Single-molecule analysis of bacterial DNA repair and mutagenesis

Ubiquitous conserved processes that repair DNA damage are essential for the maintenance and propagation of genomes over generations. Then again, inaccuracies in DNA transactions and failures to remove mutagenic lesions cause heritable genome changes. Building on decades of research using genetics an...

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Main Authors: Uphoff, S, Sherratt, D
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Annual Reviews 2017
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author Uphoff, S
Sherratt, D
author_facet Uphoff, S
Sherratt, D
author_sort Uphoff, S
collection OXFORD
description Ubiquitous conserved processes that repair DNA damage are essential for the maintenance and propagation of genomes over generations. Then again, inaccuracies in DNA transactions and failures to remove mutagenic lesions cause heritable genome changes. Building on decades of research using genetics and biochemistry, unprecedented quantitative insight into DNA repair mechanisms has come from the new-found ability to measure single proteins in vitro and inside individual living cells. This has brought together biologists, chemists, engineers, physicists, and mathematicians to solve long-standing questions about the way in which repair enzymes search for DNA lesions and form protein complexes that act in DNA repair pathways. Furthermore, unexpected discoveries have resulted from capabilities to resolve molecular heterogeneity and cell subpopulations, provoking new questions about the role of stochastic processes in DNA repair and mutagenesis. These studies are leading to new technologies that will find widespread use in basic research, biotechnology, and medicine.
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spelling oxford-uuid:5992d154-6704-41d8-be99-c7de6454b5ba2022-03-26T17:10:30ZSingle-molecule analysis of bacterial DNA repair and mutagenesisJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:5992d154-6704-41d8-be99-c7de6454b5baEnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordAnnual Reviews2017Uphoff, SSherratt, DUbiquitous conserved processes that repair DNA damage are essential for the maintenance and propagation of genomes over generations. Then again, inaccuracies in DNA transactions and failures to remove mutagenic lesions cause heritable genome changes. Building on decades of research using genetics and biochemistry, unprecedented quantitative insight into DNA repair mechanisms has come from the new-found ability to measure single proteins in vitro and inside individual living cells. This has brought together biologists, chemists, engineers, physicists, and mathematicians to solve long-standing questions about the way in which repair enzymes search for DNA lesions and form protein complexes that act in DNA repair pathways. Furthermore, unexpected discoveries have resulted from capabilities to resolve molecular heterogeneity and cell subpopulations, provoking new questions about the role of stochastic processes in DNA repair and mutagenesis. These studies are leading to new technologies that will find widespread use in basic research, biotechnology, and medicine.
spellingShingle Uphoff, S
Sherratt, D
Single-molecule analysis of bacterial DNA repair and mutagenesis
title Single-molecule analysis of bacterial DNA repair and mutagenesis
title_full Single-molecule analysis of bacterial DNA repair and mutagenesis
title_fullStr Single-molecule analysis of bacterial DNA repair and mutagenesis
title_full_unstemmed Single-molecule analysis of bacterial DNA repair and mutagenesis
title_short Single-molecule analysis of bacterial DNA repair and mutagenesis
title_sort single molecule analysis of bacterial dna repair and mutagenesis
work_keys_str_mv AT uphoffs singlemoleculeanalysisofbacterialdnarepairandmutagenesis
AT sherrattd singlemoleculeanalysisofbacterialdnarepairandmutagenesis