Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.7.7.7 (DNA polymerase)
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REV1 functions in the DNA polymerase zeta mutagenesis pathway. To help understand the role of REV1 in lesion bypass, we have examined activities of purified human REV1 opposite various template bases and several different DNA lesions. Lacking a 3'-->5' proofreading exonuclease activity, purified human REV1 exhibited a DNA polymerase activity on a repeating template G sequence, but catalyzed nucleotide insertion with 6-fold lower efficiency opposite a template A and 19-27-fold lower efficiency opposite a template T or C. Furthermore, dCMP insertion was greatly preferred regardless of the specific template base. Human REV1 inserted a dCMP efficiently opposite a template 8-oxoguanine, (+)-trans-anti-benzo[a]pyrene-N2-dG, (-)-trans-anti-benzo[a]pyrene-N2-dG and 1,N6-ethenoadenine adducts, very inefficiently opposite an acetylaminofluorene-adducted guanine, but was unresponsive to a template TT dimer or TT (6-4) photoproduct. Surprisingly, the REV1 specificity of nucleotide insertion was very similar in response to different DNA lesions with greatly preferred C insertion and least frequent A insertion. By combining the dCMP insertion activity of human REV1 with the extension synthesis activity of human polymerase kappa, bypass of the trans-anti-benzo[a]pyrene-N2-dG adducts and the 1,N6-ethenoadenine lesion was achieved by the two-polymerase two-step mechanism. These results suggest that human REV1 is a specialized DNA polymerase that may contribute to dCMP insertion opposite many types of DNA damage during lesion bypass.
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PMID:Response of human REV1 to different DNA damage: preferential dCMP insertion opposite the lesion. 1191 24

Several recently discovered human DNA polymerases are associated with translesion synthesis past DNA adducts. These include human DNA polymerase kappa (pol kappa), a homologue of Escherichia coli pol IV, which enhances the frequency of spontaneous mutation. Using a truncated form of pol kappa (pol kappa Delta C), translesion synthesis past dG-(+)- or dG-(-)-anti-N(2)-BPDE (7,8-dihydroxy-anti-9,10-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo[a]pyrene) adducts was explored. Site-specifically-modified oligodeoxynucleotides containing a single stereoisomeric dG-N(2)-BPDE lesion were used as DNA templates for primer extension reactions catalyzed by pol kappa Delta C. Primer extension was retarded one base prior to the dG-N(2)-BPDE lesion; when incubated for longer times or with higher concentration of enzyme, full primer extension was observed. Quantitative analysis of fully extended products showed preferential incorporation of dCMP, the correct base, opposite all four stereoisomeric dG-N(2)-BPDE lesions. (+)-trans-dG-N(2)-BPDE, a major BPDE-DNA adduct, promoted small amounts of dTMP, dAMP, and dGMP misincorporation opposite the lesion (total 2.7% of the starting primers) and deletions (1.1%). Although (+)-cis-dG-N(2)-BPDE was most effective in blocking translesion synthesis, its miscoding properties were similar to other dG-N(2)-BPDE isomers. Steady-state kinetic data indicate that dCMP is efficiently inserted opposite all dG-N(2)-BPDE adducts and extended past these lesions. The relative frequency of translesion synthesis (F(ins) x F(ext)) of dC.dG-N(2)-BPDE pairs was 2-6 orders of magnitude higher than that of other mismatched pairs. Pol kappa may play an important role in translesion synthesis by incorporating preferentially the correct base opposite dG-N(2)-BPDE. Its relatively low contribution to mutagenicity suggests that other newly discovered DNA polymerase(s) may be involved in mutagenic events attributed to dG-N(2)-BPDE adducts in human cells.
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PMID:Translesion synthesis by human DNA polymerase kappa on a DNA template containing a single stereoisomer of dG-(+)- or dG-(-)-anti-N(2)-BPDE (7,8-dihydroxy-anti-9,10-epoxy-7,8,9,10-tetrahydrobenzo[a]pyrene). 1199 5

A system of photoaffinity reagents for selective labeling of DNA polymerases in extracts has been examined. To create the photoreactive DNA probe in situ, DNA substrates containing a synthetic abasic site are incubated in mouse embryonic fibroblast (MEF) cellular extract in the presence of base-substituted arylazido derivatives of dNTPs. This results in synthesis of a photoreactive long patch base excision repair (BER) intermediate. The arylazido photoreactive group is then activated through energy transfer from the pyrene group of a dNTP analog (Pyr-dUTP), following 365 nm UV light exposure. Pyr-dUTP binds to the active site of DNA polymerases, and the pyrene group, when excited by 365 nm UV light, activates the nearby photoreactive group in the BER intermediate resulting in crosslinking of DNA-bound DNA polymerases. Under these conditions, various DNA binding proteins that are unable to bind Pyr-dUTP are not crosslinked to DNA. DNA polymerase beta is the predominant crosslinked protein observed in the MEF extract. In contrast, several other DNA binding proteins are labeled under conditions of direct UV light activation of the photoreactive group at 312 nm. This study illustrates use of a new method of selective labeling of DNA polymerases in a crude cellular extract.
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PMID:Binary system for selective photoaffinity labeling of base excision repair DNA polymerases. 1213 21

