Abasic Translesion Synthesis by DNA Polymerase beta  Violates the "A-rule"
NOVEL TYPES OF NUCLEOTIDE INCORPORATION BY HUMAN DNA POLYMERASE beta  AT AN ABASIC LESION IN DIFFERENT SEQUENCE CONTEXTS*

(Received for publication, August 12, 1996, and in revised form, November 6, 1996)

Edna Efrati Dagger , Georges Tocco Dagger , Ramon Eritja §, Samuel H. Wilson and Myron F. Goodman Dagger

From the Dagger  Department of Biological Sciences, Hedco Molecular Biology Laboratories, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90089-1340, the § European Molecular Biology Organization, Heidelberg, Germany 69012, and the  University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, Galveston, Texas 77555-1068

ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES


ABSTRACT

The "A-rule" reflects the preferred incorporation of dAMP opposite abasic lesions in Escherichia coli in vivo. DNA polymerases (pol) from procaryotic and eucaryotic organisms incorporate nucleotides opposite abasic lesions in accordance with the A-rule. However, recent in vivo data demonstrate that A is not preferentially incorporated opposite abasic lesions in eucaryotes. Purified human DNA polymerases beta  and alpha  are used to measure the specificity of nucleotide incorporation at a site-directed tetrahydrofuran abasic lesion, in 8-sequence contexts, varying upstream and downstream bases adjacent to the lesion. Extension past the lesion is measured in 4 sequence contexts, varying the downstream template base. Pol alpha  strongly favors incorporation of dAMP directly opposite the lesion. In marked contrast, pol beta  violates the A-rule for incorporation directly opposite the lesion. In addition to incorporation taking place directly opposite the lesion, we also analyze misalignment incorporation directed by a template base downstream from the lesion. Lesion bypass by pol beta  occurs predominantly by "skipping over" the lesion, by insertion of a nucleotide complementary to an adjacent downstream template site. Misalignment incorporation for pol beta  occurs by a novel "dNTP-stabilized" mechanism resulting in both deletion and base substitution errors. In contrast, pol alpha  shows no propensity for this type of synthesis. The misaligned DNA structures generated during dNTP-stabilized lesion bypass do not conform to misaligned structures reported previously.


INTRODUCTION

Loss of purine and pyrimidine bases is a significant source of DNA damage in procaryotic and eucaryotic organisms. Abasic (apurinic and apyrimidinic) lesions occur spontaneously in DNA; in eucaryotes it has been estimated that about 104 depurination and 102 depyrimidation events occur per day (1). An equally important source of abasic DNA lesions results from the action of DNA glycosylases, most notably uracil glycosylase which excises uracil arising primarily from spontaneous deamination of cytosine (1, 2). A DNA template with an abasic lesion presents a strong block to DNA synthesis in Escherichia coli, which can be partially alleviated by induction of the SOS response (3). Although most abasic lesions are removed by a base excision repair pathway involving the combined action of various enzymes, e.g. N-glycosylase, endonuclease, phosphodeoxyribosyl phosphodiesterase, polymerase and ligase (4), a small fraction of lesions persist and are replicated leading to a high probability of a mutation occurring. When an abasic lesion is copied in vivo in E. coli, A is predominantly incorporated opposite the lesion (3, 5).

Preferential incorporation of A opposite abasic lesions is referred to as the "A-rule" (5-8). In agreement with E. coli data (3), studies with purified DNA polymerases showed that incorporation of A opposite X1 occurs about 10-fold more frequently than G opposite the lesion and about 50-fold more frequently than either C or T (9, 10). Although neighboring sequence contexts have been observed to perturb relative nucleotide incorporation efficiencies (3, 9), the strong conclusion, until recently, remained that DNA polymerases and reverse transcriptases generally behave in accordance with the A-rule. A physically intuitive basis for the A-rule emanates from NMR studies showing that when A is opposite an abasic lesion it stacks in an intrahelical configuration causing virtually no distortion of the DNA helix (11, 12). For the other bases, G may either be inter- or extrahelical depending on temperature, while the pyrimidine bases stack poorly and are likely to be extrahelical (13).

Recent studies in eucaryotes, however, suggest that the A-rule may not be a universal mechanism for preferential incorporation of A opposite noncoding template lesions. Sarasin and co-workers (14, 15) using a shuttle vector system, replicated in monkey COS7 cells, observed an essentially random incorporation of nucleotides opposite abasic lesions. In a study of mutagenesis at apurinic sites in normal and ataxia telangiectasia human lymphoblastoid cells, Drinkwater and co-workers (16) found that incorporation of G was favored. Kunz, Demple and co-workers (17), using a yeast plasmid system that mimics chromosome behavior, found that "chromosomal" mutations in Saccharomyces cerevisiae were not in accordance with the A-rule, also showing a preference for G incorporation. Ohtsuka and co-workers (18) observed activation of a c-Ha-ras gene by an abasic site-induced point mutation having preferential incorporation of T opposite the lesion. A second ras-activating point mutation was located at the 5'-site adjacent to the abasic lesion (18). Remarkably, in a shuttle vector system in yeast cells, Gibbs and Lawrence discovered a "C-rule" where incorporation of C occurred opposite a site-directed abasic lesion 80% of the time (19). In the light of an accumulating body of evidence indicating significant differences in the processing of abasic lesions in procaryotic and eucaryotic cells, it is important to measure nucleotide incorporation specificities for eucaryotic DNA polymerases, especially the eucaryotic repair enzyme pol beta , which has no known procaryotic counterpart.

In this paper, we use human pol beta  and pol alpha  to measure deoxyribonucleotide incorporation and extension efficiencies at a site-directed tetrahydrofuran abasic analog. The incorporation efficiencies were measured in the presence of different upstream and downstream nucleotides adjacent to the template abasic lesion. We distinguish between two types of incorporation mechanisms: "direct" incorporation and a novel form of "misalignment" incorporation. Direct incorporation refers to nucleotide insertions occurring directly opposite a lesion, and misalignment incorporation is defined by nucleotide insertions occurring opposite a normal template base downstream from the lesion, on a misaligned primer-template terminus. The novel form of misalignment incorporation, carried out by pol beta , does not conform to misaligned p/t DNA structures reported previously (20-22). We use the term "dNTP-stabilized misalignment" to refer to our model for pol beta -catalyzed misalignment incorporation at abasic lesions, which will be distinguished from a "standard misalignment" model presented previously (20-22). We are concerned primarily with two issues germane to translesion synthesis. First, we address the degree to which pol beta  and pol alpha  incorporate nucleotides via direct incorporation in compliance with the A-rule. Second, we determine the extent to which the polymerases utilize direct and misalignment synthetic mechanisms to catalyze lesion bypass.


EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Materials

Enzymes

Human pol beta  was purified as described (23). The turnover number for pol beta  is from 0.5-0.8 nucleotides s-1 when assayed using poly(dA)-oligo(dT) at 20 °C, pH 7.4. Human pol alpha  (2000 units/mg, see Ref. 24), a generous gift of Dr. T. S. F. Wang, refers to the large catalytic subunit of holoenzyme and was purified as described (24). Both highly purified enzyme preparations were free of detectable 3'-exonuclease activities. 1 DNA polymerase unit is defined as the incorporation of 1 nmol of dNMP into DNA per h at 37 °C. T4 polynucleotide kinase was purchased from U. S. Biochemicals.

Nucleotides

Nonradioactive nucleotides were purchased from Pharmacia Biotech Inc. [gamma -32P]ATP (4000 Ci/mmol) was purchased from ICN Radiochemicals.

Synthesis of DNA Primer-Templates

Abasic (1,4-anhydro-2-deoxy-D-ribitol) phosphoramidite was synthesized as described previously (25). 42-mer templates containing a single abasic site and control templates with no abasic site were synthesized on an Applied Biosystems 392 DNA/RNA synthesizer, as were the different primers. Oligodeoxyribonucleotides with a 5'-phosphate group used to form gaps for pol beta  were synthesized by Lynn Williams at the University of Southern California Comprehensive Cancer Center.

DNA Substrates

For studies of insertion opposite an abasic site by pol beta , a 5-nucleotide gap with an abasic site in its center was formed by annealing a 42-mer template, 5'-TTC TAG GTT TGC TAA CAT ACT TCN XMA TAA GGA GTC TTA ATC-3', where the X designates the tetrahydrofuran abasic lesion; N and M are, respectively, the downstream and upstream nearest-neighbor bases to be varied (Fig. 1, a and b). The upstream oligonucleotide primer was 5'-GAT TAA GAC TCC TTA-3', and the downstream oligonucleotides used to form a 5-nucleotide gap for pol beta  was 5'-AAG TAT GTT AGC AAA CCT AGA A-3'. The downstream oligodeoxyribonucleotide was phosphorylated at its 5'-end (Fig. 1). The 5'-phosphate group on the downstream oligonucleotide and a gap size of fewer than six nucleotides are necessary for processive behavior by pol beta  (26). The same studies with pol alpha  used no downstream oligonucleotide; pol alpha  activity was inhibited by approximately 2-fold in a short gap filling reaction (data not shown). For studies of misaligned versus direct extension, the same templates were used but with upstream primers that were three nucleotides longer and covered the abasic site with A, C, G, or T. These templates were also annealed to a downstream oligonucleotide one nucleotide shorter than the one in the insertion assays without the first 5'-A, to form a 3-nucleotide gap (Fig. 1c). All primers and templates were purified by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.


Fig. 1. Primer-template configurations used to measure efficiencies of incorporation and extension at an abasic lesion, X. All primer-templates shown here were used for studies of pol beta . For pol alpha  the unlabeled downstream oligonucleotide was omitted. Bases adjacent to X were varied to measure the influence of: a, downstream, 5'-nearest neighbors; and b, upstream, 3'-nearest neighbors on relative efficiencies of nucleotide incorporation opposite X. Incorporation efficiencies were measured, in separate reactions, for the four dNTP substrates. The 5'-32P-end labeled primer (15-mer) was situated 2 bases upstream from the lesion to allow for a running-start. An unlabeled (5'-phosphorylated) oligonucleotide (22-mer) was annealed downstream from the lesion forming a 5-nucleotide gap, with X in the center, to be filled in by pol beta . c, configurations used to measure direct and misalignment modes of nucleotide extension past the lesion. Four different 5'-32P-end labeled 18-mer primers were annealed to various template DNAs (42-mers). The lesion was covered by 5'-primer termini containing A, C, G, or T. The arrows define the primer-template combinations used. When X was covered by A the template sequence downstream from X was 3'-TCT; when X was covered by C, the sequence was 3'-GCT; when X was covered by G, the sequence was 3'-CAT; when X was covered by T, the sequence was 3'-ACT. A downstream oligonucleotide (21-mer) was positioned to form a 3-base gap to be filled in by pol beta .
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Methods

Conditions for Determining Kinetic Constants

5'-End labeling of primers with 32P was carried out using T4-polynucleotide kinase in a reaction containing 56 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.7, 7 mM MgCl2, 13 mM dithiothreitol, 18.5 nM DNA, 0.4 µM [gamma -32P]ATP (4000 Ci/mmol), and T4-polynucleotide kinase (3 units/97-µl reaction). Reactions were incubated at 37 °C for 60 min and terminated by boiling at 100 °C for 5 min. Annealing reactions for pol beta were carried out by incubating 7.5 nM primer, 7.5 nM template, 38 nM downstream oligonucleotide in pol beta  reaction buffer (35 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 6.7 mM MgCl2, 100 mM NaCl, 0.2 mg/ml bovine serum albumin, 1.5 mM dithiothreitol, 2% glycerol) at 37 °C for 1 h followed by a gradual cooling to room temperature. For pol alpha , p/t DNA was annealed by incubating 7.5 nM primer with 7.5 nM template in pol alpha  reaction buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 10 mM MgCl2, 0.2 mg/ml bovine serum albumin, 1 mM beta -mercaptoethanol) at 37 °C for 1 h, followed by a gradual cooling to room temperature.

Kinetics of Nucleotide Incorporation Opposite an Abasic Lesion

Prior to carrying out kinetics experiments, time courses were run to determine conditions for measuring insertion and extension efficiencies at abasic template sites. Reactions were performed by mixing equal volumes (5 µl) of annealed primer-template and deoxyribonucleotide in reaction buffer (see annealing conditions). The final concentration of primer-template in all reactions was 3.75 nM. Pol beta  (0.2 units) or pol alpha  (0.2 units) were added and the reactions were incubated at 37 °C for 30 min.

Four p/t DNA constructs were used to measure incorporation opposite the model abasic (tetrahydrofuran) lesion. Although incubation times of about 2 min were sufficient to measure incorporation opposite the lesion for many of the mispairs, there remained a number of sequence contexts in which incorporation could not be detected, or where there was only slight incorporation or extension at or beyond the lesion. We found it necessary to use 30-min incubation times to detect incorporation bands for each of the templates over the range of dNTP concentrations used for the kinetic measurements. We estimate that about half of the template-primers have been extended during the 30-min incubation so that approximately 35% of the p/t DNA encounter a polymerase once, 10% twice, and 5% three times. Since there was no significant difference in the fraction of primers utilized during each experiment, the relative incorporation and extension efficiencies are not biased by the occurrence of multiple polymerase-p/t DNA encounters (27).

