”
Jan 22, 2013. The Journal of Cell Biology.
<http://www.news-medical.net/news/20130122/BRCA1-deficient-cancer-cells-take-advantage-of-DNA-repair-mechanism.aspx>
MARTINEZ SÁNCHEZ, Lina María. Biología molecular. 2. ed. Medellín:
UPB. Fac. de Medicina, 2006. 208 p.