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Evidence for an involvement of thymidine kinase in...
Journal article

Evidence for an involvement of thymidine kinase in the excision repair of ultraviolet‐irradiated herpes simplex virus in human cells

Abstract

A wild-type strain of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1:KOS) encoding a functional thymidine kinase (tk+) and a tk- mutant strain (HSV-1:PTK3B) were used to study the role of the viral tk in the repair of UV-irradiated HSV-1 in human cells. UV survival of HSV-1:PTK3B was substantially reduced compared with that of HSV-1:KOS when infecting normal human cells. In contrast, the UV survival of HSV-1:PTK3B was similar to that of HSV-1:KOS when infecting excision repair-deficient cells from a xeroderma pigmentosum patient from complementation group A. These results suggest that the repair of UV-irradiated HSV-1 in human cells depends, in part at least, on expression of the viral tk and that the repair process influenced by tk activity is excision repair or a process dependent on excision repair.

Authors

Intine RVA; Rainbow AJ

Journal

Environmental and Molecular Mutagenesis, Vol. 15, No. 1, pp. 19–23

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

January 1, 1990

DOI

10.1002/em.2850150104

ISSN

0893-6692

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