We work on three inter-related subjects: mammalian DNA excision repair, DNA damage checkpoints, and the circadian clock. We have made a number of recent discoveries in all three areas that lead to deeper understanding of the interconnections between these three systems and are directly relevant to human health and disease treatment. We developed the XR-seq (excision Repair-sequencing) method to generate an excision repair map of the entire human genome at single nucleotide resolution; we have reconstituted an in vitro system that links nucleotide excision repair to the DNA damage checkpoint; and we have discovered regulation of excision repair by the circadian clock and developed novel approaches to understand the molecular mechanism of the mammalian circadian clock. We will apply these new conceptual and technical advances for the following objectives: (1) understand factors that affect excision repair of DNA damage by carcinogenic and by anticancer agents, (2) improve the in vitro system of excision repair-checkpoint coupling for potential use in anticancer drug screening and validation, and (3) characterize the molecular mechanism of the mammalian circadian clock and develop strategies of cancer prevention and cancer treatment based on clock control of human DNA excision repair activity. This approach is innovative because it combines biochemistry/biophysics, cell biology, genetics and animal physiology to understand the mechanistic basis and connections between mammalian DNA excision repair, DNA damage checkpoints, and of the circadian clock. The proposed research is significant because of its relevance to cancer prevention and treatment.
The goal of this research is to understand the molecular mechanisms of excision repair, DNA damage checkpoints, and the circadian clock and to apply this information for cancer prevention and treatment.
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