posted on 2024-02-28, 01:05authored byRachana Tomar, Songlin Li, Martin Egli, Michael P. Stone
Urea lesions in DNA
arise from thymine glycol (Tg) or 8-oxo-dG;
their genotoxicity is thought to arise in part due to their potential
to accommodate the insertion of all four dNTPs during error-prone
replication. Replication bypass with human DNA polymerase η
(hPol η) confirmed that all four dNTPs were inserted opposite
urea lesions but with purines exhibiting greater incorporation efficiency.
X-ray crystal structures of ternary replication bypass complexes in
the presence of Mg2+ ions with incoming dNTP analogs dAMPnPP,
dCMPnPP, dGMPnPP, and dTMPnPP bound opposite urea lesions (hPol η·DNA·dNMPnPP
complexes) revealed all were accommodated by hPol η. In each,
the Watson–Crick face of the dNMPnPP was paired with the urea
lesion, exploiting the ability of the amine and carbonyl groups of
the urea to act as H-bond donors or acceptors, respectively. With
incoming dAMPnPP or dGMPnPP, the distance between the imino nitrogen
of urea and the N9 atoms of incoming dNMPnPP approximated the canonical
distance of 9 Å in B-DNA. With incoming dCMPnPP or dTMPnPP, the
corresponding distance of about 7 Å was less ideal. Improved
base-stacking interactions were also observed with incoming purines
vs pyrimidines. Nevertheless, in each instance, the α-phosphate
of incoming dNMPnPPs was close to the 3′-hydroxyl group of
the primer terminus, consistent with the catalysis of nucleotidyl
transfer and the observation that all four nucleotides could be inserted
opposite urea lesions. Preferential insertion of purines by hPol η
may explain, in part, why the urea-directed spectrum of mutations
arising from Tg vs 8-oxo-dG lesions differs.