2001
The DNA Damage Signal for Mdm2 Regulation, Trp53 Induction, and Sunburn Cell Formation In Vivo Originates from Actively Transcribed Genes
Brash D, Wikonkal N, Remenyik E, van der Horst G, Friedberg E, Cheo D, van Steeg H, Westerman A, van Kranen H. The DNA Damage Signal for Mdm2 Regulation, Trp53 Induction, and Sunburn Cell Formation In Vivo Originates from Actively Transcribed Genes. Journal Of Investigative Dermatology 2001, 117: 1234-1240. PMID: 11710938, DOI: 10.1046/j.0022-202x.2001.01554.x.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsDNA photoproductsDNA damage signalsUnrepaired DNA lesionsCell formationSpecific genome regionsTumor suppressor proteinCsb-/- miceUltraviolet-induced apoptosisNucleotide excision repair genesApoptosis signal pathwayExcision repair genesActive genesMutant cellsGenome regionsDNA repairSuppressor proteinDamage signalsMDM2 regulationWild typeDNA lesionsPrevents cellsHomozygous inactivationGenesRepair genesDNA signals
1995
Intragenic Domains of Strand-specific Repair inEscherichia coli
Kunala S, Brash D. Intragenic Domains of Strand-specific Repair inEscherichia coli. Journal Of Molecular Biology 1995, 246: 264-272. PMID: 7869378, DOI: 10.1006/jmbi.1994.0082.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsTranscription-repair coupling factorTranscription start siteStart siteEscherichia coli genesUV-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimersStrand-specific repairMfd mutationExcision repair mechanismChromatin domainsIntragenic domainsGenomic organizationMfd geneColi geneCyclobutane pyrimidine dimersLacZ transcriptionDNA repairInEscherichia coliDownstream domainIndividual nucleotidesRepair mechanismsGenesTranscriptionRepair systemDNA strandsInduced levels
1989
Ultraviolet photoproducts at the ochre suppressor mutation site in the gln U gene of Escherichia coli: Relevance to “mutation frequency decline”
Garvey N, Witkin E, Brash D. Ultraviolet photoproducts at the ochre suppressor mutation site in the gln U gene of Escherichia coli: Relevance to “mutation frequency decline”. Molecular Genetics And Genomics 1989, 219: 359-364. PMID: 2695824, DOI: 10.1007/bf00259607.Peer-Reviewed Original Research