QUANTIFICATION OF PHOTODIMERS FROM ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION-INDUCED DNA DAMAGE IN THE SEA ANEMONE, AIPTASIA PALLIDA USING ENDONUCLEASE SENSITIVE SITES (ESS)
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Date
2011-05
Type of Work
Department
Hood College Biology
Program
Biomedical and Environmental Science
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Abstract
Tropical littoral zones offer biologically harmful environments to marine
invertebrates due to high levels of exposure to ultraviolet radiation. I documented the
extent of DNA damage in the sea anemone Aiptasia pallida under laboratory conditions
by applying UVR to live animals as well as pooled DNA that had previously been
extracted from A. pallida.
Cultured A. pallida from Walsingham Pond, Bermuda were subjected to varying
lengths of UVR exposure to quantify DNA damage in the form of number of cyclobutane
pyrimidine dimers (CPD's). An endonuclease was applied to those treated with UVR to
determine varying amounts of DNA damage.
Samples without endonuclease were more significant compared to those treated
with endonuclease. Overall, all treatments were not statistically significant at the 0.05
alpha level. Small sample sizes and the inability to extract DNA efficiently without
causing damage to the controls, were not found to follow a specific pattern.