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Mutagenesis, Vol. 16, No. 4, 365-368, July 2001
© 2001 UK Environmental Mutagen Society/Oxford University Press


Ionizing radiation damage repair: a role for topoisomerases?

Felipe Cortés1, and Nuria Pastor

Department of Cellular Biology, Faculty of Biology, University of Seville, Avenida Reina Mercedes 6, 41012 Seville, Spain

Abstract

In parallel with the developing field of DNA topoisomerase poisons in tumor chemotherapy, the basic features of these nuclear enzymes have been unfolded. The role of topoisomerases in fundamental processes involving DNA metabolism has been shown to outpace by far the initial expectations. While DNA topoisomerases are involved in relaxation of chromatin to relieve tension during DNA replication and transcription, as well as for recombinational processes and chromosome segregation and condensation, the possible role, either direct or indirect, of these enzymes in DNA repair is still a matter of discussion. In this survey the possible relationship of topoisomerases with the repair of ionizing radiation damage in mammalian cells is considered, on the basis of attractive `clues' and in the light of a number of observations.

Notes

1 To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel: +34 95 4557039; Fax: +34 95 4610261; Email: cortes{at}cica.es


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