Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1980056 | DNA Repair | 2015 | 10 Pages |
•The genomic and chromatin contexts of a DNA lesion can impact damage frequency and repair outcomes: lessons from genomics.•Survey of genome-wide methods for mapping different types of DNA lesions in yeast and human cells.•Analysis of damage-associated mutation signatures in cancer can be used to understand how chromatin structure influences repair in a variety of contexts.•Achieving base-pair resolution in genome-wide mapping of DNA lesions: progress and current limitations.
DNA damage is a constant threat to cells, causing cytotoxicity as well as inducing genetic alterations. The steady-state abundance of DNA lesions in a cell is minimized by a variety of DNA repair mechanisms, including DNA strand break repair, mismatch repair, nucleotide excision repair, base excision repair, and ribonucleotide excision repair. The efficiencies and mechanisms by which these pathways remove damage from chromosomes have been primarily characterized by investigating the processing of lesions at defined genomic loci, among bulk genomic DNA, on episomal DNA constructs, or using in vitro substrates. However, the structure of a chromosome is heterogeneous, consisting of heavily protein-bound heterochromatic regions, open regulatory regions, actively transcribed genes, and even areas of transient single stranded DNA. Consequently, DNA repair pathways function in a much more diverse set of chromosomal contexts than can be readily assessed using previous methods. Recent efforts to develop whole genome maps of DNA damage, repair processes, and even mutations promise to greatly expand our understanding of DNA repair and mutagenesis. Here we review the current efforts to utilize whole genome maps of DNA damage and mutation to understand how different chromosomal contexts affect DNA excision repair pathways.