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Sunlight damage to cellular DNA: Focus on oxidatively generated lesions

André Passáglia Schuch, Natália Cestari Moreno, Natielen Jacques Schuch, Carlos Frederico Martins Menck, Camila García

Free Radical Biology and Medicine · 2017 · ▲ 423 citations

Abstract

The routine and often unavoidable exposure to solar ultraviolet (UV) radiation makes it one of the most significant environmental DNA-damaging agents to which humans are exposed. Sunlight, specifically UVB and UVA, triggers various types of DNA damage. Although sunlight, mainly UVB, is necessary for the production of vitamin D, which is necessary for human health, DNA damage may have several deleterious consequences, such as cell death, mutagenesis, photoaging and cancer. UVA and UVB photons can be directly absorbed not only by DNA, which results in lesions, but also by the chromophores that are present in skin cells. This process leads to the formation of reactive oxygen species, which may indirectly cause DNA damage. Despite many decades of investigation, the discrimination among the consequences of these different types of lesions is not clear. However, human cells have complex systems to avoid the deleterious effects of the reactive species produced by sunlight. These systems include antioxidants, that protect DNA, and mechanisms of DNA damage repair and tolerance. Genetic defects in these mechanisms that have clear harmful effects in the exposed skin are found in several human syndromes. The best known of these is xeroderma pigmentosum (XP), whose patients are defective in the nucleotide excision repair (NER) and translesion synthesis (TLS) pathways. These patients are mainly affected due to UV-induced pyrimidine dimers, but there is growing evidence that XP cells are also defective in the protection against other types of lesions, including oxidized DNA bases. This raises a question regarding the relative roles of the various forms of sunlight-induced DNA damage on skin carcinogenesis and photoaging. Therefore, knowledge of what occurs in XP patients may still bring important contributions to the understanding of the biological impact of sunlight-induced deleterious effects on the skin cells.

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2017.01.029
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2026-06-09 MST

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APA
Schuch, A.P., Moreno, N.C., Schuch, N.J., Menck, C.F.M., &amp; García, C. (2017). Sunlight damage to cellular DNA: Focus on oxidatively generated lesions. <em>Free Radical Biology and Medicine</em>. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2017.01.029
Vancouver
Schuch AP, Moreno NC, Schuch NJ, Menck CFM, García C. Sunlight damage to cellular DNA: Focus on oxidatively generated lesions. Free Radical Biology and Medicine. 2017. doi:10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2017.01.029.
BibTeX
@article{andr2017Sunlig, title = {Sunlight damage to cellular DNA: Focus on oxidatively generated lesions}, author = {André Passáglia Schuch and Natália Cestari Moreno and Natielen Jacques Schuch and Carlos Frederico Martins Menck and Camila García}, journal = {Free Radical Biology and Medicine}, year = {2017}, doi = {10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2017.01.029}, }

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