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Publication : Heterozygosity for the mouse Apex gene results in phenotypes associated with oxidative stress.

First Author  Meira LB Year  2001
Journal  Cancer Res Volume  61
Issue  14 Pages  5552-7
PubMed ID  11454706 Mgi Jnum  J:70397
Mgi Id  MGI:2137155 Citation  Meira LB, et al. (2001) Heterozygosity for the mouse Apex gene results in phenotypes associated with oxidative stress. Cancer Res 61(14):5552-7
abstractText  Apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease is a key enzyme in the process of base excision repair, required for the repair of spontaneous base damage that arises as a result of oxidative damage to DNA. In mice, this endonuclease is coded by the Apex gene, disruption of which is incompatible with embryonic life. Here we confirm the embryonic lethality of Apex-null mice and report the phenotypic characterization of mice that are heterozygous mutants for the Apex gene (Apex+/-). We show that Apex heterozygous mutant cells and animals are abnormally sensitive to increased oxidative stress. Additionally, such animals manifest elevated levels of oxidative stress markers in serum, and we show that dietary supplementation with antioxidants restores these to normal levels. Apex+/- embryos and pups manifest reduced survival that can also be partially rescued by dietary supplementation with antioxidants. These results are consistent with a proposed role for this enzyme in protection against the deleterious effects of oxidative stress and raise the possibility that humans with heterozygous mutations in the homologous HAP1 gene may be at increased risk for the phenotypic consequences of oxidative stress in cells.
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