Abstract

Many genotoxic agents form base lesions that inhibit DNA polymerases. To study the mechanism underlying termination of DNA synthesis on defective templates, we tested the capacity of a model enzyme (Klenow fragment of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I) to catalyze primer elongation across a series of C4' deoxyribose derivatives. A site with inverted C4' configuration or two different C4' deoxyribose adducts were introduced into the backbone of synthetic templates without modifying the chemistry of the corresponding bases. Inverted deoxyribose moieties may arise in cellular DNA as a product of C4' radical attack. We found that DNA synthesis by the Klenow polymerase was arrested transiently at the C4' inversion and was essentially blocked at C4' deoxyribose adducts. Major termination sites were located one position downstream of a C4' selenophenyl adduct and immediately 3' to or opposite a C4' pivaloyl adduct. Primer extension studies in the presence of single deoxyribonucleotides showed intact base pairing fidelity opposite all three C4' variants regardless of whether the Klenow fragment or its proofreading-deficient mutant was tested. These results imply that the coding ability of template bases is maintained at altered C4' deoxyribose moieties. However, their capacity to impede DNA polymerase progression indicates that backbone distortion and steric hindrance are important determinants of DNA synthesis arrest on damaged templates. The strong inhibition by C4' adducts suggests a potential target for new chemotherapeutic strategies.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call