Effects of Benzo[a]pyrene Adduct Stereochemistry on Downstream DNA
Replication in Vitro: Evidence for Different Adduct Conformations within the
Active Site of DNA Polymerase I (Klenow Fragment)†
Posted on 2002-03-06 - 00:00
The presence of bulky adducts in DNA is known to interfere with DNA replication not only
at the site of the lesion but also at positions up to 5 nucleotides past the adduct location. Kinetic studies
of primer extension by exonuclease-deficient E. coli DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment) (KF) when
(+)-trans- or (+)-cis-B[a]P-N2-dG adducts were positioned in the double-stranded region of the primer-templates showed that both stereoisomers significantly block downstream replication. However the (+)-cis adduct, which causes a stronger inhibition of the nucleotides insertion across from and immediately
past the lesion, affected the downstream replication to a much smaller extent than did the (+)-trans adduct,
especially when the B[a]P-modified dG was properly paired with a dC. The effects of mismatches across
from the adduct and the sequence context surrounding the adduct were also dependent on the stereochemistry
of the B[a]P adduct. Thus, the identity of the nucleotide across from the adduct that provided the best
downstream replication was different for the (+)-cis and (+)-trans adducts, a factor that might differentially
contribute to the mutagenic bypass of these lesions. These findings provide strong direct evidence that
the conformations of the (+)-cis and (+)-trans adducts within the active site of KF are significantly different
and probably differentially affect the interactions of the polymerase with the minor groove, thereby leading
to different replication trends. The stereochemistry of the adduct was also found to differentially affect
the sequence-mediated primer-template misalignments, resulting in different consequences during the bypass
of the lesion.
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Alekseyev, Yuriy O.; Romano, Louis J. (2016). Effects of Benzo[a]pyrene Adduct Stereochemistry on Downstream DNA
Replication in Vitro: Evidence for Different Adduct Conformations within the
Active Site of DNA Polymerase I (Klenow Fragment)†. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi015850l