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DNA sequence context greatly affects the accuracy of bypass across an ultraviolet light 6-4 photoproduct in mammalian cells
- Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- Translesion DNA synthesis (TLS) is a DNA damage tolerance mechanism carried out by low-fidelity DNA polymerases that bypass DNA lesions, which overcomes replication stalling. Despite the miscoding nature of most common DNA lesions, several of them are bypassed in mammalian cells in a relatively accurate manner, which plays a key role maintaining a low mutation load. Whereas it is generally agreed that TLS across the major UV and sunlight induced DNA lesion, the cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD), is accurate, there were conflicting reports on whether the same is true for the thymine–thymine pyrimidine–pyrimidone(6-4) ultraviolet light photoproduct (TT6-4PP), which represents the second most common class of UV lesions. Using a TLS assay system based on gapped plasmids carrying site-specific TT6-4PP lesions in defined sequence contexts we show that the DNA sequence context markedly affected both the extent and accuracy of TLS. The sequence exhibiting higher TLS exhibited also higher error-frequency, caused primarily by semi-targeted mutations, at the nearest nucleotides flanking the lesion. Our results resolve the discrepancy reported on TLS across TT6-4PP, and suggest that TLS is more accurate in human cells than in mouse cells.
- Subjects :
- DNA damage
DNA polymerase
DNA repair
Ultraviolet Rays
Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
Pyrimidine dimer
medicine.disease_cause
Article
chemistry.chemical_compound
Mice
Species Specificity
Genetics
Ultraviolet light
medicine
Animals
Humans
Molecular Biology
Cell Line, Transformed
Mutation
biology
DNA synthesis
Molecular biology
chemistry
Pyrimidine Dimers
biology.protein
DNA
DNA Damage
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c2823171c8a3a86b7b0987eaab708fd1