Powerful skin cancer protection by a CPD-photolyase transgene

J Jans, W Schul, YG Sert, Y Rijksen, H Rebel, APM Eker, S Nakajima, H van Steeg, FR de Gruijl, A Yasui, JHJ Hoeijmakers, GTJ van der Horst*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Background: The high and steadily increasing incidence of ultraviolet-B (UV-B)-induced skin cancer is a problem recognized worldwide. UV introduces different types of damage into the DNA, notably cyclobutane pyrimidine dinners (CPDs) and (6-4) photoproducts (6-4PPs). If unrepaired, these photolesions can give rise to cell death, mutation induction, and onset of carcinogenic events, but the relative contribution of CPDs and 6-4PPs to these biological consequences of UV exposure is hardly known. Because placental mammals have undergone an evolutionary loss of photolyases, repair enzymes that directly split CPDs and 6-4PPs into the respective monomers in a light-dependent and lesion-specific manner, they can only repair UV-induced DNA damage by the elaborate nucleotide excision repair pathway.

Results: To assess the relative contribution of CPDs and 6-4PPs to the detrimental effects of UV light, we generated transgenic mice that ubiquitously express CPD-photolyase, 6-4PP-photolyase, or both, thereby allowing rapid light-dependent repair of CPDs and/or 6-4PPs in the skin. We show that the vast majority of (semi)acute responses in the UV-exposed skin (i.e., sunburn, apoptosis, hyperplasia, and mutation induction) can be ascribed to CPDs. Moreover, CPD-photolyase mice, in contrast to 6-4PP-photolyase mice, exhibit superior resistance to sunlight-induced tumorigenesis.

Conclusions: Our data unequivocally identify CPDs as the principal cause of nonmelanoma skin cancer and provide genetic evidence that CPD-photolyase enzymes can be employed as effective tools to combat skin cancer.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)105-115
Number of pages11
JournalCurrent Biology
Volume15
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 26 Jan 2005

Keywords

  • CYCLOBUTANE PYRIMIDINE DIMERS
  • ULTRAVIOLET-INDUCED APOPTOSIS
  • NUCLEOTIDE EXCISION-REPAIR
  • RNA-POLYMERASE-II
  • DNA-REPAIR
  • 6-4 PHOTOPRODUCTS
  • HUMAN-CELLS
  • TRANSCRIBED STRAND
  • MAMMALIAN-CELLS
  • DHFR GENE

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