4.5 Article

Translesion synthesis of the major nitrogen mustard-induced DNA lesion by human DNA polymerase η

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 477, Issue 23, Pages 4543-4558

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BCJ20200767

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [ES-26676]

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Nitrogen mustards are among the first modern anticancer chemotherapeutics that are still widely used as non-specific anticancer alkylating agents. While the mechanism of action of mustard drugs involves the generation of DNA interstrand cross-links, the predominant lesions produced by these drugs are nitrogen half-mustard-N7-dG (NHMG) adducts. The bulky major groove lesion NHMG, if left unrepaired, can be bypassed by translesion synthesis (TLS) DNA polymerases. However, studies of the TLS past NHMG have not been reported so far. Here, we present the first synthesis of an oligonucleotide containing a site-specific NHMG. We also report kinetic and structural characterization of human DNA polymerase eta (pol eta) bypassing NHMG. The templating NHMG slows dCTP incorporation similar to 130-fold, while it increases the misincorporation frequency similar to 10-30-fold, highlighting the promutagenic nature of NHMG. A crystal structure of pol. incorporating dCTP opposite NHMG shows a Watson-Crick NHMG:dCTP base pair with a large propeller twist angle. The nitrogen half-mustard moiety fits snugly into an open cleft created by the Arg61-Trp64 loop of pol eta, suggesting a role of the Arg61-Trp64 loop in accommodating bulky major groove adducts during lesion bypass. Overall, our results presented here to provide first insights into the TLS of the major DNA adduct formed by nitrogen mustard drugs.

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