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ScharerDavid Orlando

Scharer, Orlando D.
Schärer Lab.
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The structure and duplex context of DNA interstrand crosslinks affects the activity of DNA polymerase eta

Author(s)
Roy, UpasanaMukherjee, ShivamSharma, AnjaliFrank, Ekaterina G.Scharer, Orlando D.
Issued Date
2016-09
DOI
10.1093/nar/gkw485
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/21234
Fulltext
https://academic.oup.com/nar/article-lookup/doi/10.1093/nar/gkw485
Citation
NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, v.44, no.15, pp.7281 - 7291
Abstract
Several important anti-tumor agents form DNA interstrand crosslinks (ICLs), but their clinical efficiency is counteracted by multiple complex DNA repair pathways. All of these pathways require unhooking of the ICL from one strand of a DNA duplex by nucleases, followed by bypass of the unhooked ICL by translesion synthesis (TLS) polymerases. The structures of the unhooked ICLs remain unknown, yet the position of incisions and processing of the unhooked ICLs significantly influence the efficiency and fidelity of bypass by TLS polymerases. We have synthesized a panel of model unhooked nitrogen mustard ICLs to systematically investigate how the state of an unhooked ICL affects pol eta activity. We find that duplex distortion induced by a crosslink plays a crucial role in translesion synthesis, and length of the duplex surrounding an unhooked ICL critically affects polymerase efficiency. We report the synthesis of a putative ICL repair intermediate that mimics the complete processing of an unhooked ICL to a single crosslinked nucleotide, and find that it provides only aminimal obstacle for DNA polymerases. Our results raise the possibility that, depending on the structure and extent of processing of an ICL, its bypass may not absolutely require TLS polymerases.
Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
ISSN
0305-1048

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