A binary system of photoaffinity reagents was proposed earlier for highly efficient labeling of DNA polymerases by 5;-[32P]DNA primers. In the present study we demonstrate the feasibility of this approach to increase the efficiency of DNA polymerase labeling. A photoactive 2,3,5,6-tetrafluoro-4-azidobenzoyl (FAB) group was incorporated at the 3;-end of 5;-[32P]DNA primers synthesized by DNA polymerase beta or Tte in the presence of one of the dTTP analogs--FAB-4-dUTP, FAB-9-dUTP, or FAB-4-ddUTP. The reaction mixture was irradiated by light with wavelength of 334-365 nm (direct labeling) or 365-450 nm in the presence of photosensitizer, one of dTTP analogs containing a pyrene moiety, Pyr-6-dUTP or Pyr-8-dUTP. In the case of the binary system of photoaffinity reagents, a FAB group is activated by energy transfer from sensitizer localized in the dNTP-binding site of DNA polymerase in the triple complex, comprised by reagent, DNA polymerase, and Pyr-6(8)-dUTP. Direct activation of the FAB group under these conditions is negligible. The most efficient photolabeling of DNA polymerases was observed with a primer containing a FAB-4-dUMP group at the 3;-end, and Pyr-6-dUTP as a photosensitizer. Using 10-fold molar excess of photoreagent to DNA polymerase beta, the labeling efficiency was shown to achieve 60%, which is 2-fold higher than the efficiency of the direct DNA polymerase labeling under harsher conditions (334-365 nm).
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PMID:Highly efficient labeling of DNA polymerases by a binary system of photoaffinity reagents. 1213 81

Bulky carcinogen-DNA adducts, including (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG derived from the reaction of (+)-anti-benzo[a]pyrene diol epoxide with guanine, often block the progression of DNA polymerases. However, when rare bypass of the lesions does occur, they may be misreplicated. Experimental results have shown that nucleotides are inserted opposite the (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG adduct by bacteriophage T7 DNA polymerase with the order of preference A>T>or=G>C. To gain structural insights into the effects of the bulky adduct on nucleotide incorporation within the polymerase active site, molecular modeling and molecular dynamics simulations were carried out using T7 DNA polymerase to permit the relation of function to structure. We modeled the (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG adduct opposite incoming dGTP, dTTP and dCTP nucleotides, as well as unmodified guanine opposite its normal partner dCTP as a control, to compare with our previous simulation with dATP opposite the adduct. The modeling required that the (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG adduct adopt the syn conformation in each case to avoid deranging essential protein-DNA interactions. While the dATP: (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG pair was well accommodated within the active site of T7 DNA polymerase, dCTP fit poorly opposite the adduct, adopting an orientation perpendicular to the plane of the syn modified guanine during the simulation. Rotation about the glycosidic bond of the dCTP residue to this abnormal position was allowed because only one hydrogen bond between dCTP and the (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG residue evolved during the simulation, and this hydrogen bond was directly across from the dCTP glycosidic bond. The dTTP and dGTP nucleotides, incorporated with an intermediate preference opposite (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG, were accommodated reasonably well, but not as stably as the dATP nucleotide, due to a skewed primer-template alignment and more exposed BP moiety, respectively. In addition, the extent of stabilizing interactions between the nascent base-pair in each simulation was correlated positively with the incorporation preference of that particular nucleotide. The dATP nucleotide is accommodated most stably opposite the adduct, with protein-DNA hydrogen bonding interactions and an active-site pocket size that do not deviate significantly from those of the control simulation. The simulations of dTTP and dGTP opposite (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG exhibited more instability in interactions between the protein and the nascent base-pair than the dATP system. However, the active-site pocket size of the dTTP and dGTP simulations remained stable. The dCTP: (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG system had the least number of stabilizing interactions, and the active-site pocket of this system increased in size significantly compared to the control and other dNTPs opposite the adduct. These simulations elucidated why A is inserted opposite (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG most frequently, while T and G are inserted opposite the adduct to an extent intermediate between A and C, and C is most rarely incorporated. Structural rationalization of the incorporation preference opposite (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG by T7 DNA polymerase contributes to providing a molecular explanation for mutations caused by this carcinogen-DNA adduct in a model system.
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PMID:Toward understanding the mutagenicity of an environmental carcinogen: structural insights into nucleotide incorporation preferences. 1221 92

