XPG: its products and biological roles

OD Schärer - Molecular Mechanisms of Xeroderma Pigmentosum, 2008 - Springer
Molecular Mechanisms of Xeroderma Pigmentosum, 2008Springer
Xeroderma pigmetosum patients of the complementation group G are rare. One group of XP-
G patients displays a rather mild and typical XP phenotype. Mutations in these patients
interfere with the function of XPG in the nucleotide excision repair, where it has a structural
role in the assembly of the preincision complex and a catalytic role in making the incision
3′ to the damaged site in DNA. Another set of XP-G patient is much more severely affected,
displaying combined symptoms of xeroderma pigmentosum and Cockayne syndrome …
Abstract
Xeroderma pigmetosum patients of the complementation group G are rare. One group of XP-G patients displays a rather mild and typical XP phenotype. Mutations in these patients interfere with the function of XPG in the nucleotide excision repair, where it has a structural role in the assembly of the preincision complex and a catalytic role in making the incision 3′ to the damaged site in DNA. Another set of XP-G patient is much more severely affected, displaying combined symptoms of xeroderma pigmentosum and Cockayne syndrome, referred to as XP/CS complex. Although the molecular basis leading to the XP/CS complex has not yet been fully established, current evidence suggests that these patients suffer from a mild defect in transcription in addition to a repair defect. Here, the history of how the XPG gene was discovered, the biochemical properties of the XPG protein and the molecular defects found in XP-G patients and mouse models are reviewed.
Springer