Two-polymerase mechanisms dictate error-free and error-prone translesion DNA synthesis in mammals
Tipo de material:
TextoSeries ; The EMBO Journal, 28, p.383-393, 2008Trabajos contenidos: - Shachar, S
- Ziv, O
- Avkin, S
- Adar, S
- Wittschieben, J
- Reißner, T
- Chaney, S
- Chaney, S
- Wang, Z
- Carell, T
- Geacintov, N
- Livneh, Z
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DNA replication across blocking lesions occurs by translesion DNA synthesis (TLS), involving a multitude of mutagenic DNA polymerases that operate to protect the mammalian genome. Using a quantitative TLS assay, we identified three main classes of TLS in human cells: two rapid and error-free, and the third slow and error-prone. A single gene, REV3L, encoding the catalytic subunit of DNA polymerase f (polf), was found to have a pivotal role in TLS, being involved in TLS across all lesions examined, except for a TT cyclobutane dimer. Genetic epistasis siRNA analysis indicated that discrete two-polymerase combinations with polf dictate error-prone or error-free TLS across the same lesion. These results highlight the central role of polf in both error-prone and error-free TLS in mammalian cells, and show that bypass of a single lesion may involve at least three different DNA polymerases, operating in different two-polymerase combinations.
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