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Inhibition of DNA Repair in Ultraviolet-Irradiated Human Cells by HydroxyureaFrancis, Andrew A., Blevins, R. Dean, Carrier, William L., Smith, David P., Regan, James D. 26 July 1979 (has links)
The effect on DNA repair in ultraviolet-irradiated human skin fibroblasts by hydroxyurea has been examined in this study using three independent methods for measuring DNA repair: the 5-bromodeoxyuridine photolysis assay which measures DNA repair replication, chromatographic measurement of thymine-containing dimers, and measurement of specific ultraviolet-endonucleasesensitive sites in irradiated DNA. Little effect of hydroxyurea was observed at the concentration of 2 mM, which is often used to inhibit semiconservative DNA synthesis; however, 10 mM hydroxyurea resulted in marked inhibition (65-70%) of excision repair. This inhibition was accompanied by a possible doubling in the size of the repaired region. The accumulation of large numbers of single-strand breaks following ultraviolet irradiation and hydroxyurea incubation seen by other investigators was not observed with the normal skin fibroblasts used in this study. A comparison of hydroxyurea effects on the different DNA repair assays indicates inhibition of one step in DNA repair also results in varying degrees of inhibition of other steps as well.
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TARGETING DNA DAMAGE AND REPAIR TO OVERCOME THERAPY MEDIATED TUMOR IMMUNE EVASION AND HETEROGENEITY IN THE CONTEXT OF ONCOLYTIC VIRUS VACCINATIONKesavan, Sreedevi January 2021 (has links)
Due to the inevitable reality that most patients diagnosed with cancer will eventually relapse, modern oncology research has been forced to tackle this outcome primitively using combination therapies. Adoptive T-cell transfer with Oncolytic Virus Vaccination represents a new class of combination therapies that can facilitate the crosstalk of multiple aspects of the immune system such that they work in concert to prevent this outcome for many types of cancer. Despite this, immunosuppressive systems like those characterized in the B16F10-gp33 melanoma model pose a new problem for this approach. Typically, this model has total regression but is subsequently followed by relapse. Previous work from the Wan lab has suggested that this may be an outcome of total target gene deletion. Here we present two approaches to tackle this through the targeting of DNA repair pathways of the host cell. Our data can show that both VSV and Vaccinia infection/ propagation does lead to the generation of DNA damage but in the case of VSV this leads to incomplete cell lysis, and ultimately target gene loss via double-stranded DNA repair mechanisms. We were able to tackle the phenomenon following VSV administration by adding DNA repair inhibitors to the mix and showed that the proportion of cells that escaped after the loss of the target antigen was decreased by half when compared to the standard procedures. Additionally, this work also gave a preliminary understanding of how Vaccinia may achieve a similar outcome to this via its unique cytoplasmic replication mechanisms. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
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