In the Ames Salmonella typhimurium reversion assay 1,6- and 1,8-dinitropyrenes (1,6- and 1,8-DNPs) are much more potent mutagens than 1-nitropyrene (1-NP). Genetic experiments established that certain differences in the metabolism of the DNPs, which in turn result in increased DNA adduction, play a role. It remained unclear, however, if the DNP adducts, N-(guanin-8-yl)-1-amino-6 ()-nitropyrene (Gua-C8-1,6-ANP and Gua-C8-1,8-ANP), which contain a nitro group on the pyrene ring covalently linked to the guanine C8, are more mutagenic than the major 1-NP adduct, N-(guanin-8-yl)-1-aminopyrene (Gua-C8-AP). In order to address this, we have compared the mutation frequency of the three guanine C8 adducts, Gua-C8-AP, Gua-C8-1,6-ANP, and Gua-C8-1,8-ANP in a CGCG*CG sequence. Single-stranded M13mp7L2 vectors containing these adducts and a control were constructed and replicated in Escherichia coli. A remarkable difference in the induced CpG deletion frequency between these adducts was noted. In repair-competent cells the 1-NP adduct induced 1.7% CpG deletions without SOS, whereas the 1,6- and 1,8-DNP adducts induced 6.8 and 10.0% two-base deletions, respectively. With SOS, CpG deletions increased up to 1.9, 11.1, and 15.1% by 1-NP, 1,6-, and 1,8-DNP adducts, respectively. This result unequivocally established that DNP adducts are more mutagenic than the 1-NP adduct in the repetitive CpG sequence. In each case the mutation frequency was significantly increased in a mutS strain, which is impaired in methyl-directed mismatch repair, and a dnaQ strain, which carries a defect in proofreading activity of the DNA polymerase III. Modeling studies showed that the nitro group on the pyrene ring at the 8-position can provide additional stabilization to the two-nucleotide extrahelical loop in the promutagenic slipped frameshift intermediate through its added hydrogen-bonding capability. This could account for the increase in CpG deletions in the M13 vector with the nitro-containing adducts compared with the Gua-C8-AP adduct itself.
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PMID:Comparative mutagenesis of the C8-guanine adducts of 1-nitropyrene and 1,6- and 1,8-dinitropyrene in a CpG repeat sequence. A slipped frameshift intermediate model for dinucleotide deletion. 1223 19

A binary system of photoaffinity reagents for selective affinity labeling of DNA polymerases has been developed. The photoreactive probe was formed in nuclear extract, using an end-labeled oligonucleotide containing a synthetic abasic site. This site was incised by apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease and then dNMPs carrying a photoreactive adduct were added to the 3(') hydroxyl using base-substituted arylazido derivatives of dUTP or dCTP. This results in the synthesis of photoreactive base excision repair (BER) intermediates. The photoreactive group was then activated, either directly (UV light exposure 320nm) or in the presence of the sensitizer of dTTP analog containing a pyrene group (Pyr-dUTP) under UV light 365nm. DNA polymerase beta was the main target crosslinked by photoreactive BER intermediates in this nuclear extract. In contrast, several proteins were labeled under the conditions of direct activation of arylazido group.
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PMID:Photoaffinity labeling of proteins in bovine testis nuclear extract. 1235 11

Benzo[a]pyrene is a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) associated with potent carcinogenic activity. Mutagenesis induced by benzo[a]pyrene DNA adducts is believed to involve error-prone translesion synthesis opposite the lesion. However, the DNA polymerase involved in this process has not been clearly defined in eukaryotes. Here, we provide biochemical evidence suggesting a role for DNA polymerase eta (Poleta) in mutagenesis induced by benzo[a]pyrene DNA adducts in cells. Purified human Poleta predominantly inserted an A opposite a template (+)- and (-)-trans-anti-BPDE-N2-dG, two important DNA adducts of benzo[a]pyrene. Both lesions also dramatically elevated G and T mis-insertion error rates of human Poleta. Error-prone nucleotide insertion by human Poleta was more efficient opposite the (+)-trans-anti-BPDE-N2-dG adduct than opposite the (-)-trans-anti-BPDE-N2-dG. However, translesion synthesis by human Poleta largely stopped opposite the lesion and at one nucleotide downstream of the lesion (+1 extension). The limited extension synthesis of human Poleta from opposite the lesion was strongly affected by the stereochemistry of the trans-anti-BPDE-N2-dG adducts, the nucleotide opposite the lesion, and the sequence context 5' to the lesion. By combining the nucleotide insertion activity of human Poleta and the extension synthesis activity of human Polkappa, effective error-prone lesion bypass was achieved in vitro in response to the (+)- and (-)-trans-anti-BPDE-N2-dG DNA adducts.
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PMID:Two-step error-prone bypass of the (+)- and (-)-trans-anti-BPDE-N2-dG adducts by human DNA polymerases eta and kappa. 1245 40

