Polβ, despite lacking an intrinsic proofreading exonuclease activity, makes only few errors per 10,000 nucleotides incorporated. Interestingly, 60% of base substitution errors made by polβ are T•G mismatches. To gain insights into substrate discrimination and misincorporation mechanisms of polβ, we solved two ternary complex structures of polβ with an incoming nonhydrolyzable dTTP analog paired with templating dG in the presence of physiological Mg2+ or mutagenic Mn2+. Our T•G-Mg2+ ternary structure shows an open protein conformation and staggered base pair conformation, suggesting that polβ deters nucleotide misincorporation by inducing a catalytically incompetent active-site conformation. On the contrary, the T•G-Mn2+ structure shows a closed protein conformation and coplanar base pair conformation. Surprisingly, T•G in the T•G-Mn2+ structure forms a Watson-Crick-like base pair, indicating that noncanonical H-bonding patterns of T•G mismatch can be accommodated in the active site of polβ. Our kinetic studies show that Watson-Crick-type T•G base pair forms through ionization. In addition to these, we discovered a novel metal-ligand interaction, which turned out to be crucially important for the formation of closed protein conformation and the replication fidelity of polβ. Our structural studies indicate that polβ allows Watson-Crick-type T•G at the enzyme active site, and the enzyme utilizes metal ion-coordination as a kinetic checkpoint to prevent misincorporation. Our structural and biochemical studies thus provide significant insights into the substrate discrimination and misincorporation mechanisms of polβ, and also provide insight into the spontaneous mutagenesis mechanism. Grant Funding Source: Supported by the NIH ES23101
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