Literature DB >> 22965905

DNA polymerase kappa microsatellite synthesis: two distinct mechanisms of slippage-mediated errors.

Beverly A Baptiste1, Kristin A Eckert.   

Abstract

Microsatellite tandem repeats are frequent sites of strand slippage mutagenesis in the human genome. Microsatellite mutations often occur as insertion/deletion of a repeat motif (unit-based indels), and increase in frequency with increasing repeat length after a threshold is reached. We recently demonstrated that DNA polymerase κ (Pol κ) produces fewer unit-based indel errors within dinucleotide microsatellites than does polymerase δ. Here, we examined human Pol κ's error profile within microsatellite alleles of varying sequence composition and length, using an in vitro HSV-tk gap-filling assay. We observed that Pol κ displays relatively accurate synthesis for unit-based indels, using di- and tetranucleotide repeat templates longer than the threshold length. We observed an abrupt increase in the unit-based indel frequency when the total microsatellite length exceeds 28 nucleotides, suggesting that extended Pol κ protein-DNA interactions enhance fidelity of the enzyme when synthesizing these microsatellite alleles. In contrast, Pol κ is error-prone within the HSV-tk coding sequence, producing frequent single-base errors in a manner that is highly biased with regard to sequence context. Single-nucleotide errors are also created by Pol κ within di- and tetranucleotide repeats, independently of the microsatellite allele length and at a frequency per nucleotide similar to the frequency of single base errors within the coding sequence. These single-base errors represent the mutational signature of Pol κ, and we propose them a mechanism independent of homology-stabilized slippage. Pol κ's dual fidelity nature provides a unique research tool to explore the distinct mechanisms of slippage-mediated mutagenesis.
Copyright © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22965905     DOI: 10.1002/em.21721

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Mol Mutagen        ISSN: 0893-6692            Impact factor:   3.216


  14 in total

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Authors:  Marietta Y W T Lee; Sufang Zhang; Szu Hua Sharon Lin; Xiaoxiao Wang; Zbigniew Darzynkiewicz; Zhongtao Zhang; Ernest Y C Lee
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3.  An accurate and efficient method for large-scale SSR genotyping and applications.

Authors:  Lun Li; Zhiwei Fang; Junfei Zhou; Hong Chen; Zhangfeng Hu; Lifen Gao; Lihong Chen; Sheng Ren; Hongyu Ma; Long Lu; Weixiong Zhang; Hai Peng
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2017-06-02       Impact factor: 16.971

Review 4.  Translesion DNA Synthesis in Cancer: Molecular Mechanisms and Therapeutic Opportunities.

Authors:  Maroof K Zafar; Robert L Eoff
Journal:  Chem Res Toxicol       Date:  2017-09-28       Impact factor: 3.739

5.  Genetic evidence that both dNTP-stabilized and strand slippage mechanisms may dictate DNA polymerase errors within mononucleotide microsatellites.

Authors:  Beverly A Baptiste; Kimberly D Jacob; Kristin A Eckert
Journal:  DNA Repair (Amst)       Date:  2015-02-27

6.  Human PrimPol is a highly error-prone polymerase regulated by single-stranded DNA binding proteins.

Authors:  Thomas A Guilliam; Stanislaw K Jozwiakowski; Aaron Ehlinger; Ryan P Barnes; Sean G Rudd; Laura J Bailey; J Mark Skehel; Kristin A Eckert; Walter J Chazin; Aidan J Doherty
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2014-12-29       Impact factor: 16.971

7.  Accurate typing of short tandem repeats from genome-wide sequencing data and its applications.

Authors:  Arkarachai Fungtammasan; Guruprasad Ananda; Suzanne E Hile; Marcia Shu-Wei Su; Chen Sun; Robert Harris; Paul Medvedev; Kristin Eckert; Kateryna D Makova
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Review 8.  PRIMPOL ready, set, reprime!

Authors:  Stephanie Tirman; Emily Cybulla; Annabel Quinet; Alice Meroni; Alessandro Vindigni
Journal:  Crit Rev Biochem Mol Biol       Date:  2020-11-12       Impact factor: 8.250

9.  Mature microsatellites: mechanisms underlying dinucleotide microsatellite mutational biases in human cells.

Authors:  Beverly A Baptiste; Guruprasad Ananda; Noelle Strubczewski; Andrew Lutzkanin; Su Jen Khoo; Abhinaya Srikanth; Nari Kim; Kateryna D Makova; Maria M Krasilnikova; Kristin A Eckert
Journal:  G3 (Bethesda)       Date:  2013-03-01       Impact factor: 3.154

10.  Microsatellite interruptions stabilize primate genomes and exist as population-specific single nucleotide polymorphisms within individual human genomes.

Authors:  Guruprasad Ananda; Suzanne E Hile; Amanda Breski; Yanli Wang; Yogeshwar Kelkar; Kateryna D Makova; Kristin A Eckert
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2014-07-17       Impact factor: 5.917

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