ALFALFA SEEDLINGS GROWN OUTDOORS ARE MORE RESISTANT TO UV-INDUCED DNA DAMAGE THAN PLANTS GROWN IN A UV-FREE ENVIRONMENTAL CHAMBER |
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Authors: | Shinnosuke,Takayanagi ,John G.,Trunk ,John C.,Sutherland Betsy M.,Sutherland &dagger |
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Affiliation: | Biology Department, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY 11973, USA |
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Abstract: | Abstract The relative UV sensitivities of alfalfa seedlings grown outdoors versus plants grown in a growth chamber under UV-filtered cool white fluorescent bulbs have been determined using three criteria: (1) level of endogenous DNA damage as sites for the UV endonuclease from Micrococcus luteus . (2) susceptibility to pyrimidine dimer induction by a UV challenge exposure and (3) ability to repair UV-induced damage. We find that outdoor-grown plants contain approximately equal frequencies of endogenous DNA damages, are less susceptible to dimer induction by a challenge exposure of broad-spectrum UV and photorepair dimers more rapidly than plants grown in an environmental chamber under cool white fluorescent lamps plus a filter that removes most UV radiation. These data suggest that plants grown in a natural environment would be less sensitive to UVB-induced damage than would be predicted on the basis of studies on plants grown under minimum UV. |
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