J Korean Assoc Oral Maxillofac Surg.  2008 Oct;34(5):509-517.

The Effect of Genetic Variation in The Dna Base Repair Genes on the Risk of Head and Neck Cancer

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, School of Dentistry, Kyung-Hee University, Korea. omsojh@khu.ac.kr

Abstract

DNA damage accumulates in cells as a result of exposure to exogenous agents such as benzopyrene, cigarette smoke, ultraviolet light, X-ray, and endogenous chemicals including reactive oxygen species produced from normal metabolic byproducts. DNA damage can also occur during aberrant DNA processing reactions such as DNA replication, recombination, and repair. The major of DNA damage affects the primary structure of the double helix; that is, the bases are chemically modified. These modification can disrupt the molecules' regular helical structure by introducing non-native chemical bonds or bulky adducts that do not fit in the standard double helix. DNA repair genes and proteins scan the global genome to detect and remove DNA damage and damage to single nucleotides. Direct reversal of DNA damage, base excision repair, double strand break. DNA repair are known relevant DNA repair mechanisms. Four different mechanisms are distinguished within excision repair: direct reversal, base excision repair, nucleotide excision repair, and mismatch repair. Genetic variation in DNA repair genes can modulate DNA repair capacity and alter cancer risk. The instability of a cell to properly regulate its proliferation in the presence of DNA damage increase risk of gene mutation and carcinogenesis. This article aimed to review mechanism of excision repair and to understand the relationship between genetic variation of excision repair genes and head and neck cancer.

Keyword

DNA damage; DNA repair gene; Genetic variation; Head and Neck Cancer

MeSH Terms

DNA
DNA Damage
DNA Mismatch Repair
DNA Repair
DNA Replication
Genetic Variation
Genome
Head
Head and Neck Neoplasms
Nucleotides
Proteins
Reactive Oxygen Species
Recombination, Genetic
Smoke
Tobacco Products
Ultraviolet Rays
DNA
Nucleotides
Proteins
Reactive Oxygen Species
Smoke
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