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Mutagenesis
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=== Spontaneous hydrolysis === DNA is not entirely stable in aqueous solution, and [[depurination]] of the DNA can occur. Under physiological conditions the [[glycosidic bond]] may be hydrolyzed spontaneously and 10,000 [[purine]] sites in DNA are estimated to be depurinated each day in a cell.<ref name="loeb">{{Cite journal | last1 = Loeb | first1 = L. A. | title = Endogenous carcinogenesis: Molecular oncology into the twenty-first century--presidential address | journal = Cancer Research | url = http://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/content/49/20/5489.full.pdf | volume = 49 | issue = 20 | pages = 5489β5496 | year = 1989 | pmid = 2676144 }}</ref> Numerous DNA repair pathways exist for DNA; however, if the apurinic site is not repaired, misincorporation of nucleotides may occur during replication. Adenine is preferentially incorporated by DNA polymerases in an [[apurinic site]]. Cytidine may also become [[Deamination|deaminated]] to uridine at one five-hundredth of the rate of depurination and can result in G to A transition. Eukaryotic cells also contain [[5-methylcytosine]], thought to be involved in the control of gene transcription, which can become deaminated into thymine.
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