4.8 Article

Base excision repair intermediates are mutagenic in mammalian cells

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 33, Issue 14, Pages 4404-4411

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gki749

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Base excision repair (BER) is the main pathway for repair of DNA damage in mammalian cells. This pathway leads to the formation of DNA repair intermediates which, if still unsolved, cause cell lethality and mutagenesis. To characterize mutations induced by BER intermediates in mammalian cells, an SV-40 derived shuttle vector was constructed carrying a site-specific lesion within the recognition sequence of a restriction endonuclease. The mutation spectra of abasic (AP) sites, 5'-deoxyribose-5-phosphate (5'dRp) and 3'-[2,3-didehydro-2,3-dideoxy-ribose] (3'ddR5p) single-strand breaks (ssb) in mammalian cells was analysed by RFLP/PCR and mutation frequency was estimated by quantitative PCR. Point mutations were the predominant events occurring at all BER intermediates. The AP site-induced mutation spectrum supports evidence for the 'A-rule' and is also consistent with the use of the 5' neighbouring base to instruct nucleotide incorporation (5'-rule). Preferential adenine insertion was also observed after in vivo replication of 5'dRp or 3'ddR5p ssb. We provide original evidence that not only the abasic site but also its derivatives 'faceless' BER intermediates are mutagenic, with a similar mutation frequency, in mammalian cells. Our findings support the hypothesis that unattended BER intermediates could be a constant threat for genome integrity as well as a spontaneous source of mutations.

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