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The Efficiency of Translesion Synthesis Past Single Styrene Oxide DNA Adducts in Vitro Is Polymerase-Specific
- Source :
- Chemical Research in Toxicology. 8:422-430
- Publication Year :
- 1995
- Publisher :
- American Chemical Society (ACS), 1995.
-
Abstract
- In order to examine the effect of adenine N6 adducts of styrene oxide (SO) on DNA replication, 33-mer templates were constructed bearing site-specific and stereospecific SO modifications. Both R- and S-SO adducts were introduced at four different base positions within a sequence containing codons 60-62 from the human N-ras gene. The resulting eight templates were replicated in primer extension assays using the Klenow fragment, Sequenase 2.0, T4 polymerase holoenzyme, polymerase alpha, and polymerase beta. Replication of the damaged templates was analyzed under conditions defining single and/or multiple encounters between the polymerase and the substrate. Polymerization by all five enzymes was sensitive to both the local sequence context and the chirality of the SO adduct. For example, R-SO lesions placed at the third position of N-ras codon 61 were readily bypassed, whereas stereochemically-identical lesions in other sequence contexts were often poor substrates for replication. Similarly, R- and S-SO adducts introduced within identical sequences were often bypassed nonequivalently. Significantly, the degree of adduct-directed termination and translesion synthesis during replication was also dependent on the choice of polymerase. Although SO adducts directed termination either opposite the lesion or 1 base 3' to the damage using all five polymerases, templates that were poor substrates for bypass synthesis with one enzyme were often read-through much more efficiently when a different polymerase was used. Thus, the activities of these enzymes on the SO-modified substrates produced replication profiles, or "fingerprints", that were unique to each polymerase.
- Subjects :
- DNA Replication
Molecular Sequence Data
Context (language use)
DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase
Toxicology
Photochemistry
Primer extension
DNA Adducts
Viral Proteins
chemistry.chemical_compound
Animals
Bacteriophage T4
Humans
Gene
Polymerase
Klenow fragment
chemistry.chemical_classification
Base Sequence
biology
DNA replication
DNA Polymerase II
Templates, Genetic
General Medicine
DNA Polymerase I
Rats
Genes, ras
Enzyme
Biochemistry
chemistry
biology.protein
Epoxy Compounds
DNA
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15205010 and 0893228X
- Volume :
- 8
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Chemical Research in Toxicology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d229fa1d351bce83e6989808fea0e83f
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1021/tx00045a014