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Cell biology

DNA damage

DEDNA-Schäden

DNA damage is any chemical or structural change to your genome. It includes base modifications, single- and double-strand breaks, and crosslinks. It comes from reactive oxygen species, ionizing radiation, UV light, and replication stress. Your cells fight back through DNA-damage repair pathways. But when those are overwhelmed, the damage triggers senescence, apoptosis, or mutations. Genomic instability, driven by accumulated DNA damage, is a recognized hallmark of aging, and a driver of cancer.

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Sources

  1. Hoeijmakers. (2009). DNA damage, aging, and cancer. *New England Journal of Medicine*doi:10.1056/NEJMra0804615
  2. Jackson & Bartek. (2009). The DNA-damage response in human biology and disease. *Nature*doi:10.1038/nature08467