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ULTRAVIOLET ACTION SPECTRA FOR DNA DIMER INDUCTION, LETHALITY, AND MUTAGENESIS IN Escherichia coli WITH EMPHASIS ON THE UVB REGION
Author(s) -
Peak M. J.,
Peak J. G.,
Moehring M. P.,
Webs R. B.
Publication year - 1984
Publication title -
photochemistry and photobiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.818
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1751-1097
pISSN - 0031-8655
DOI - 10.1111/j.1751-1097.1984.tb05349.x
Subject(s) - action spectrum , pyrimidine dimer , spectral line , mutagenesis , chemistry , ultraviolet , wavelength , dna , dimer , escherichia coli , absorption (acoustics) , absorption spectroscopy , photochemistry , analytical chemistry (journal) , dna damage , materials science , mutation , physics , biochemistry , optics , optoelectronics , gene , organic chemistry , chromatography , astronomy
—Ultraviolet (UV) action spectra were obtained for lethality and mutagenesis (reversion to tryptophan independence) in Escherichia coli WP2s for wavelengths 254–405 nm with detailed analysis in the UVB region (290–320 nm). Parallel chemical assay yields of pyrimidine dimers in DNA of E. coli RT4 were determined at the same wavelengths. Spectral regions isolated from a Xe arc and resonance lines from a high‐pressure Hg‐Xe arc lamp were both used for irradiation. In all cases, precise energy distributions throughout the isolated Xe bands regions were defined. Lethality, mutagenesis, and dimer induction all decreased in efficiency in a similar fashion as the wavelengths of the radiation increased. Between 300 and 320 nm, all characteristics measured showed differences of about two and a half orders of magnitude. Between these wavelengths, the values of the three end points used either coincide with or parallel the absorption spectrum of DNA. The mutagenesis action spectrum coincides closely with the absorption spectrum of DNA. The lethality spectrum is closely parallel to the mutagenicity spectrum; the points, however, consistently occur at about 2 nm longer wavelengths. A calculation derived from the slope of the UVB spectra reveals that a 1‐nm shift of the solar UV spectrum to shorter wavelengths would result in a 35% increase in its mutagenic potential. At 325 nm, both biological action spectra show sharp decreases in slope. In addition, above 325 nm the spectra for lethality. mutagenicity, and dimer formation diverge sharply; lethalities at these UVA wavelengths were approximately tenfold greater relative to mutagenicity than at shorter wavelengths. The relative yield of dimer formation by 365 nm radiation is intermediate between the yields for lethality and mutagenesis.

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