Abstract

During short-patch base excision repair, the excision of a 5'-terminal 2-deoxyribose-5-phosphate moiety of the downstream strand by the 5'-2-deoxyribose-5-phosphate lyase activity of either DNA polymerase beta or lambda is believed to occur after each respective enzyme catalyzes gap-filling DNA synthesis. Yet the effects of this 5'-terminal 2-deoxyribose-5-phosphate moiety on the polymerase activities of these two enzymes have never been quantitatively determined. Moreover, x-ray crystal structures of truncated polymerase lambda have revealed that the downstream strand and its 5'-phosphate group of gapped DNA interact intensely with the dRPase domain, but the kinetic effect of these interactions is unclear. Here, we utilized pre-steady state kinetic methods to systematically investigate the effect of a downstream strand and its 5'-moieties on the polymerase activity of the full-length human polymerase lambda. The downstream strand and its 5'-phosphate were both found to increase nucleotide incorporation efficiency (kp/Kd) by 15 and 11-fold, respectively, with the increase procured by the effect on the nucleotide incorporation rate constant kp rather than the ground state nucleotide binding affinity Kd. With 4 single nucleotide-gapped DNA substrates containing a 1,2-dideoxyribose-5-phosphate moiety, a 2-deoxyribose-5-phosphate mimic, we measured the incorporation efficiencies of 16 possible nucleotides. Our results demonstrate that although this 5'-terminal 2-deoxyribose-5-phosphate mimic does not affect the fidelity of polymerase lambda, it moderately decreased the polymerase efficiency by 3.4-fold. Moreover, this decrease in polymerase efficiency is due to a drop of similar magnitude in kp rather than Kd. The implication of the downstream strand and its 5'-moieties on the kinetics of gap-filling synthesis is discussed.

Highlights

  • Ous cytosine deamination [3], and hydrolytic base loss [3, 5, 6]

  • This hypothesis is directly supported by the following observations: (i) recombinant human fPol␭ purified from Escherichia coli can replace human Pol␤ in an in vitro reconstituted short-patch Base excision repair (BER) assay [26]; (ii) mouse embryonic fibroblast Pol␤Ϫ/Ϫ cell extract contains a substantial amount of active fPol␭ that can replace Pol␤ in a similar in vitro reconstituted BER assay, and monoclonal antibodies against fPol␭ in this cell extract strongly reduce in vitro BER [27]. fPol␭, like Pol␤, lacks 3Ј 3 5Ј exonuclease activity [22,23,24] and has low processivity when copying non-gapped or large gap DNA [25]

  • Structural evidence suggests that the increase in polymerase processivity and efficiency is due to additional contacts that are established in a gapped DNA substrate between the deoxyribose-5-phosphate lyase (dRPase) domains of these two enzymes and the downstream strand [29, 32]

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Summary

Kinetic Studies of the Impact of a Downstream Strand

Been shown to increase polymerase processivity of both Pol␤ [28] and fPol␭ [25, 29]. Pol␤ has been found to incorporate a single nucleotide ϳ10-fold more efficiently with single nucleotide-gapped DNA than non-gapped DNA [30, 31], but the polymerase fidelity is not altered [31]. The effects of a downstream strand and its 5Ј-phosphate on the efficiency and fidelity of gap-filling synthesis catalyzed by fPol␭ has not been quantitatively determined These effects associated with human fPol␭ will be investigated through presteady state kinetic studies. FPol␭ is estimated to possess a 4-fold slower dRPase activity than Pol␤ [26], while these two enzymes catalyze single nucleotide gap-filling DNA synthesis with Ͻ2-fold difference in catalytic efficiency [34]. These kinetic data strongly indicate that the 5Ј-dRP moiety in the downstream strand is removed after Pol␤ or fPol␭ fills single nucleotide-gapped DNA in Scheme 1. We will use single nucleotidegapped DNA substrates containing a dRP mimic on the 5Ј-terminus of the downstream strand to determine the kinetic effect of the 5Ј-dRP moiety on gap-filling DNA synthesis catalyzed by human fPol␭ through detailed pre-steady state kinetic analysis

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
No observed incorporation
Efficiency ratioa
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