Abstract

The 3 million-base pair genome of Sulfolobus solfataricus likely undergoes depurination/depyrimidination frequently in vivo. These unrepaired abasic lesions are expected to be bypassed by Dpo4, the only Y-family DNA polymerase from S. solfataricus. Interestingly, these error-prone Y-family enzymes have been shown to be physiologically vital in reducing the potentially negative consequences of DNA damage while paradoxically promoting carcinogenesis. Here we used Dpo4 as a model Y-family polymerase to establish the mechanistic basis for DNA lesion bypass. While showing efficient bypass, Dpo4 paused when incorporating nucleotides directly opposite and one position downstream from an abasic lesion because of a drop of several orders of magnitude in catalytic efficiency. Moreover, in disagreement with a previous structural report, Dpo4-catalyzed abasic bypass involves robust competition between the A-rule and the lesion loop-out mechanism and is governed by the local DNA sequence. Analysis of the strong pause sites revealed biphasic kinetics for incorporation indicating that Dpo4 primarily formed a nonproductive complex with DNA that converted slowly to a productive complex. These strong pause sites are mutational hot spots with the embedded lesion even affecting the efficiency of five to six downstream incorporations. Our results suggest that abasic lesion bypass requires tight regulation to maintain genomic stability.

Highlights

  • Numerous DNA-damaging agents continuously attack the cellular genome and generate a myriad of DNA lesions

  • We report the first comprehensive characterization of the mechanism of lesion bypass catalyzed by Dpo4 through rigorous pre-steady state kinetic analysis

  • These results demonstrated that Dpo4 uses an induced-fit mechanism to select a correct nucleotide as observed for several replicative and repair polymerases [18] and another Y-family DNA polymerase, yeast pol ␩ [7]

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

S. solfataricus DNA polymerase IV; AP, abasic; dNTP, deoxynucleoside 5Ј-triphosphate; dPTP, pyrene nucleoside 5Ј-triphosphate; pol, polymerase. Pre-steady State Kinetic Studies of Abasic Lesion Bypass homologs, almost exclusively uses the template base 5Ј to the lesion (referred to as the 5Ј-rule) to instruct nucleotide incorporation during AP bypass [17]. Our thorough examination of the kinetic effects of AP bypass has clearly illustrated a sequence-dependent competition between these two pathways in disagreement with the conclusions from these previous structural studies

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
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