You are here : Home > News > Exploring the reaction mechanism of DNA photorepair by electronic spectroscopy

News | Article | Photosynthesis

Exploring the reaction mechanism of DNA photorepair by electronic spectroscopy


​A team from the I2BC has just demonstrated, using transient absorption spectroscopy, that the repair of UV-induced damage in DNA by a repair enzyme (6-4) photolyase occurs in two successive photoreactions, corroborating and detailing the two-photon reaction model at work in the core of these enzymes.  

Published on 23 March 2022

Flavoenzymes photolyases are natural catalysts present in all kingdoms of life. They use sunlight to reverse carcinogenic chemical modifications of DNA caused by UV-light. Scientists from the  3P (Photobiology, Photosynthesis, Photocatalysis) team of the I2BC have been exploring the molecular mechanisms by which these essential photoenzymes repair DNA since 1999.

To learn more, read the news recently published on the I2BC website :
News-2022 – Institute for Integrative Biology of the Cell (paris-saclay.fr)

Contact : Pavel Muller  pavel.muller@i2bc.paris-saclay.fr

Top page