Abstract

Ribonucleotides incorporated in the genome are a source of endogenous DNA damage and also serve as signals for repair. Although recent advances of ribonucleotide detection by sequencing, the balance between incorporation and repair of ribonucleotides has not been elucidated. Here, we describe a competitive sequencing method, Ribonucleotide Scanning Quantification sequencing (RiSQ‐seq), which enables absolute quantification of misincorporated ribonucleotides throughout the genome by background normalization and standard adjustment within a single sample. RiSQ‐seq analysis of cells harboring wild‐type DNA polymerases revealed that ribonucleotides were incorporated nonuniformly in the genome with a 3′‐shifted distribution and preference for GC sequences. Although ribonucleotide profiles in wild‐type and repair‐deficient mutant strains showed a similar pattern, direct comparison of distinct ribonucleotide levels in the strains by RiSQ‐seq enabled evaluation of ribonucleotide excision repair activity at base resolution and revealed the strand bias of repair. The distinct preferences of ribonucleotide incorporation and repair create vulnerable regions associated with indel hotspots, suggesting that repair at sites of ribonucleotide misincorporation serves to maintain genome integrity and that RiSQ‐seq can provide an estimate of indel risk.

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