DNA polymerase enzymes employ a number of innate fidelity mechanisms to ensure the faithful replication of the genome. However, when confronted with DNA damage, their fidelity mechanisms can be evaded, resulting in a mutation that may contribute to the carcinogenic process. The environmental carcinogen benzo[a]pyrene is metabolically activated to reactive intermediates, including the tumorigenic (+)-anti-benzo[a]pyrene diol epoxide, which can attack DNA at the exocyclic amino group of guanine to form the major (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG adduct. Bulky adducts such as (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG primarily block DNA replication, but are occasionally bypassed and cause mutations if paired with an incorrect base. In vitro standing-start primer-extension assays show that the preferential insertion of A opposite (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG is independent of the sequence context, but the primer is extended preferentially when dT is positioned opposite the damaged base in a 5'-CG*T-3' sequence context. Regardless of the base positioned opposite (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG, extension of the primer past the lesion site poses the greatest block to polymerase progression. In order to gain insight into primer-extension of each base opposite (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG, we carried out molecular modeling and 1.25 ns unrestrained molecular dynamics simulations of the adduct in the +1 position of the template within the replicative pol I family T7 DNA polymerase. Each of the four bases was modeled at the 3' terminus of the primer, incorporated opposite the adduct, and the next-to-be replicated base was in the active site with its Watson-Crick partner as the incoming nucleotide. As in our studies of nucleotide incorporation, (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG was modeled in the syn conformation in the +1 position, with the BP moiety on the open major groove side of the primer-template duplex region, leaving critical protein-DNA interactions intact. The present work revealed that the efficiency of primer-extension past this bulky adduct opposite each of the four bases in the 5'-CG*T-3' sequence can be rationalized by the stability of interactions between the polymerase protein, primer-template DNA and incoming nucleotide. However, the relative stabilization of each nucleotide opposite (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG in the +1 position (T > G > A > or = C) differed from that when the adduct and partner were the nascent base-pair (A > T > or = G > C). In addition, extension past (+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG may pose a greater block to a high fidelity DNA polymerase than does nucleotide incorporation opposite the adduct because the presence of the modified base-pair in the +1 position is more disruptive to the polymerase-DNA interactions than it is within the active site itself. The dN:(+)-trans-anti-[BP]-N(2)-dG base-pair is strained to shield the bulky aromatic BP moiety from contact with the solvent in the +1 position, causing disruption of protein-DNA interactions that would likely result in decreased extension of the base-pair. These studies reveal in molecular detail the kinds of specific structural interactions that determine the function of a processive DNA polymerase when challenged by a bulky DNA adduct.
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PMID:Extending the understanding of mutagenicity: structural insights into primer-extension past a benzo[a]pyrene diol epoxide-DNA adduct. 1265 64

Benzo[a]pyrene is a potent environmental carcinogen, which can be metabolized in cells to the DNA damaging agent anti-benzo[a]pyrene-7,8-dihydrodiol-9,10-epoxide (anti-BPDE). We hypothesize that mutations induced by BPDE DNA adducts are mainly generated through an error-prone translesion synthesis that requires a specialized DNA polymerase (Pol). Using an in vivo mutagenesis assay in the yeast model system, we have examined the potential roles of Pol(zeta) and Pol(eta) in (+/-)-anti-BPDE-induced mutagenesis. In cells proficient in mutagenesis, (+/-)-anti-BPDE induced 85% base substitutions with predominant G --> C followed by G --> T transversions, 9% deletions of 1-3 nucleotides, and 6% insertions of 1-3 nucleotides. In rad30 mutant cells lacking Pol(eta), (+/-)-anti-BPDE-induced mutagenesis was reduced and accompanied by a moderate decrease in base substitutions and more significant decrease in deletions and insertions of 1-3 nucleotides. In rev3 mutant cells lacking Pol(zeta), (+/-)-anti-BPDE-induced mutagenesis was mostly abolished, leading to a great decrease in both base substitutions and deletions/insertions of 1-3 nucleotides. In contrast, large deletions/insertions were significantly increased in cells lacking Pol(zeta). Consistent with the in vivo results, purified yeast Pol(zeta) performed limited translesion synthesis opposite (+)- and (-)-trans-anti-BPDE-N(2)-dG DNA adducts with predominant G incorporation opposite the lesion. These results show that (+/-)-anti-BPDE-induced mutagenesis in yeast requires Pol(zeta) and partially involves Pol(eta) and suggest that Pol(zeta) directly participates in nucleotide insertions opposite the lesion, while Pol(eta) significantly contributes to deletions and insertions of 1-3 nucleotides.
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PMID:Mutagenesis of benzo[a]pyrene diol epoxide in yeast: requirement for DNA polymerase zeta and involvement of DNA polymerase eta. 1450 75


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