Abstract

DNA-protein cross-links are formed when proteins become covalently trapped with DNA in the presence of exogenous or endogenous alkylating agents. If left unrepaired, they inhibit transcription as well as DNA unwinding during replication and may result in genome instability or even cell death. The DNA repair protein O6-alkylguanine DNA-alkyltransferase (AGT) is known to form DNA cross-links in the presence of the carcinogen 1,2-dibromoethane, resulting in G:C to T:A transversions and other mutations in both bacterial and mammalian cells. We hypothesized that AGT-DNA cross-links would be processed by nuclear proteases to yield peptides small enough to be bypassed by translesion (TLS) polymerases. Here, a 15-mer and a 36-mer peptide from the active site of AGT were cross-linked to the N2 position of guanine via conjugate addition of a thiol containing a peptide dehydroalanine moiety. Bypass studies with DNA polymerases (pols) η and κ indicated that both can accurately bypass the cross-linked DNA peptides. The specificity constant (kcat/Km) for steady-state incorporation of the correct nucleotide dCTP increased by 6-fold with human (h) pol κ and 3-fold with hpol η, with hpol η preferentially inserting nucleotides in the order dC > dG > dA > dT. LC-MS/MS analysis of the extension product also revealed error-free bypass of the cross-linked 15-mer peptide by hpol η. We conclude that a bulky 15-mer AGT peptide cross-linked to the N2 position of guanine can retard polymerization, but that overall fidelity is not compromised because only correct bases are inserted and extended.

Highlights

  • The repair of DNA–protein cross-links is more challenging due to its diverse nature, and more remains to be discovered

  • The N2-dG DNA peptide cross-links were synthesized using a 2-fluorodeoxyinosine (2-F-dI)-containing 19-nucleotide oligonucleotide and 15-mer (Ac-PVPILIPCHRVVSSS-NH2, AGT residues 138–152, with Cys-150 changed to Ser) or a

  • 36-mer (Ac-PLAARAVGGALRGNPVPILIPCHRVVSSSGA VGNYS-NH2, AGT residues 124–159, with Lys-125 and Met134 both changed to Leu and Cys-150 changed to Ser to yield modification only at the Cys-145 residue) peptide

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Summary

Introduction

The repair of DNA–protein cross-links is more challenging due to its diverse nature, and more remains to be discovered. The full-length extension reactions were performed using a 14-mer primer and respective unmodified and cross-linked templates in the presence of mixture of dNTPs (Fig. 4A). With the N2-dG-15-mer peptide cross-link, hpol κ fully extended the primer with similar efficiency as the unmodified template (Fig. 4C, lanes 1–6 and 7–12).

Results
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