Increased oxidative damage to all DNA bases in patients with type II diabetes mellitus
FEBS Letters 448(1): 120-122
Article 1999 English
Authors
AR
Almas Rehman
JN
Jaffar Nourooz‐Zadeh
WM
Wenke Möller
Abstract
1 min read
Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry was used to measure the oxidative DNA damage in diabetic subjects and controls. Levels of multiple DNA base oxidation products, but not DNA base de-amination or chlorination products, were found to be elevated in white blood cell DNA from patients with type II diabetes as compared with age-matched controls. The chemical pattern of base damage is characteristic of that caused by an attack on DNA by hydroxyl radical. An increased formation of the highly reactive hydroxyl radical could account for many of the reports of oxidative stress in diabetic subjects. There was no evidence of an increased DNA damage by reactive nitrogen or chlorine species.
Timothy G. England, Emily R. Beatty, Almas Rehman, Jaffar Nourooz‐Zadeh, Paulo Pereira, JAMES O'REILLY, Helen Wiseman, Catherine Geissler, Barry Halliwell
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