For each reaction, the dNTP substrate for incorporation opposite X was varied in concentration over a range of 10 µM to 1.5 mM. For the time courses, the substrate concentration used for incorporation opposite the lesion was held constant at 1 mM. The reactions were carried out under running start conditions and contained from 5 to 50 µM dTTP for incorporation opposite two dAMPs upstream of the lesion. The dTTP concentrations were chosen to extend the primers as rapidly as possible subject to the constraint that no measurable dTMP was incorporated opposite the lesion itself. Reactions were terminated by adding 2 volumes of 20 mM EDTA in 95% formamide to chelate Mg2+ prior to heating, heating to 100 °C for 5 min, and placing the reactions on ice for about 5 min. The samples were then loaded on an 18% polyacrylamide gel and the extended single-stranded DNA primers were separated according to length by electrophoresis (9, 28).

A gel fidelity analysis was used to determine the kinetics of incorporation of each of the four deoxynucleotides opposite the lesion as a function of deoxynucleotide concentration (9, 28). Integrated polyacrylamide gel band intensities were measured on a PhosphorImager using Imagequant software (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA). The nucleotide incorporation efficiency (apparent Vmax/Km) opposite a lesion, measured in a running-start reaction, can be obtained by measuring IX/IX-1, where IX is the integrated gel band intensity of a primer extended to the site opposite the lesion and beyond, and IX-1 is the integrated gel band intensity of a primer extended to a site just prior to the lesion (9, 28). A plot of IX/IX-1 as a function of the target dNTP substrate concentration results in a rectangular hyperbola whose slope in the linear region is given by apparent Vmax/Km. Apparent Km and relative Vmax values were obtained using a nonlinear least squares fit to the rectangular hyperbola. In p/t DNA sequence contexts where incorporation and extension were relatively inefficient, plots of IX/IX-1 versus dNTP concentration showed little or no curvature; in these cases, apparent Vmax/Km values were obtained by a least squares fit of the data to a straight line. The same analysis was also used to calculate apparent kinetic constants for extension beyond an abasic site (following subsection). Based on a series of time course measurements, kinetic data were obtained using 30-min incubations. The data for both enzymes were in the linear range for incorporation and extension at the abasic lesions for each of the p/t DNA constructs, with the possible exception of dAMP incorporation opposite X by pol alpha . We note, however, that the relative efficiencies of incorporation of dAMP compared to dGMP opposite X are consistent with previous measurements using pol alpha  to copy a tetrahydrofuran moiety (9, 10).

Extension Past an Abasic Site

Reactions were carried out as described above except that the abasic site was covered by the upstream primer with A, C, G, or T (see, e.g. Fig. 1c). These reactions were carried out using standing-start conditions. The reactions were run in the presence of only one nucleotide, either the one complementary to the first base downstream of X or to the second nucleotide downstream of the lesion. The concentration of dNTPs was varied between 10 and 500 µM, and the reactions were run for 30 min. The extension efficiency, Vmax/Km, is proportional to (IX+1/Io) × 1/t, where IX+1 is the integrated band intensity for band(s) extended beyond the abasic lesion, Io is the integrated band intensity of the unextended primer band located opposite the lesion, and t is the reaction time. The proportionality constant is the same for incorporation of A, T, G, or C opposite X in all sequence contexts (29) so that a comparison of the ratio IX/IX-1 for each nucleotide provides a direct measure of the relative extension efficiencies. In cases where Io is not >> IX+1, then Io is replaced in the equation for fext by Io + 0.5 IX+1 to correct for the change in concentration of input p/t DNA during the course of the reaction (30).

Equilibrium Binding Constants for Pol beta  and Pol alpha  to p/t DNA

Apparent equilibrium dissociation constants were determined for binding of pol beta  or pol alpha  to the p/t DNA used in the extension assays as described in Ref. 31.


RESULTS

To investigate the specificity of nucleotide incorporation opposite abasic template sites using eucaryotic pol beta  and pol alpha , template DNAs were synthesized with a site-directed model (tetrahydrofuran) abasic lesion (25) placed adjacent to each of the four different upstream and downstream nearest-neighbor bases (Fig. 1). The abasic lesion is denoted by the symbol X. Steady-state kinetic measurements were performed to determine nucleotide incorporation efficiencies opposite X (9, 32) and efficiencies of extension downstream from X (30, 32, 33).

Nucleotide Incorporation Efficiencies at a Site-directed Abasic Lesion as a Function of Downstream Sequence Context

Nucleotide incorporation kinetics for pol beta  and pol alpha  were measured in running-start reactions, by varying the downstream base adjacent to the lesion. In the running-start reaction, two Ts are incorporated prior to encountering an abasic lesion, followed by incorporation of dNMPs A, C, G, or T, at different concentrations, opposite the lesion, X. Representative kinetic data are presented in which G is the base immediately downstream from the lesion (Fig. 2). The data illustrate that pol beta  incorporated all four nucleotides opposite X, favoring misalignment incorporation of dCMP which is complementary to the template base to the 5'-side of the lesion (Fig. 2a, dCTP lanes). In contrast, pol alpha  strongly favored incorporation of dAMP and to a lesser extent dGMP (Fig. 2b). Pol alpha  also catalyzed incorporation of dCMP, but with exceedingly low efficiency (Fig. 2b, dCTP lanes).


Fig. 2. Gels showing nucleotide incorporation opposite an abasic lesion, X, as a function of dNTP substrate concentration using pol beta  and pol alpha . dTTP (50 µM) was used in a running-start reaction to extend the primer to X. In a, for pol beta , incorporation of dAMP, dCMP, dGMP, and dTMP opposite X was measured at dNTP concentrations of 10, 25, 50, 100, 200, 400, and 800 µM. In b, for pol alpha , the following dNTP concentrations were used: 25, 50, 100, 200, 400, 800, 1200, and 1500 µM dATP; 10, 50, 100, 200, 400, 800, 1200, 1500 µM dCTP or dGTP; 10, 50, 100, 200, 400, or 800 µM dTTP. Reactions were carried out for 30 min as described under "Experimental Procedures." The lane on the left-hand side of the gel, designated by "P," contains unextended primer. Template sequences are shown to the left of the gels.
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Two distinct mechanisms are responsible for the incorporation of C in this p/t configuration: (i) direct incorporation of dCMP opposite X and (ii) misalignment incorporation of dCMP opposite the downstream template G. Note that misalignment synthesis, where the incoming dNTP stabilizes a misaligned p/t structure, has not been reported previously. We refer to this novel type of synthesis as "dNTP-stabilized" misalignment synthesis to distinguish it from the standard "Streisinger" misalignment synthesis (20, 21, 34, 35) in which the p/t DNA forms a transiently misaligned structure (Fig. 3).


