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Original Article

Commentary the Measurement of Oxidative Damage to DNA by HPLC and GC/MS Techniques

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Pages 75-87 | Received 01 Nov 1991, Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Oxidative damage to DNA has been measured by quantitating 8-hydroxy-2′-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdGuo) after enzymic digestion of DNA, followed by HPLC separation and electrochemical detection. Alternatively, 8-hydroxyguanine (and a wide range of other base-derived products of free radical attack) may be measured after acidic hydrolysis of DNA or chromatin, followed by derivatization and gas-chromatography/mass spectrometry. Both techniques have comparable sensitivity, but GC/MS enables determination of a wide variety of chemical changes to all four DNA bases and it can be applied to DNA-protein complexes. However, the two techniques do not always give similar results. Potential reasons for this are discussed. Greater attention to methodological questions is required before using measurement of 8-OHdGuo as a “routine” marker of oxidative DNA damage in vivo.

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