4.8 Article

Translesion polymerase eta both facilitates DNA replication and promotes increased human genetic variation at common fragile sites

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2106477118

Keywords

common fragile sites; polymerase eta; replication fork pause; non-B DNA; SNP

Funding

  1. NIH [CA220430, CA092584, 5R01-GM045751, R01-CA085344, R00-HL136870-05, R00-HL136870-04S1, T-32 NIH 5T32AG023475]
  2. National Cancer Institute Cancer Center Support Grant [P30-CA013330]
  3. Robert A. Welch Chair in Chemistry
  4. NSF [ACI-1445606, ACI-1548562]

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The study reveals the crucial role of Pol eta in the replication of common fragile sites (CFSs), highlighting how its deficiency can lead to replication pausing and genetic variations. Presence of non-B DNA structures may increase replication hindrance. Activity of Pol eta in replicating through CFSs may result in genetic variations found in the human population at these sites.
Common fragile sites (CFSs) are difficult-to-replicate genomic regions that form gaps and breaks on metaphase chromosomes under replication stress. They are hotspots for chromosomal instability in cancer. Repetitive sequences located at CFS loci are inefficiently copied by replicative DNA polymerase (Pol) delta. However, translesion synthesis Pol eta has been shown to efficiently polymerize CFS-associated repetitive sequences in vitro and facilitate CFS stability by a mechanism that is not fully understood. Here, by locus-specific, single-molecule replication analysis, we identified a crucial role for Pol eta (encoded by the gene POLH) in the in vivo replication of CFSs, even without exogenous stress. We find that Pol eta deficiency induces replication pausing, increases initiation events, and alters the direction of replication-fork progression at CFS-FRA16D in both lymphoblasts and fibroblasts. Furthermore, certain replication pause sites at CFS-FRA16D were associated with the presence of non-B DNA-forming motifs, implying that non-B DNA structures could increase replication hindrance in the absence of Pol eta. Further, in Pol eta-deficient fibroblasts, there was an increase in fork pausing at fibroblast-specific CFSs. Importantly, while not all pause sites were associated with non-B DNA structures, they were embedded within regions of increased genetic variation in the healthy human population, with mutational spectra consistent with Pol eta activity. From these findings, we propose that Pol eta replicating through CFSs may result in genetic variations found in the human population at these sites.

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