Hanawalt PC. The awakening of DNA repair at Yale.
THE YALE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE 2013;
86:517-23. [PMID:
24348216 PMCID:
PMC3848106]
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Abstract
As a graduate student with Professor Richard Setlow at Yale in the late 1950s, I studied the effects of ultraviolet and visible light on the syntheses of DNA, RNA, and protein in bacteria. I reflect upon my research in the Yale Biophysics Department, my subsequent postdoctoral experiences, and the eventual analyses in the laboratories of Setlow, Paul Howard-Flanders, and myself that constituted the discovery of the ubiquitous pathway of DNA excision repair in the early 1960s. I then offer a brief perspective on a few more recent developments in the burgeoning DNA repair field and their relationships to human disease.
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