4.6 Article

Mismatch repair-dependent iterative excision at irreparable O6-methylguanine lesions in human nuclear extracts

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 281, Issue 32, Pages 22674-22683

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M603667200

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute Funding Source: Medline
  2. NCI NIH HHS [P01 CA092584-060005, P50 CA108786, 1P50CA108786, P01 CA092584, P01 CA92584] Funding Source: Medline
  3. NIGMS NIH HHS [R01 GM045190-16, GM45190, R01 GM045190] Funding Source: Medline

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The response of mammalian cells to S(n)1 DNA methylators depends on functional MutS alpha and MutL alpha. Cells deficient in either of these activities are resistant to the cytotoxic effects of this class of chemotherapeutic drug. Because killing by Sn1 methylators has been attributed to O-6-methylguanine (MeG), we have constructed nicked circular heteroduplexes that contain a single MeG-T mis-pair, and we have examined processing of these molecules by mismatch repair in nuclear extracts of human cells. Excision provoked by MeG-T is restricted to the incised heteroduplex strand, leading to removal of the MeG when it resides on this strand. However, when the MeG is located on the continuous strand, the heteroduplex is irreparable. MeG-T-dependent repair DNA synthesis is observed on both reparable and irreparable 3' and 5' heteroduplexes as judged by [P-32]dAMP incorporation. Labeling with [alpha-P-32]dATP followed by a cold dATP chase has demonstrated that newly synthesized DNA on irreparable molecules is subject to re-excision in a reaction that is MutL alpha-dependent, an effect attributable to the presence of MeG on the template strand. Processing of the irreparable 3' heteroduplex is also associated with incision of the discontinuous strand of a few percent of molecules near the thymidylate of the MeG-T base pair. These results provide the first direct evidence for mismatch repair-mediated iterative processing of DNA methylator damage, an effect that may be relevant to damage signaling events triggered by this class of chemotherapeutic agent.

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