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Recent Advances in Understanding the Structures of Translesion Synthesis DNA Polymerases

Journal

GENES
Volume 13, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes13050915

Keywords

DNA replication; DNA polymerases; DNA repair; DNA damage; mutagenesis; genome stability

Funding

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [GM081433]

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DNA damage can cause replication forks to stall, but cells have evolved translesion synthesis polymerases to incorporate nucleotides opposite DNA lesions. Recent methodological developments, including time-lapse X-ray crystallography, full-ensemble hybrid methods, and cryo-electron microscopy, have enhanced our understanding of the structures and mechanisms of these polymerases.
DNA damage in the template strand causes replication forks to stall because replicative DNA polymerases are unable to efficiently incorporate nucleotides opposite template DNA lesions. To overcome these replication blocks, cells are equipped with multiple translesion synthesis polymerases that have evolved specifically to incorporate nucleotides opposite DNA lesions. Over the past two decades, X-ray crystallography has provided a wealth of information about the structures and mechanisms of translesion synthesis polymerases. This approach, however, has been limited to ground state structures of these polymerases bound to DNA and nucleotide substrates. Three recent methodological developments have extended our understanding of the structures and mechanisms of these polymerases. These include time-lapse X-ray crystallography, which allows one to identify novel reaction intermediates; full-ensemble hybrid methods, which allow one to examine the conformational flexibility of the intrinsically disordered regions of proteins; and cryo-electron microscopy, which allows one to determine the high-resolution structures of larger protein complexes. In this article, we will discuss how these three methodological developments have added to our understanding of the structures and mechanisms of translesion synthesis polymerases.

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