Fig. 3. Misalignment modes of synthesis at an abasic lesion. In the dNTP-stabilized misalignment mode (top panel), the abasic moiety is located out of the helical plane, but having no H-bonded base pair downstream from the lesion. In this model, the presence of incoming substrate (dCTP) bound at the active site of pol beta and H-bonded opposite the downstream G stabilizes the putative distorted template structure. In the standard misalignment mode (bottom panel), the abasic moiety is illustrated as being located out of the helical plane and stabilized by hydrogen bonded base pairs on both sides of the lesion.
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Time courses, covering a range from 2 to 60 min, were performed to measure nucleotide incorporation opposite X with the same p/t sequence used for the kinetic analysis shown in Fig. 2 (data not shown). The time course data were consistent with the kinetic data, i.e. the same polymerase-specific differences in the abilities of the two human polymerases to incorporate nucleotides opposite an abasic lesion were observed at each reaction time point. Pol alpha  behaved in accordance with the A-rule since it readily incorporated dAMP, and less readily dGMP, opposite the lesion, whereas incorporation of pyrimidines opposite X was barely detectable, even following a lengthy (60 min) reaction period (data not shown). Pol beta  did not follow the A-rule since it incorporated all four dNMPs opposite X in a relatively impartial manner at each time point (data not shown).

Analysis of the data for each of the four downstream nearest-neighbors demonstrates pol beta -catalyzed incorporations were most efficient when the downstream template base was complementary to the incoming dNTP substrate (Fig. 4a, Vmax/Km values indicated by arrows pointing downward along the diagonal). The large apparent Vmax/Km values along the diagonal suggest that a major fraction of misincorporations taking place opposite the lesion are actually "correct" incorporations in which an incoming dNTP is positioned opposite its complementary template base immediately downstream from the lesion. Except in the case of a downstream template A, misincorporations by pol beta  are dominated by this mechanism. Nucleotide misincorporations caused by p/t misalignments, as documented by Kunkel and co-workers (20, 21), contain a "looped out," i.e. extrahelical base (in this case a looped out abasic moiety) stabilized by H-bonded base pairs surrounding the looped out moiety (see, e.g. Fig. 3, standard misalignment structure). However, the misalignment incorporations found for pol beta  in running-start reactions (Fig. 4a) are novel because, there is no base pair available downstream from the lesion to stabilize a putatively looped out X (Fig. 3, dNTP-stabilized misalignment structure). Instead, stabilization of the misaligned structure occurs when a dNTP complementary to the template base downstream from X binds in the active site of pol beta .


Fig. 4. Comparison of pol beta  and pol alpha  nucleotide incorporation efficiencies opposite an abasic lesion, X, with different 5'-nearest neighbors. Incorporation efficiencies were calculated as described under "Experimental Procedures" for: a, pol beta ; and b, pol alpha . Each value shown is the average incorporation efficiency (apparent Vmax/Km) ± S.E. The four apparent Vmax/Km values indicated by arrows pointing along the diagonal (left-hand panel) correspond to incorporations catalyzed by pol beta  from misaligned primer termini with dNTP substrates complementary to the template base on the 5'-side of X. The 12 apparent Vmax/Km values off the diagonal, shown in panel a, correspond to incorporations catalyzed by pol beta  directly opposite X. Template sequences are shown to the left of the histograms.
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The incorporation pattern for pol alpha  (Fig. 4b) differs from that of pol beta . The largest apparent Vmax/Km values for pol alpha  correspond to incorporations of dAMP opposite X. Incorporations of dGMP opposite X were 5-12-fold lower in efficiency compared to dAMP. Incorporation of pyrimidine nucleotides opposite X occurred with lowest efficiencies. This trend is in accordance with A-rule behavior (8) for incorporation at abasic lesions in vitro (3, 9, 10). The lack of correlation between the magnitudes of Vmax/Km and the presence of a template base downstream from the lesion complementary to an incoming dNTP suggests that pol alpha  acts principally by incorporating nucleotides directly opposite X, and not by dNTP-stabilized misalignment.

Comparison of Pol beta  and Pol alpha  for Conformation to the A-rule for Synthesis at Abasic Lesions in the Direct Incorporation Mode

The 12 "off-diagonal" Vmax/Km values for pol beta  are dominated by direct incorporations occurring opposite the lesion (values that do not fall on the diagonal designated by the arrows, Fig. 4a). A synopsis of the 12 direct incorporation Vmax/Km values suggests that pol beta  incorporates nucleotides in a less biased manner, in comparison to pol alpha  which favors incorporation of dAMP, and to a lesser extent dGMP. We conclude that, in relation to the incorporation of dAMP, pol beta  incorporates pyrimidine nucleotides in a more unbiased manner than pol alpha . The data further suggest that, when copying identical sequence contexts in the direct incorporation mode, pol beta  may incorporate pyrimidine deoxynucleotides with higher absolute efficiencies (Vmax/Km values) than pol alpha  (Fig. 4), but this point has not been conclusively demonstrated.

The presence of an abasic lesion caused a strong reduction in incorporation efficiencies for both polymerases, typically by factors of between 104- and 105-fold compared to normal template sites. Vmax/Km values for dNMP incorporation at normal template sites (where X is replaced by a normal template base) were approximately 105 M-1 to 106 M-1 using pol beta  on gapped p/t DNA; pol beta  activity on ungapped p/t DNA was very low (data not shown). Corresponding measurements with pol alpha  resulted in Vmax/Km values on the order of 105 M-1, with activities roughly 2-fold higher on ungapped DNA (data not shown). The reduction in incorporation and extension efficiencies at abasic template sites compared to normal sites reflects a strong kinetic block, i.e. an impediment in synthesis where reduction is not caused by the inability of pol beta  to bind in the vicinity of X; we found that the apparent equilibrium binding constants for both enzymes were not altered significantly in the presence of an abasic lesion (data not shown).

Nucleotide Extension Efficiencies at a Site-directed Abasic Lesion as a Function of Sequence Context

Nucleotide extension kinetics for pol beta  and pol alpha  were measured in a standing-start reaction by varying the concentration of dNTP substrates targeted for incorporation opposite a complementary template base either one base downstream from the lesion site, corresponding to direct extension, or two bases downstream from X, corresponding to misalignment extension, in accordance with a standard misalignment structure (Fig. 3 and Fig. 5). Note that in the extension reaction, the primer-3'-terminal base covers the lesion (Fig. 1c).


