How a Key Enzyme Repairs Sun-Damaged DNA
BraveHeart writes "Researchers have long known that mammals, including humans, lack a key enzyme — one possessed by most of the animal kingdom and even plants — that reverses severe sun damage. For the first time, researchers have witnessed how this enzyme works at the atomic level to repair sun-damaged DNA. 'Normal sunscreen lotions convert UV light to heat, or reflect it away from our skin. A sunscreen containing photolyase could potentially heal some of the damage from UV rays that get through.'"
The ever present question remains: how long until we can see a viable product on the market?
Any reason why this couldn't be used to repair damage from other forms of radiation or carcinogens?
Well, if it was present with all plants and animals (except mammals) why did evolution lose such a "useful" enzyme? Or more importantly, what functionality did the body get while losing it? Without understanding these basic questions, it would be foolhardy to get such a product and start using it all over our body.
Uhmm, would that work on human beings or only on walking and talking plants?
Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
Researchers have long known that mammals, including humans, lack a key enzyme ... a sunscreen containing photolyase could potentially heal some of the damage from UV rays that get through.
Isn't that how the lizzardman got started?
Normal sunscreen lotions cause cancer
There, fix'd that for you.
IMO the summary is a bit vague on certain points. This sort of gives the impression that the enzyme is restoring "lost data" which was corrupted by exposure to UV, which would amount to dark sorcery.
To get a bit more specific, what seems to be happening from TFA is that the UV dumps some unexpected energy into the DNA (things like light frequency, energy level, time distribution, and so forth probably play a part). This causes the DNA to fold up in order to store the received energy, and it binds to itself in a way it's not supposed to. When transcription or whatever occurs, the normal processes do their thing but aren't aware that the UV light has secretly substituted their normal DNA storage for something which is connected to itself in ways it shouldn't be. The enzyme acts as a catalyst to break these "bad" bonds, which are presumably characteristically different than the "good" bonds which make up the DNA molecule's structure, and probably weaker as well. Therefore the enzyme can break up the "bad" bonds so that the normal cellular processes get what they expect without the enzyme itself posing a risk to the DNA.
Short and simple version: the UV light makes the DNA get tangled up in ways it shouldn't like a user playing with cables, and the enzyme untangles this mess so that the cellular processes can actually find which cord goes where.
"A sunscreen containing photolyase could potentially heal some of the damage from UV rays that get through"
Genial! Let's extend this method to feeding the beef proteins by massaging meat into the skin!
While that's a nice article, it doesn't mention sunscreen's biggest hazard: it prevents the body from synthesizing Vitamin D, the anti-cancer vitamin.
The best advice is to avoid the sun between 10am and 2pm, or wear a hat/long sleeves. If you do get burned, take a large dose of Vitamin C, and slather on some fresh Aloe Vera (have you ever looked at the label on that green gunk sold as "aloe" at the megamart?)
Most sunscreens are swindles. They might prevent a burn, but you're more likely to get cancer a few years later - either due to the chemical itself, or because the body was unable to get all the Vitamin D it could have used..
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This doesn't sound like intelligent design, nor an evolutionary advantage.
So, why???
Patents Drive Free Software as Hurricanes Drive Construction Industry
> Researchers have long known that mammals, including humans, lack a key enzyme -- one possessed by most of the animal kingdom and even plants -- that reverses severe sun damage
The story description is misleading. By careful omission it gives the impression that this enzyme is the only one that can repair sun-damaged DNA damaged by UV, emphasizing that humans lack it. OH CRUEL LORD! But we do in fact already have other enzymes that repair DNA damage and these are very old news. Ohio U. are just talking about one mechanism, but the press release makes it sound like the only one.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNA_repair
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8053698
Seems to be a trend with journal articles: Release the journal article and a popular press article; Take huge liberties with the popular press article to guarantee widespread media coverage (and we guess future funding and sunscreen merchandising). Note Ohio U. is the source of the journal article and this press release:
http://www.medicaldaily.com/news/20100725/550/researchers-discover-how-key-enzyme-repairs-sun-damaged-dna.htm
We saw the same thing recently with the silly "chicken or egg" article:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2010/jul/18/chicken-and-egg-conundrum-solved
I'm not knocking either journal article. What they did was pretty cool, but would these people please learn to be honest in their press releases too? You would think they would have learned from Climategate?
"Nine natural foods to enhance libido"
"Eight instant benefits of meditation"
"Five major health benefits of flax seed"
"Five Yogic cures for respiratory ailments"
a sunscreen with enough chemicals added to allow any photolyase molecules from the lotion to permeate into my damaged skin cells.
Any large proteins just slapped onto the skin just stay there, and have no perceivable effect (assuming absence of active transport mechanisms, attack to the cell membrane, etc., which I can confidently exclude in this case).
If you add permeation helpers to destabilize the skin cell membranes sufficiently to allow uptake into the cells, the stuff gets so nasty that any positive effects will certainly far be outweighed by negative side effects.
Yes it will selll like hotcakes in sun tan lotion once the label says:
BINDS TO YOU DNA
BINDS TO YOUR DNA
or
BINDS AND REARRANGES YOUR DNA!
Good golly, is it possible there is a reason mammals have not re-evolved this?
Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
There is an important evolutionary reason why mammals are missing this enzyme.
Consider this prehistoric scenario:
Male mammal: Hey, the sun is out! lets go out and bask on the rocks like the lizards!!
Female mammal: No, you know I get sunburned easily.
Male mammal:Ok, then let's stay inside and F***
Even though possession of melanin in large enough quantities is not longer a criminal offence, not even in Alabama, it universally is considered as an aggravating factor in any trial or police proceeding (see: treatment of 15-year-old drug users: 'young thug' vs 'young man with a promising future who just made a little mistake').
I am always blown away at how complex a cell can be and the amazing things that it can do. This is just one more article pointing out the amazing complex machinery at the cell level.
You got me puzzled for a long time until I realized you meant "tale of mammals" instead of "tail of mammals".
__
Men with no respect for life must never be allowed to control the ultimate instruments of death.
GW Bu
Though looks like no real developments on this in the past 10 years
http://www.pnas.org/content/97/4/1790.full