Role for DNA polymerase beta in response to ionizing radiation

2007 
Abstract Evidence for a role of DNA polymerase β in determining radiosensitivity is conflicting. In vitro assays show an involvement of DNA polymerase β in single strand break repair and base excision repair of oxidative damages, both products of ionizing radiation. Nevertheless the lack of DNA polymerase β has been shown to have no effect on radiosensitivity. Here we show that mouse embryonic fibroblasts deficient in DNA polymerase β are considerably more sensitive to ionizing radiation than wild-type cells, but only when confluent. The inhibitor methoxyamine renders abasic sites refractory to the dRP lyase activity of DNA polymerase β. Methoxyamine did not significantly change radiosensitivity of wild-type fibroblasts in log phase. However, DNA polymerase β deficient cells in log phase were radiosensitized by methoxyamine. Alkaline comet assays confirmed repair inhibition of ionizing radiation induced damage by methoxyamine in these cells, indicating both the existence of a polymerase β-dependent long patch pathway and the involvement of another methoxyamine sensitive process, implying the participation of a second short patch polymerase(s) other than DNA polymerase β. This is the first evidence of a role for DNA polymerase β in radiosensitivity in vivo .
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