Fig. 5. Comparison of direct extension with misalignment extension at abasic template sites, X, by pol beta  and pol alpha . a and b, misalignment extension, using the structure indicated by a looped-out X, is strongly favored over direct extension for pol beta when extending primers terminating with either C (panel a) or A (panel b). c, extension of a primer terminating with C is catalyzed with relatively low efficiency by pol alpha , with misalignment extension favored over direct extension; d, extension of a primer terminating with A is catalyzed with relatively high efficiency by pol alpha , with misalignment extension favored over direct extension. For misalignment extension, G (dGMP) is incorporated at a template site two bases downstream from X. For direct extension either C (dCMP, panels a and c) or A (dAMP, panels b and d) is incorporated at a downstream template site adjacent to X. Reactions were run for 30 min. Template sequences are shown to the left of the gels.
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Pol beta  extends past an abasic lesion using misaligned primer termini by incorporating the dNMP complementary to the template site two bases downstream from X (Fig. 5, a and b, right-hand gels). Continued synthesis on the misaligned p/t DNA would lead to a -1 nt deletion. Tandem base substitutions could also occur if continued synthesis were to take place from a realigned primer-template. In the relatively unlikely event that template realignment had occurred prior to continued synthesis, then following realignment of the template, dGMP which had been "correctly" incorporated opposite C, two bases downstream from X, would then be relocated opposite G to form a dCMP·X, dGMP·G tandem mispair (Fig. 5a), or opposite T to form a dAMP·X, dGMP·T tandom mispair (Fig. 5b).

A minute amount of direct extension onto a correctly aligned primer terminating in C opposite X was observed in the lane corresponding to 500 µM dCTP (Fig. 5a, left-hand gel); a small amount of direct extension occurred on a correctly aligned primer terminating in A opposite X (Fig. 5b, left-hand gel). In the case of pol alpha , primers terminating in A were extended with high efficiency both by direct and standard misalignment modes of synthesis, whereas primers terminating in C were extended poorly using a misaligned primer and were not measurably extended on a correctly aligned primer.

A synopsis of extension efficiencies for direct and standard misalignment synthetic modes is shown in Fig. 6. Extensions past abasic lesions for pol beta  occurred almost exclusively from misaligned primer termini (Fig. 6a). Misalignment extension for pol alpha  was strongly favored from dAMP·X and dGMP·X primer termini (Fig. 6b). An important additional feature of pol alpha  extension is that efficient direct extension also occurred for primers terminating in A while less efficient direct extension took place from primers terminating in G. Note that three of the four template strands contained CT at the 5'-end of the 3-nucleotide gap (Fig. 6). The template having a primer terminating with G opposite X has the CT replaced by AT to avoid generating both one and two base loops in which the primer-3'-G pairs with a template C adjacent to the lesion or a second C two bases downstream from X. We have observed that pol beta  extends transiently misaligned primers containing putative two-base loop-outs (data not shown).


Fig. 6. Comparison of pol beta  and pol alpha  extension efficiencies by misalignment and direct extension mechanisms, with templates having different 5'-nearest neighbors. Extension efficiencies were calculated as described under "Experimental Procedures" for: a, pol beta ; and b, pol alpha . Each value shown is the average extension efficiency ± S.E. dNTP refers to the substrate used for extension of the primer terminus. Misalignment extension occurs at a template site two bases downstream from X (G opposite C, or T opposite A); direct extension occurs at a template site immediately downstream from X (A opposite T, C opposite G, G opposite C, or T opposite A). Template sequences are shown to the left of the histograms. The designation n.d. refers to nucleotide extension reactions that were not detectable.
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Nucleotide Incorporation Efficiencies Opposite X Measured as a Function of Upstream Sequence Context

Nucleotide incorporation efficiencies were measured in a running-start reaction on templates with a different upstream template base present at the 3'-side of X. The downstream template base (to the 5'-side of X) was held constant (Fig. 7). Pol beta  favored incorporation of dGMP opposite the template C downstream from the lesion in the four p/t configurations, via dNTP-stabilized misalignment incorporation (Fig. 7a). As expected, pol alpha  strongly favored incorporation of dAMP opposite X (Fig. 7b). Data were obtained for the template 3'- ... AAXCC.. (Fig. 7) independently from that shown in Fig. 4 (second panel from the top); the two data sets are in good agreement.


Fig. 7. Comparison of pol beta  and pol alpha  nucleotide incorporation efficiencies opposite an abasic lesion, X, with different 3'-nearest neighbors. Incorporation efficiencies for A, C, G, and T opposite X were calculated as described under "Experimental Procedures" for: a, pol beta ; and b, pol alpha . Each value shown is the average incorporation efficiency (apparent Vmax/Km) ± S.E. Template sequences are shown to the left of the histograms. The designation n.d. refers nucleotide incorporation reactions that were not detectable.
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For pol beta , an unexpected finding was the remarkably strong effects caused by changing just one upstream base. Incorporation opposite X occurred much more efficiently on the template 3'- ... AGXCC ... compared to 3'- ... ATXCC; the incorporation efficiencies were greater by factors of 51-fold, >66-fold, 12-fold, and 1.6-fold for A, C, G, and T opposite X (Fig. 7a, third and fourth panels). The corresponding comparisons for pol alpha , while less dramatic, still demonstrate a significant influence of the upstream base pair on incorporation opposite the lesion (Fig. 7b, third and fourth panels). Large upstream sequence effects were observed for pol alpha  when comparing templates 3'- ... ACXCC ... and 3' ... ATXCC (Fig. 7b, second and fourth panels); here the incorporation efficiencies were greater with ACXCC by factors of 10-fold, 9-fold, 16-fold, and 2-fold for A, C, G, and T, respectively. We verified that there were no significant differences in primer utilization for any of the DNAs, ruling out the possibility that the large upstream nearest-neighbor effects on incorporation opposite the lesion could be caused by differential utilization of the four p/t DNAs (data not shown).

Lesion Bypass Occurs with a much Higher Efficiency When Pol beta  Incorporates a Nucleotide Opposite X and Then Extends It Compared to Extension of a Pre-existing Primer Terminating Opposite X

Pol beta  failed to incorporate the next correct nucleotide, dCMP opposite G (adjacent to X), when the 3'-primer terminus was placed directly opposite the abasic lesion (Fig. 5a, left-hand gel). In contrast, pol beta  was able to incorporate dCMP readily opposite the same neighboring template G in a running-start reaction (Fig. 2a, dCTP lanes). Thus, there appears to be a significant difference in lesion bypass efficiency when pol beta  initially incorporates a nucleotide opposite X in contrast to extension from a pre-existing primer terminating opposite X. We have made similar observations using other p/t DNA configurations (data not shown).

