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Human Mitochondrial DNA Polymerase Metal Dependent UV Lesion Bypassing Ability. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Human mitochondrial DNA has more UV damage than nuclear DNA because it lacks effective repair mechanisms for bulky lesions; DNA polymerase gamma (Pol γ) is the main enzyme for DNA replication in mitochondria.
  • - Previous research indicated that Pol γ can bypass UV lesions only when its exonuclease activity is disabled, and this study explored how different metal ions affect its ability to replicate damaged DNA.
  • - It was found that when manganese (Mn) replaces magnesium (Mg), Pol γ can efficiently replicate over UV lesions, achieving nearly the same efficiency as on undamaged DNA, suggesting that Mn alters Pol γ's active site to facilitate this process without inhibiting exonuclease activity.

Article Abstract

Human mitochondrial DNA contains more UV-induced lesions than the nuclear DNA due to lack of mechanism to remove bulky photoproducts. Human DNA polymerase gamma (Pol γ) is the sole DNA replicase in mitochondria, which contains a polymerase () and an exonuclease () active site. Previous studies showed that Pol γ only displays UV lesion bypassing when its exonuclease activity is obliterated. To investigate the reaction environment on Pol γ translesion activity, we tested Pol γ DNA activity in the presence of different metal ions. While Pol γ is unable to replicate through UV lesions on DNA templates in the presence of Mg, it exhibits robust translesion DNA synthesis (TLS) on cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD)-containing template when Mg was mixed with or completely replaced by Mn. Under these conditions, the efficiency of Pol γ's TLS opposite CPD is near to that on a non-damaged template and is 800-fold higher than that of exonuclease-deficient Pol γ. Interestingly, Pol γ exhibits higher exonuclease activity in the presence of Mn than with Mg, suggesting Mn-stimulated Pol γ TLS is not via suppressing its exonuclease activity. We suggest that Mn ion expands Pol γ's active site relative to Mg so that a UV lesion can be accommodated and blocks the communication between and active sites to execute translesion DNA synthesis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8959595PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmolb.2022.808036DOI Listing

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