Journal of Nucleic Acids

DNA Damage, Mutagenesis, and DNA Repair


Publishing date
15 Oct 2010
Status
Published
Submission deadline
15 Jun 2010

Lead Editor

1Department of Chemistry, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, USA

2Department of Biology, New York University, New York, NY, USA

3Division of Chemistry, Graduate School of Engineering Science, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan

4Rudolf Virchow Center for Experimental Biomedicine, Institute for Structural Biology, University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany


DNA Damage, Mutagenesis, and DNA Repair

Description

The consequences of DNA damage have been the subject of numerous studies in the last few decades. Replication of damaged DNA may result in an increased rate of mutations in the progeny, which may impart deleterious consequence on the organism. Various types of cancers have been linked to DNA damages and it is believed that the initiation of carcinogenesis may result from misreplication of the damaged DNA. DNA repair systems maintain the integrity of the genome by removing the damaged base, sugar, or phosphate from the DNA. In humans, specific DNA repair deficiencies have been associated with elevated risks of diseases, notably cancer, which underscores the importance of DNA repair. DNA damage is also known to induce lesion bypass polymerases which are error-prone on undamaged DNA and may bypass lesions in error-free or error-prone manners. The recent discovery of this new Y-family of DNA polymerases, their interactions with the lesions as determined by structural studies, and advances in the area of DNA repair have provided new insights on replicative and repair processes and their ultimate impact on mutagenesis. We believe that the time is ripe in this area of nucleic acids research to evaluate the current state of this field and to explore new research directions.

We invite authors to present original research articles as well as review articles that will stimulate the continuing efforts to define the connections between research in relevant areas and human diseases. We are particularly interested in manuscripts that report mechanisms of mutation or repair processes, kinetics, mechanisms, and structures of dNTP incorporation opposite a lesion by DNA polymerases, as well as binding and removal of a defined lesion by purified repair proteins.

Potential topics include but are not limited to:

  • Endogenous DNA damages
  • DNA adducts or lesions formed by chemicals, radiation, or drugs
  • Development of probes to evaluate damage to nucleic acids
  • Biomarkers of human exposure
  • Base or nucleotide excision repair
  • X-, B-, or Y-Family DNA polymerases and their interaction with DNA lesions
  • Structure-function relationship in miscoding
  • Kinetic analysis of translesion synthesis

Before submission authors should carefully read over the journal's Author Guidelines, which are located at http://www.hindawi.com/journals/jna/guidelines/. Prospective authors should submit an electronic copy of their complete manuscript through the journal Manuscript Tracking System at http://mts.hindawi.com/ according to the following timetable:


Articles

  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2010
  • - Article ID 701518
  • - Review Article

The Effect of Mitochondrial Dysfunction on Cytosolic Nucleotide Metabolism

Claus Desler | Anne Lykke | Lene Juel Rasmussen
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2010
  • - Article ID 174252
  • - Review Article

Base Sequence Context Effects on Nucleotide Excision Repair

Yuqin Cai | Dinshaw J. Patel | ... | Nicholas E. Geacintov
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2010
  • - Article ID 457176
  • - Review Article

DNA Polymerase: Structural Homology, Conformational Dynamics, and the Effects of Carcinogenic DNA Adducts

Richard G. Federley | Louis J. Romano
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2010
  • - Article ID 356917
  • - Research Article

Mouse WRN Helicase Domain Is Not Required for Spontaneous Homologous Recombination-Mediated DNA Deletion

Adam D. Brown | Alison B. Claybon | Alexander J. R. Bishop
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2010
  • - Article ID 710589
  • - Research Article

Role of Topoisomerase II in DNA Damage Response following IR and Etoposide

Nicola J. Sunter | Ian G. Cowell | ... | Caroline A. Austin
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2010
  • - Article ID 319142
  • - Research Article

Differential Dynamics of ATR-Mediated Checkpoint Regulators

Daniël O. Warmerdam | Roland Kanaar | Veronique A. J. Smits
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2010
  • - Article ID 761217
  • - Review Article

The Role of PCNA Posttranslational Modifications in Translesion Synthesis

Montaser Shaheen | Ilanchezhian Shanmugam | Robert Hromas
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2010
  • - Article ID 931394
  • - Research Article

Intracellular DNA Damage by Lysine-Acetylene Conjugates

Wang-Yong Yang | Qiang Cao | ... | Igor V. Alabugin
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2010
  • - Article ID 201367
  • - Review Article

Cellular Responses to Cisplatin-Induced DNA Damage

Alakananda Basu | Soumya Krishnamurthy
  • Special Issue
  • - Volume 2010
  • - Article ID 795946
  • - Research Article

SOD1 Is Essential for the Viability of DT40 Cells and Nuclear SOD1 Functions as a Guardian of Genomic DNA

Eri Inoue | Keizo Tano | ... | Takemi Enomoto
Journal of Nucleic Acids
 Journal metrics
See full report
Acceptance rate20%
Submission to final decision101 days
Acceptance to publication23 days
CiteScore2.800
Journal Citation Indicator0.270
Impact Factor2.3
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