Abstract

Previous studies revealed DNA damage to occur during the toxic action of PaT, a fungal anticodon ribonuclease (ACNase) targeting the translation machinery via tRNA cleavage. Here, we demonstrate that other translational stressors induce DNA damage-like responses in yeast as well: not only zymocin, another ACNase from the dairy yeast Kluyveromyces lactis, but also translational antibiotics, most pronouncedly hygromycin B (HygB). Specifically, DNA repair mechanisms BER (base excision repair), HR (homologous recombination) and PRR (post replication repair) provided protection, whereas NHEJ (non-homologous end-joining) aggravated toxicity of all translational inhibitors. Analysis of specific BER mutants disclosed a strong HygB, zymocin and PaT protective effect of the endonucleases acting on apurinic sites. In cells defective in AP endonucleases, inactivation of the DNA glycosylase Ung1 increased tolerance to ACNases and HygB. In addition, Mag1 specifically contributes to the repair of DNA lesions caused by HygB. Consistent with DNA damage provoked by translation inhibitors, mutation frequencies were elevated upon exposure to both fungal ACNases and HygB. Since polymerase ζ contributed to toxicity in all instances, error-prone lesion-bypass probably accounts for the mutagenic effects. The finding that differently acting inhibitors of protein biosynthesis induce alike cellular responses in DNA repair mutants is novel and suggests the dependency of genome stability on translational fidelity.

Highlights

  • The aminoglycoside antibiotic hygromycin B (HygB) from Streptomyces hygroscopicus displays activities against pro- and eukaryotic organisms [1,2]; it possesses unique structural and functional properties [3, 4]

  • Hypersensitivity of the mutant defective in Apn1 and Apn2 revealed a HygB protective effect of AP endonucleases involved in base excision repair pathway (BER) (Fig 1)

  • As HygB triggered the most pronounced reaction, similar to those induced by the yeast anticodon ribonuclease (ACNase) PaT and zymocin, we focused on the hitherto unknown HygB-mediated impact on genome integrity

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Summary

Introduction

The aminoglycoside antibiotic hygromycin B (HygB) from Streptomyces hygroscopicus displays activities against pro- and eukaryotic organisms [1,2]; it possesses unique structural and functional properties [3, 4]. For checking effects of other translational inhibitors, DNA repair mutants defective in homologous recombination (HR, rad52), non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ, yku80), post replication repair (PRR, rad18), and base excision repair (BER, apn1 apn2) were analyzed with respect to their response to ribosomal inhibitors, among them HygB (Fig 1) and paromomycin, neomycin, geneticin and cycloheximide (S1 Fig).

Results
Conclusion
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