Literature DB >> 28945359

Defective Nucleotide Release by DNA Polymerase β Mutator Variant E288K Is the Basis of Its Low Fidelity.

Mariam M Mahmoud1, Allison Schechter1, Khadijeh S Alnajjar1, Ji Huang1, Jamie Towle-Weicksel1, Brian E Eckenroth2, Sylvie Doublié2, Joann B Sweasy1,3.   

Abstract

DNA polymerases synthesize new DNA during DNA replication and repair, and their ability to do so faithfully is essential to maintaining genomic integrity. DNA polymerase β (Pol β) functions in base excision repair to fill in single-nucleotide gaps, and variants of Pol β have been associated with cancer. Specifically, the E288K Pol β variant has been found in colon tumors and has been shown to display sequence-specific mutator activity. To probe the mechanism that may underlie E288K's loss of fidelity, a fluorescence resonance energy transfer system that utilizes a fluorophore on the fingers domain of Pol β and a quencher on the DNA substrate was employed. Our results show that E288K utilizes an overall mechanism similar to that of wild type (WT) Pol β when incorporating correct dNTP. However, when inserting the correct dNTP, E288K exhibits a faster rate of closing of the fingers domain combined with a slower rate of nucleotide release compared to those of WT Pol β. We also detect enzyme closure upon mixing with the incorrect dNTP for E288K but not WT Pol β. Taken together, our results suggest that E288K Pol β incorporates all dNTPs more readily than WT because of an inherent defect that results in rapid isomerization of dNTPs within its active site. Structural modeling implies that this inherent defect is due to interaction of E288K with DNA, resulting in a stable closed enzyme structure.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28945359      PMCID: PMC5654646          DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.7b00869

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochemistry        ISSN: 0006-2960            Impact factor:   3.162


  35 in total

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2.  The nature of the DNA substrate influences pre-catalytic conformational changes of DNA polymerase β.

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3.  Using single-molecule FRET to probe the nucleotide-dependent conformational landscape of polymerase β-DNA complexes.

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4.  A pre-catalytic non-covalent step governs DNA polymerase β fidelity.

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Review 5.  Inhibition of DNA Repair in Cancer Therapy: Toward a Multi-Target Approach.

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