Abstract

Translesion synthesis (TLS) provides a mechanism of copying damaged templates during DNA replication. This potentially mutagenic process may operate either at the replication fork or at post-replicative gaps. We used the example of T-T cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) bypass to determine the influence of polymerase recruitment via PCNA ubiquitylation versus the REV1 protein on the efficiency and mutagenic outcome of TLS. Using mutant chicken DT40 cell lines we show that, on this numerically most important UV lesion, defects in polymerase η or in PCNA ubiquitylation similarly result in the long-term failure of lesion bypass with persistent strand gaps opposite the lesion, and the elevation of mutations amongst successful TLS events. Our data suggest that PCNA ubiquitylation promotes CPD bypass mainly by recruiting polymerase η, resulting in the majority of CPD lesions bypassed in an error-free manner. In contrast, we find that polymerase ζ is responsible for the majority of CPD-dependent mutations, but has no essential function in the completion of bypass. These findings point to a hierarchy of access of the different TLS polymerases to the lesion, suggesting a temporal order of their recruitment. The similarity of REV1 and REV3 mutant phenotypes confirms that the involvement of polymerase ζ in TLS is largely determined by its recruitment to DNA by REV1. Our data demonstrate the influence of the TLS polymerase recruitment mechanism on the success and accuracy of bypass.

Highlights

  • The successful replication of damaged genomic DNA is essential for cell survival, but this process is a main cause of mutagenesis

  • In vivo replicative bypass of synthetic cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) lesions Synthetic T-T CPD lesions [34] were incorporated into the pQ1 shuttle plasmid, which provides a useful tool for the analysis of physiological lesion bypass [9]

  • The resulting fully double stranded pQ-CPDs plasmid was introduced into DT40 cells

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Summary

Introduction

The successful replication of damaged genomic DNA is essential for cell survival, but this process is a main cause of mutagenesis. Several TLS polymerases are present in higher eukaryotes, and potentially a number of them are available for the bypass of a particular type of lesion [2]. Their choice and regulated access to DNA can determine the outcome of TLS. The Y family TLS polymerases may all directly bind PCNA-Ub, as Pols g, i and k as well as REV1 have been shown to contain evolutionarily conserved ubiquitin binding domains [5]. PCNA monoubiquitylation and the REV1 protein may form the core of two alternative mechanisms of TLS polymerase recruitment, which in some cases can recruit the same polymerase [9]

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