Abstract

Unrepaired DNA–protein cross-links, due to their bulky nature, can stall replication forks and result in genome instability. Large DNA–protein cross-links can be cleaved into DNA–peptide cross-links, but the extent to which these smaller fragments disrupt normal replication is not clear. Ethylene dibromide (1,2-dibromoethane) is a known carcinogen that can cross-link the repair protein O6-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase (AGT) to the N6 position of deoxyadenosine (dA) in DNA, as well as four other positions in DNA. We investigated the effect of a 15-mer peptide from the active site of AGT, cross-linked to the N6 position of dA, on DNA replication by human translesion synthesis DNA polymerases (Pols) η, ⍳, and κ. The peptide–DNA cross-link was bypassed by the three polymerases at different rates. In steady-state kinetics, the specificity constant (kcat/Km) for incorporation of the correct nucleotide opposite to the adduct decreased by 220-fold with Pol κ, tenfold with pol η, and not at all with Pol ⍳. Pol η incorporated all four nucleotides across from the lesion, with the preference dT > dC > dA > dG, while Pol ⍳ and κ only incorporated the correct nucleotide. However, LC-MS/MS analysis of the primer-template extension product revealed error-free bypass of the cross-linked 15-mer peptide by Pol η. We conclude that a bulky 15-mer peptide cross-linked to the N6 position of dA can retard polymerization and cause miscoding but that overall fidelity is not compromised because only correct pairs are extended.

Highlights

  • Unrepaired DNA–protein cross-links, due to their bulky nature, can stall replication forks and result in genome instability

  • Most DNA–protein cross-links are too large for DNA polymerase bypass [37], and proteases are believed to cleave the proteins to smaller peptides that can be repaired by nucleotide excision repair (NER) [38] or homologous recombination (HR) or bypassed by translesion synthesis (TLS) polymerases [39]

  • A 15-mer peptide cross-linked to an oligonucleotide (N6dA) was synthesized using the 15-mer peptide and a 6-chloropurine-containing oligonucleotide as outlined in Figure 2 (Scheme S1–S2, See Table S1 for oligonucleotide sequences)

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Summary

Results

Synthesis and characterization of a 15-mer peptide cross-linked to an oligonucleotide. A 15-mer peptide cross-linked to an oligonucleotide (N6dA) was synthesized using the 15-mer peptide (acyl-PVPILIPCHRVVSSS-amide, AGT residues 138–152, with Cys-150 changed to Ser to permit exclusive modification at Cys-145) and a 6-chloropurine-containing oligonucleotide as outlined in Figure 2 (Scheme S1–S2, See Table S1 for oligonucleotide sequences). The peptide was treated with O-(mesitylsulfonyl) hydroxylamine (MSH), yielding amination of the cysteine to produce a dehydroalanine (dha) residue in its place (Scheme S1). The dha peptide was purified by HPLC (Fig. S1) and AGT-Cys145-S

H N N HO dha peptide
Discussion
Experimental procedures
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