DNA Products Resulting from dNTP-stabilized Misalignment Synthesis by Pol beta  Lead to Both One Base Deletion and Base Substitution Errors

An analysis of product lengths in the gap-filling reaction for pol beta  reveals that one base deletions and base substitutions can result from lesion bypass caused by dNTP-stabilized misalignment. Extension of 32P-labeled primer bands by addition of 1-5 nt were observed as discrete gel bands when pol beta  copied the gapped templates, 3'-AAXGC (Fig. 8a) and 3'-AAXCC (Fig. 8b). Lesion bypass occurred when either 4 or 5 nt were added during the extension reaction. The addition of 4 nt on a misaligned template (X out of the helical plane) would result in a 1-nt deletion, while the addition of 5 nt on a realigned template (X in the helical plane) would result in a base substitution.


Fig. 8. Pol beta  catalyzes -1 frameshift and base substitution errors by the dNTP-stabilized misalignment mechanism. A 5-nt gap was filled by pol beta  in the presence of a running-start dTTP substrate (5 µM), using two templates: a, 3'-AAXGC-5'; and b, 3'-AAXCC-5'. In panel a, lane 6, the primer extension reaction was carried out initially in the presence of dTTP (5 µM) and dCTP (800 µM) and after 10 min had elapsed, dGTP (800 µM) was added to the reaction. In panel a, lanes 2-5, the lower doublet band, indicated by the lower arrow, denotes a primer extended by 4 nt, containing dCMP at its 3' terminus. The upper doublet band, indicated by the middle arrow, denotes a primer extended by 4 nt, containing dGMP at its 3'-primer terminus. The low intensity band migrating above the doublet indicated by the upper arrow denotes a primer extended by 5 nt. The gel band indicated by the middle arrow corresponds to a -1 frameshift formed by incorporation dCMP opposite G and dGMP opposite C on misaligned p/t DNA. The gel band indicated by the upper arrow corresponds to a single base substitution formed, most likely, by incorporation of dCMP opposite G on misaligned p/t DNA, realignment of the DNA repositioning C opposite X, followed by incorporation of dCMP opposite G and then dGMP opposite C. The faint doublet bands opposite X in lanes 5 and 6, were formed by incorporation of either dCMP (lower band) or dGMP (upper band) directly opposite the lesion.
[View Larger Version of this Image (64K GIF file)]


Doublet bands were observed at the template G position when dGTP and dCTP were present in the reaction (Fig. 8a, lanes 2-4, lower two arrows). The less intense lower band of the doublet migrated in the same position as a primer band extended in the presence of dCTP but in the absence of dGTP (Fig. 8a, lane 1); thus, the lower doublet band (Fig. 8, lower arrow) corresponds to a primer extended by incorporation of 4 nt, with dCMP at its 3' terminus. The intense upper doublet band (Fig. 8, middle arrow) corresponds to addition of 4 nt onto the primer, with dGMP at its 3' terminus. Primers were also extended by incorporation of 5 nt as shown by the presence of a low intensity band opposite C, migrating above the doublet (Fig. 8a, lanes 2-4 and 6, upper arrow).

The origin of the primer extension bands for the 3'-AAXGC template can be inferred from the dNTP-stabililized misalignment model (Fig. 3). Formation of the relatively intense upper doublet band (Fig. 8, middle arrow) is likely to have occurred by incorporation of dCMP opposite G on a misaligned template (X looped out of the helix) followed by incorporation of dGMP opposite C using the same misaligned template. We suggest that the p/t structure responsible for generating the upper band would lead to a -1 nt deletion. This structure is stabilized by the presence of C:G and G:C base pairs downstream from the putative looped-out abasic moiety.

The lower doublet band (Fig. 8, lower arrow) was probably formed by the following steps: (i) incorporation dCMP opposite G on a misaligned template, (ii) realignment of the template strand (placing dCMP opposite X), (iii) incorporation of a second dCMP opposite G, (iv) dissociation of pol beta , leaving a partially filled gap. The upper band of the doublet is much more intense than the lower band. This difference in intensities is consistent with the idea that a misaligned structure containing consecutive C:G and G:C base pairs, downstream from the looped-out lesion, should be considerably more stable than a realigned structure containing C opposite X followed by a single C:G base pair. NMR measurements showed that both C and X were located extrahelically when they were located opposite one another in double-stranded DNA (13).

The band running above the doublet opposite C (Fig. 8, upper arrow) corresponds to extension of the primer by 5 nt, to completely fill the gap. Therefore, template realignment can occur, allowing incorporation of dGMP opposite C, in spite of the reduced stability of the realigned structure relative to the misaligned structure. The presence of a band opposite C implies that base substitutions can result from dNTP-stabilized misalignment, although, they would be much less likely to occur than -1 base deletions (Fig. 8, middle arrow).

Further insight into dNTP-stabilized misalignment pathways can be arrived at by investigating the dependence of band intensities on dGTP concentration. As dGTP is increased relative to dCTP, the lower doublet band decreases in intensity (Fig. 8a, lanes 2-5). Incorporation of dCMP occurs efficiently opposite G with X out of the plane of the helix. As the concentration of dGTP is increased relative to dCTP, it becomes much easier to incorporate dGMP opposite C, from a misaligned template, than to incorporate a second dCMP opposite G from a realigned template. In other words, at high dGTP/dCTP ratios the template does not appear to have sufficient time to realign prior to incorporation of dGMP opposite C.

There is also a marked decrease in intensity of the band opposite C accompanying an increase in dGTP concentration (Fig. 8a, lanes 4 and 5, upper arrow), suggesting that a -1 base deletion occurs in preference to a base substitution. At high dGTP/dCTP ratios, the addition of two complementary nucleotides, dCMP opposite G followed by dGMP opposite C, acts to stabilize the misaligned template, favoring -1 base deletions. At low dGTP/dCTP ratios, base substitutions can occur because the template has sufficient time to realign. Further evidence supporting the occurrence of template realignment is the presence of a band opposite C when the reaction is carried out initially with dTTP (running-start nucleotide) and dCTP followed, at 10 min, by the addition of dGTP (Fig. 8a, lane 6). Following dCMP incorporation opposite G on a misaligned template, the template realigns in the absence of dGTP and incorporation of dCMP opposite G can again occur (see, e.g. Fig. 8a, lane 1). When dGTP is added 10 min later, incorporation of dGMP opposite C occurs on the realigned template (Fig. 8a, lane 6), leading to a base substitution.

