Contribution of oxidation reactions to photo-induced damage to cellular DNA.
Takayasu KawasakiDimitar AngelovPaolo Di MascioJ Richard WagnerPublished in: Photochemistry and photobiology (2024)
This review article is aimed at providing updated information on the contribution of immediate and delayed oxidative reactions to the photo-induced damage to cellular DNA/skin under exposure to UVB/UVA radiations and visible light. Low-intensity UVC and UVB radiations that operate predominantly through direct excitation of the nucleobases are very poor oxidizing agents giving rise to very low amounts of 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine and DNA strand breaks with respect to the overwhelming bipyrimidine dimeric photoproducts. The importance of these two classes of oxidatively generated damage to DNA significantly increases together with a smaller contribution of oxidized pyrimidine bases upon UVA irradiation. This is rationalized in terms of sensitized photooxidation reactions predominantly mediated by singlet oxygen together with a small contribution of hydroxyl radical that appear to also be implicated in the photodynamic effects of the blue light component of visible light. Chemiexcitation-mediated formation of "dark" cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers in UVA-irradiated melanocytes is a recent major discovery that implicates in the initial stage, a delayed generation of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species giving rise to triplet excited carbonyl intermediate and possibly singlet oxygen. High-intensity UVC nanosecond laser radiation constitutes a suitable source of light to generate pyrimidine and purine radical cations in cellular DNA via efficient biphotonic ionization.
Keyphrases
- visible light
- circulating tumor
- cell free
- high intensity
- single molecule
- oxidative stress
- energy transfer
- high glucose
- nucleic acid
- healthcare
- radiation therapy
- nitric oxide
- resistance training
- drug induced
- high throughput
- ionic liquid
- high resolution
- mass spectrometry
- hydrogen peroxide
- cancer therapy
- social media
- endothelial cells
- gas chromatography
- liquid chromatography
- high speed