Formation and Repair of Mismatches Containing Ribonucleotides and Oxidized Bases at Repeated DNA Sequences

The cellular pool of ribonucleotide triphosphates (rNTPs) is higher than that of deoxyribonucleotide triphosphates. To ensure genome stability, DNA polymerases must discriminate against rNTPs and incorporated ribonucleotides must be removed by ribonucleotide excision repair (RER). We investigated DN...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2015-10, Vol.290 (43), p.26259-26269
Hauptverfasser: Cilli, Piera, Minoprio, Anna, Bossa, Cecilia, Bignami, Margherita, Mazzei, Filomena
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The cellular pool of ribonucleotide triphosphates (rNTPs) is higher than that of deoxyribonucleotide triphosphates. To ensure genome stability, DNA polymerases must discriminate against rNTPs and incorporated ribonucleotides must be removed by ribonucleotide excision repair (RER). We investigated DNA polymerase β (POL β) capacity to incorporate ribonucleotides into trinucleotide repeated DNA sequences and the efficiency of base excision repair (BER) and RER enzymes (OGG1, MUTYH, and RNase H2) when presented with an incorrect sugar and an oxidized base. POL β incorporated rAMP and rCMP opposite 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxodG) and extended both mispairs. In addition, POL β was able to insert and elongate an oxidized rGMP when paired with dA. We show that RNase H2 always preserves the capacity to remove a single ribonucleotide when paired to an oxidized base or to incise an oxidized ribonucleotide in a DNA duplex. In contrast, BER activity is affected by the presence of a ribonucleotide opposite an 8-oxodG. In particular, MUTYH activity on 8-oxodG:rA mispairs is fully inhibited, although its binding capacity is retained. This results in the reduction of RNase H2 incision capability of this substrate. Thus complex mispairs formed by an oxidized base and a ribonucleotide can compromise BER and RER in repeated sequences. Background: Whether ribonucleotide and base excision repair (RER and BER) interfere during repair synthesis events is unknown. Results: Complex mispairs containing ribonucleotides and oxidized bases are formed by polymerase β and processed by RER and BER enzymes. Conclusion: Complex lesions modify the efficiency of DNA/RNA repair systems. Significance: This work explains how complex mispairs can compromise BER and RER.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M115.679209