An analysis of primer extension products using a 3'-AAXCC template demonstrates that template realignment can occur even if the misaligned structure is stabilized by two downstream G:C base pairs (Fig. 8b, lanes 1 and 2). Primer extension corresponding to the addition of dGMP opposite C (with X out of the helical plane), followed by addition of dGMP opposite C on the misaligned template, gives rise to a -1 base frameshift at low dGTP (100 µM) concentrations (Fig. 8b, lane 1). At a higher dGTP concentration (600 µM), both base substitutions and -1 frameshifts occur (Fig. 8b, lane 2). The ability to fill the 5-nt gap at high dGTP concentration suggests that the template can undergo realignment (placing C opposite X), even though template realignment is far less favorable than retention of the misaligned template structure having two G:C base pairs downstream from a looped-out X. The ability to fill in the 5-nt gap completely, at a high dGTP concentration (Fig. 8b, lane 2), suggests that base substitutions can result even though template realignment is a kinetically unfavorable process.

The data also show that pol beta  is processive in synthesizing past the lesion provided that the misaligned template does not realign. Pol beta  tends to dissociate following template realignment; a discrete extension band is observed opposite X (Fig. 8a, lanes 2-4). However, the band corresponding to insertion opposite X is absent (Fig. 8a, lanes 5 and 6) when the template is misaligned; pol beta  does not dissociate from the template when adding dCMP opposite G followed by dGMP opposite C in the dNTP-stabilized misalignment mode. Note, however, that two barely detectable doublet bands can be seen opposite X in lanes 5 and 6. These bands arise from inefficient incorporation of either dGMP or dCMP directly opposite the lesion, after which pol beta  dissociates.


DISCUSSION

It has been proposed that the A-rule (8), defined as the preferential incorporation of A at abasic DNA template lesions, serves as a DNA polymerase default mechanism allowing bypass of noncoding lesions encountered at a replication fork. Previous studies showed that polymerases purified from eucaryotic and procaryotic cells behave in accordance with the A-rule, preferentially incorporating A opposite abasic lesions with about a factor of 10 higher efficiency than G and with about a 50-fold greater efficiency than either C or T (9, 10).

However, recent in vivo experiments suggest that the A-rule may not be operative at abasic sites in eucaryotes. Data from eucaryotic systems demonstrate that incorporation can be random (14, 15), or that G (16, 17), T (18), and C (19) can be favored, depending on the particular system studied. The eucaryotic results raise the interesting possibility that perhaps one or more eucaryotic polymerases exhibit a broad specificity range for incorporation at abasic sites. We have tested this possibility by measuring the efficiency of nucleotide incorporation at abasic lesion sites using pol beta , a repair polymerase found only in eucaryotic organisms.

Kinetic determinations of nucleotide incorporation efficiencies were performed at site-directed abasic lesions (X) placed next to four different downstream template bases, for each of the four dNTP substrates (Fig. 4). Nucleotide incorporation takes place directly opposite X in 12 of the 16 dNTP-p/t configurations. In the four configurations, where a dNTP substrate is complementary to a template base immediately downstream from the lesion, incorporation can occur either directly opposite X on a properly aligned primer, or opposite a downstream template base on a misaligned primer. Side-by-side comparisons were made for pol beta  and pol alpha  using identical p/t DNA constructs.

Two definitive differences in the properties of pol beta  and pol alpha  were found for nucleotide incorporation at abasic lesions. First, pol beta  does not exhibit A-rule behavior while pol alpha  does (Figs. 2 and 4). Second, pol beta  incorporates nucleotides with higher efficiency, using misaligned primer-3'-termini (data indicated by arrows along the diagonal, Fig. 4a), while pol alpha  does not (Fig. 4b). The misalignment mechanism for pol beta  is different from that previously observed (20-22, 36, 37) because it does not require the presence of H-bonded structures surrounding the extrahelical moiety as postulated for the standard misalignment model, shown in Fig. 3. Instead, the presence of an incoming dNTP complementary to the template base downstream from the lesion is sufficient to cause misalignment incorporation to take place; we refer to this novel type of misincorporation as "dNTP-stabilized misalignment" incorporation (Fig. 3). We have also shown that this novel mode of misalignment incorporation for pol beta  favors the occurrence of -1 frameshifts but can also give rise to base substitutions (Fig. 8). It has previously been shown that pol beta  catalyzes -1 frameshifts and base substitutions by the standard Streisinger slippage mechanism (20).

Pol alpha  Behaves in Accordance with the A-rule, but Pol beta  Does Not

The 12 apparent Vmax/Km values off the diagonal correspond to pol beta  incorporations occurring directly opposite the lesion, i.e. not via p/t DNA misalignment synthesis (Fig. 4a). With A downstream from X, direct incorporation of G opposite X was favored slightly over A and C; with C downstream, A was favored by roughly 7-fold over C and T; with G downstream, A and T were almost equivalent and favored by about 2-fold over G; with T downstream, C and G are roughly equivalent and favored by about 2-fold over T. Thus, pol beta  appears to operate in a robust and less than partial manner than pol alpha  with respect to direct incorporation opposite abasic template lesions. The properties of pol alpha  are obviously different because A was favored over G for incorporation opposite X by factors ranging from 5-12-fold, for all p/t configurations, while incorporation of the pyrimidine nucleotides was far less efficient.

A molecular basis to rationalize the A-rule stems from NMR studies showing that A is stacked within the plane of the DNA helix (11-13), G is intrahelical at low temperatures but is melted prior to denaturation of the helix, and that C and probably T are extrahelical (13). It is possible that base stacking interactions between incoming dNTPs and primer-3'-termini differ significantly for pol beta  in relation to other polymerases that have been investigated, e.g. pol alpha , human immunodeficiency virus-1 and avian myeloblastosis virus reverse transcriptase (32). The properties of pol beta  concerning untemplated incorporation at abasic template sites on physiologically relevant p/t configurations used here are also in contrast to the A-rule-like results observed for untemplated end-addition reactions, noted both in solution (38) and in crystals of enzyme and blunt-ended DNA (39). In the end-addition reactions, base stacking interactions for the primer base and incoming base may be more important for stabilizing the transition state intermediate than in the case of abasic site untemplated synthesis on a primer-template. In the latter case, pol beta -DNA interactions may impose a bend in the primer-template such that stacking between the primer base and incoming base is not critical to the free energy of stabilization of the transition state (40).

