Biomarkers of nucleic acid oxidation: A summary state-of-the-art
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Biomarkers of nucleic acid oxidation : A summary state-of-the-art. / Chao, Mu-Rong; Evans, Mark D.; Hu, Chiung-Wen; Ji, Yunhee; Møller, Peter; Rossner, Pavel; Cooke, Marcus S.
In: Redox Biology, Vol. 42, 101872, 2021.Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Biomarkers of nucleic acid oxidation
T2 - A summary state-of-the-art
AU - Chao, Mu-Rong
AU - Evans, Mark D.
AU - Hu, Chiung-Wen
AU - Ji, Yunhee
AU - Møller, Peter
AU - Rossner, Pavel
AU - Cooke, Marcus S.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Oxidatively generated damage to DNA has been implicated in the pathogenesis of a wide variety of diseases. Increasingly, interest is also focusing upon the effects of damage to the other nucleic acids, RNA and the (2?deoxy-)ribonucleotide pools, and evidence is growing that these too may have an important role in disease. LCMS/MS has the ability to provide absolute quantification of specific biomarkers, such as 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2?deoxyGuo (8-oxodG), in both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA, and 8-oxoGuo in RNA. However, significant quantities of tissue are needed, limiting its use in human biomonitoring studies. In contrast, the comet assay requires much less material, and as little as 5 ?L of blood may be used, offering a minimally invasive means of assessing oxidative stress in vivo, but this is restricted to nuclear DNA damage only. Urine is an ideal matrix in which to non-invasively study nucleic acid-derived biomarkers of oxidative stress, and considerable progress has been made towards robustly validating these measurements, not least through the efforts of the European Standards Committee on Urinary (DNA) Lesion Analysis. For urine, LC-MS/MS is considered the gold standard approach, and although there have been improvements to the ELISA methodology, this is largely limited to 8oxodG. Emerging DNA adductomics approaches, which either comprehensively assess the totality of adducts in DNA, or map DNA damage across the nuclear and mitochondrial genomes, offer the potential to considerably advance our understanding of the mechanistic role of oxidatively damaged nucleic acids in disease.
AB - Oxidatively generated damage to DNA has been implicated in the pathogenesis of a wide variety of diseases. Increasingly, interest is also focusing upon the effects of damage to the other nucleic acids, RNA and the (2?deoxy-)ribonucleotide pools, and evidence is growing that these too may have an important role in disease. LCMS/MS has the ability to provide absolute quantification of specific biomarkers, such as 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2?deoxyGuo (8-oxodG), in both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA, and 8-oxoGuo in RNA. However, significant quantities of tissue are needed, limiting its use in human biomonitoring studies. In contrast, the comet assay requires much less material, and as little as 5 ?L of blood may be used, offering a minimally invasive means of assessing oxidative stress in vivo, but this is restricted to nuclear DNA damage only. Urine is an ideal matrix in which to non-invasively study nucleic acid-derived biomarkers of oxidative stress, and considerable progress has been made towards robustly validating these measurements, not least through the efforts of the European Standards Committee on Urinary (DNA) Lesion Analysis. For urine, LC-MS/MS is considered the gold standard approach, and although there have been improvements to the ELISA methodology, this is largely limited to 8oxodG. Emerging DNA adductomics approaches, which either comprehensively assess the totality of adducts in DNA, or map DNA damage across the nuclear and mitochondrial genomes, offer the potential to considerably advance our understanding of the mechanistic role of oxidatively damaged nucleic acids in disease.
KW - Oxidative stress
KW - DNA
KW - RNA
KW - Nucleotide pool
KW - Biomarkers
KW - DNA repair
KW - PERFORMANCE LIQUID-CHROMATOGRAPHY
KW - TANDEM MASS-SPECTROMETRY
KW - NUCLEOTIDE EXCISION-REPAIR
KW - LINKED-IMMUNOSORBENT-ASSAY
KW - GINGIVAL CREVICULAR FLUID
KW - ENDOGENOUS DNA ADDUCT
KW - IN-VITRO REPAIR
KW - COMET ASSAY
KW - HUMAN URINE
KW - MITOCHONDRIAL-DNA
U2 - 10.1016/j.redox.2021.101872
DO - 10.1016/j.redox.2021.101872
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 33579665
VL - 42
JO - Redox Biology
JF - Redox Biology
SN - 2213-2317
M1 - 101872
ER -
ID: 269491497