Summary
2008, Vol. 43, No. 4, Pages 239-276

Base Excision Repair and its Role in Maintaining Genome Stability

Joke Baute, Anne Depicker
Department of Plant Systems Biology, Flanders Institute for Biotechnology, Gent 9052, Belgium
Department of Molecular Genetics, Ghent University, Gent 9052, Belgium
Correspondence:
Department of Plant Systems Biology, VIB, Universiteit Gent, Technologiepark 927, Gent, Belgium, B-9052



For all living organisms, genome stability is important, but is also under constant threat because various environmental and endogenous damaging agents can modify the structural properties of DNA bases. As a defense, organisms have developed different DNA repair pathways. Base excision repair (BER) is the predominant pathway for coping with a broad range of small lesions resulting from oxidation, alkylation, and deamination, which modify individual bases without large effect on the double helix structure. As, in mammalian cells, this damage is estimated to account daily for 104 events per cell, the need for BER pathways is unquestionable. The damage-specific removal is carried out by a considerable group of enzymes, designated as DNA glycosylases. Each DNA glycosylase has its unique specificity and many of them are ubiquitous in microorganisms, mammals, and plants. Here, we review the importance of the BER pathway and we focus on the different roles of DNA glycosylases in various organisms.

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Authors:
Joke Baute
Anne Depicker
Keywords:
DNA glycosylase
DNA repair
DNA damage
mutagenesis