Substrate specificity and sequence preference of G:T mismatch repair: incision at G:T, O6-methylguanine:T, and G:U mispairs in DNA by human cell extracts.

Abstract:

:Extracts of two human glioma cell lines (lacking O6-methylguanine DNA-methyltransferase) (i.e., A1235 and its alkylation-resistant derivative A1235-MR4) were examined for their ability to execute strand incision at different base mismatches in model (45-bp) DNA. These heteroduplex substrates were of the same sequence except for the presence, at the same site, of one of three mispairs: G:T, O6-methylguanine:T (m6G:T), and G:U. The parental (A1235) extract, when supplemented with ATP and human thymine DNA glycosylase (TDG), acted proficiently on all three substrates, incising immediately 5' to the mismatched thymine or uracil residue. In contrast, the derivative extract, under the same conditions, recognized only the G:U substrate. The activity of the A1235 extract toward the G:T (or m6G:T) substrate was markedly reduced in the absence of ATP, whereas the G:U substrate was incised rapidly by both extracts irrespective of the addition of ATP. These combined data confirm and extend our earlier findings demonstrating that human cells possess two G:T incision activities, one efficient and ATP-dependent and the other inefficient and ATP-independent. The derivative extract lacks the former activity but retains the latter activity. In substrate competition assays, the G:U substrate inhibited the ATP-dependent G:T incision activity to a greater extent than did the G:T substrate itself. Given the well-known substrate preference of TDG for G:U as compared to G:T, this unexpected result implies that TDG may be an integral component of the ATP-dependent G:T incision machinery in human cells. Finally, the base 5' to the mismatched G in the G:T mispair conferred sequence preference on the A1235 extract in the presence of ATP and TDG, with a pyrimidine (especially cytosine) being much favored over a purine. This latter observation suggests that the ATP-dependent G:T incision activity is designed to repair deaminated 5-methycytosine lesions in CpG islands, the methylation of which is linked to control of gene expression.

journal_name

Biochemistry

journal_title

Biochemistry

authors

Lari SU,Al-Khodairy F,Paterson MC

doi

10.1021/bi020239n

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2002-07-23 00:00:00

pages

9248-55

issue

29

eissn

0006-2960

issn

1520-4995

pii

bi020239n

journal_volume

41

pub_type

杂志文章