Lesion Bypass Occurs with Much Higher Efficiency in Running-start Compared to Standing-start Reactions

In a standing-start reaction, pol beta  appeared to have great difficulty adding a next correct dNTP onto pre-existing primers terminating opposite an abasic lesion (Fig. 5a). In contrast, in a running-start reaction, the enzyme had essentially no difficulty carrying out translesion synthesis by first incorporating a nucleotide using a misaligned primer-template and then using a realigned template to continue synthesis past the lesion by direct addition of the next correct dNMP (Fig. 2a, dCTP lanes). Although we have not attempted to carry out a systematic investigation using a large number of p/t DNA sequences, this observation does not appear to be restricted to specific sequence contexts.

Conceivably, pol beta  may assume different conformations depending on whether it binds at a pre-existing primer terminus opposite a lesion or is bound at the identical site just after having inserted a nucleotide opposite X. The difficulty of pol beta  to extend a pre-existing primer by addition of a dNMP complementary to the template base immediately downstream from the lesion, even after a 30-min incubation (Figs. 5, a and b, left-hand gels), suggests that the enzyme is inhibited in forming a kinetically competent complex when bound opposite a lesion on a properly aligned primer terminus. However, when pol beta  was bound to a misaligned primer (indicated in Fig. 5, a and b, by the looped-out X shown out of the helical plane, right-hand gels), the enzyme was easily able to add the next correct dNMP two bases downstream from the lesion. The underlying reasons for these interesting kinetic differences are not known and merit further study. These marked differences in standing-start compared to running-start kinetics can be exploited in delineating rate-limiting steps in the nucleotide incorporation pathway for pol beta .

Another interesting aspect of the data shown in Fig. 5 is that pol beta  extends past an abasic lesion using misaligned primer termini by incorporating the dNMP complementary to the template site two bases downstream from X (Fig. 5, a and b, right-hand gels). Following realignment of the template, dGMP which had been correctly incorporated opposite C, two bases downstream from X, is then relocated opposite G to form a dGMP·G mispair (Fig. 5a), or opposite T to form a dGMP·T mispair (Fig. 5b). This mechanism, strongly favored by pol beta  may explain the interesting observation of Kamiya et al. (18) that c-Ha-ras gene mutations occur both at the site of an abasic lesion and at an adjacent downstream site.

Effect of Changing the Upstream Base Pair on the Efficiency of Nucleotide Incorporation Opposite X

We expected that differences in the efficiencies of nucleotide incorporation opposite X would depend on the identity of the base pair preceding the lesion and on the specific polymerase used in the assay. Sequence context effects on fidelity at normal and aberrant template sites have been well documented, and models have been proposed to address how polymerase parameters might modulate the appearance of nucleotide incorporation hot and cold spots (41-43). However, we did not expect to observe the extremely large effects exerted by upstream base pairs on incorporation efficiencies opposite X (Fig. 7). For example, when T was replaced by G as the neighboring upstream template base, pol beta incorporated A and C opposite X with 51-fold and >66-fold higher efficiencies, respectively (Fig. 7a, third and fourth panels). Large upstream nearest-neighbor effects, on the order of 10-15-fold, were also observed for pol alpha  (Fig. 7b, second and fourth panels).

Possible Biological Consequences Resulting from Pol beta 's Ability to Copy Abasic Lesions in an Impartial Manner

The ability of pol beta  to incorporate nucleotides in a relatively indiscriminant manner opposite an abasic lesion in the direct incorporation mode (Fig. 4a), and opposite a base downstream from an abasic lesion in the dNTP-stabilized mode, suggests a possible resolution for the A-rule disparity between procaryotic and eucaryotic organisms. However, an important cautionary note is that although a requirement for pol beta  has been shown in short gap filling DNA repair synthesis pathways (44, 45), there is no evidence showing that pol beta  actually carries out translesion synthesis during in vivo replication or repair. Nevertheless, one can speculate that replication complexes involving pol epsilon  and pol delta  stall when encountering an abasic lesion during chromosomal replication. Dissociation of the replication complex could allow pol beta  access to carry out error-prone translesion synthesis. Then, following dissociation of pol beta , reassociation of the replication complex could take place at a nascent primer terminus downstream from the lesion. It is perhaps even more likely that pol beta  might act during excision repair to copy an abasic site located within a repair gap created by a targeted removal of a UV-induced lesion on the opposite strand.

Replication and repair polymerases appear to have overlapping cellular roles; for example, pol epsilon  has been implicated in base excision repair in yeast (46) and repair of human fibroblast DNA (47). Although it remains to be determined if either pol epsilon  or pol delta  exhibit broad nucleotide incorporation specificities at abasic lesions, proofreading exonucleases are known to strongly inhibit abasic lesion bypass in vitro (29). In contrast to both pols epsilon  and delta  which contain active proofreading activities (48), pol beta  has no detectable proofreading activity (48, 49).

The presence of an abasic lesion results in a strong reduction in incorporation efficiencies, on the order of 104-105-fold (data not shown; see also Ref. 9). The reduction in incorporation and extension (32) efficiencies at abasic template sites compared to normal sites reflects a strong block to DNA synthesis in the vicinity of an abasic lesion. Therefore, it is likely that other proteins might interact with polymerases at the site of an abasic lesion to stimulate translesion synthesis and possibly to alter nucleotide insertion specificities. The SOS-induced protein complex, UmuD'C, is required in vivo to observe error-prone translesion bypass in E. coli, see e.g. Ref. 50. A recent result supporting the possibility that polymerase specificities may depend on interactions with lesion bypass accessory proteins is that two analogs of umuD'C, mucAB and rumAB, were shown to alter the relative frequencies of mutations at cyclobutane dimers in vivo (51). However, there is as yet no evidence for the presence of UmuD'C-like translesion bypass proteins in eucaryotic cells. The yeast REV 1 protein has recently been shown to catalyze incorporation of C opposite abasic lesions in vitro (52). Perhaps this activity is responsible for the 80% level of dCMP incorporation opposite X observed on a shuttle vector in yeast (19). However, the deoxycytidyl transferase activity of REV1 does not explain the favored incorporation of G at abasic lesions in the yeast chromosomal model system (17).

When allowance for each of these caveats is made, the salient point remains that pol beta  is the first example of an enzyme able to copy abasic lesions in a generally impartial manner. We suggest that the relaxed incorporation specificity of pol beta  provides a plausible biological mechanism to account for the lack of an A-rule in eucaryotes.


FOOTNOTES

*   This research was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants AG11398, GM21422, and ES06839, Welch Foundation Grant H-1265, and North Atlantic Collaborative Research Grant 900554. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
1    The abbreviations used are: X, refers to a tetrahydrofuran abasic lesion on a DNA template strand; pol beta  and pol alpha , eucaryotic DNA polymerases beta  and alpha ; dNTP, deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate; p/t DNA, primer-template DNA; nt, nucleotide.

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