4.5 Article

DNA polymerase δ is preferentially recruited during homologous recombination to promote heteroduplex DNA extension

Journal

MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 4, Pages 1373-1382

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/MCB.01651-07

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DNA polymerases play a central role during homologous recombination (HR), but the identity of the enzyme(s) implicated remains elusive. The pol3-ct allele of the gene encoding the catalytic subunit of DNA polymerase 6 (Pol delta) has highlighted a role for this polymerase in meiotic HR. We now address the ubiquitous role of Pol delta during HR in somatic cells. We find that pol3-ct affects gene conversion tract length during mitotic recombination whether the event is initiated by single-strand gaps following UV irradiation or by site-specific double-strand breaks. We show that the pol3-ct effects on gene conversion are completely independent of mismatch repair, indicating that shorter gene conversion tracts in pol3-ct correspond to shorter extensions of primed DNA synthesis. Interestingly, we find that shorter repair tracts do not favor synthesis-dependent strand annealing at the expense of double- strand-break repair. Finally, we show that the DNA polymerases that have been previously suspected to mediate HR repair synthesis (Pol epsilon and Pol eta) do not affect gene conversion during induced HR, including in the pol3-ct background. Our results argue strongly for the preferential recruitment of Pol delta during HR.

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