We are attempting to understand the processes required to accurately replicate the repetitive DNA sequences whose instability is associated with several human diseases. Here we test the hypothesis that the contribution of exonucleolytic proofreading to frameshift fidelity during replication of repetitive DNA sequences diminishes as the number of repeats in the sequence increases. The error rates of proofreading-proficient T7, T4, and Pyrococcus furiosis DNA polymerases are compared to their exonuclease-deficient derivatives, for +1 and -1 base errors in homopolymeric repeat sequences of three to eight base pairs. All three exonuclease-deficient polymerases produce frameshift errors during synthesis at rates that increase as a function of run length, suggesting the involvement of misaligned intermediates. Their wild-type counterparts are all much more accurate, suggesting that the majority of the intermediates are corrected by proofreading. However, the contribution of the exonuclease to fidelity decreases substantially as the length of the homopolymeric run increases. For example, the exonuclease enhances the frameshift fidelity of T7 DNA polymerase in a run of three A.T base pairs by 160-fold, similar to its contribution to base substitution fidelity. However, in a run of eight consecutive A.T base pairs, the exonuclease only enhances frameshift fidelity by 7-fold. A similar pattern was observed with T4 and Pfu DNA polymerases. Thus, both polymerase selectivity and exonucleolytic proofreading efficiency are diminished during replication of repetitive sequences. This may place an increased relative burden on post-replication repair processes to reduce rates of addition and deletion mutations in organisms whose genome contains abundant simple repeat DNA sequences.
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Virus Evol
October 2022
Institut für Virologie, Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin 14163, Germany.
Evolution relies on the availability of genetic diversity for fitness-based selection. However, most deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) viruses employ DNA polymerases (Pol) capable of exonucleolytic proofreading to limit mutation rates during DNA replication. The relative genetic stability produced by high-fidelity genome replication can make studying DNA virus adaptation and evolution an intensive endeavor, especially in slowly replicating viruses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Struct Mol Biol
December 2021
Genome Integrity & Structural Biology Laboratory, NIH/NIEHS, DHHS, Research Triangle Park, Durham, NC, USA.
Accurate DNA replication of an undamaged template depends on polymerase selectivity for matched nucleotides, exonucleolytic proofreading of mismatches, and removal of remaining mismatches via DNA mismatch repair (MMR). DNA polymerases (Pols) δ and ε have 3'-5' exonucleases into which mismatches are partitioned for excision in cis (intrinsic proofreading). Here we provide strong evidence that Pol δ can extrinsically proofread mismatches made by itself and those made by Pol ε, independently of both Pol δ's polymerization activity and MMR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComput Struct Biotechnol J
June 2021
Institute of Molecular Medicine and Bioengineering, National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University, Hsinchu 30068, Taiwan.
Mammalian apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonuclease 1 (APE1) has versatile enzymatic functions, including redox, endonuclease, and exonuclease activities. APE1 is thus broadly associated with pathways in DNA repair, cancer cell growth, and drug resistance. Unlike its AP site-specific endonuclease activity in Base excision repair (BER), the 3'-5' exonucleolytic cleavage of APE1 using the same active site exhibits complex substrate selection patterns, which are key to the biological functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Chem
August 2020
MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge Biomedical Campus, Cambridge, UK.
The ability of reverse transcriptases (RTs) to synthesize a complementary DNA from natural RNA and a range of unnatural xeno nucleic acid (XNA) template chemistries, underpins key methods in molecular and synthetic genetics. However, RTs have proven challenging to discover and engineer, in particular for the more divergent XNA chemistries. Here we describe a general strategy for the directed evolution of RT function for any template chemistry called compartmentalized bead labelling and demonstrate it by the directed evolution of efficient RTs for 2'-O-methyl RNA and hexitol nucleic acids and the discovery of RTs for the orphan XNA chemistries D-altritol nucleic acid and 2'-methoxyethyl RNA, for which previously no RTs existed.
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