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Methylation and hydroxymethylation of cytosine alter activity and fidelity of translesion DNA polymerases. / Shilkin, Evgeniy S.; Petrova, Daria V.; Novikova, Anna A. et al.

In: DNA Repair, Vol. 141, 103712, 09.2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Shilkin, ES, Petrova, DV, Novikova, AA, Boldinova, EO, Zharkov, DO & Makarova, AV 2024, 'Methylation and hydroxymethylation of cytosine alter activity and fidelity of translesion DNA polymerases', DNA Repair, vol. 141, 103712. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dnarep.2024.103712

APA

Shilkin, E. S., Petrova, D. V., Novikova, A. A., Boldinova, E. O., Zharkov, D. O., & Makarova, A. V. (2024). Methylation and hydroxymethylation of cytosine alter activity and fidelity of translesion DNA polymerases. DNA Repair, 141, [103712]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dnarep.2024.103712

Vancouver

Shilkin ES, Petrova DV, Novikova AA, Boldinova EO, Zharkov DO, Makarova AV. Methylation and hydroxymethylation of cytosine alter activity and fidelity of translesion DNA polymerases. DNA Repair. 2024 Sept;141:103712. doi: 10.1016/j.dnarep.2024.103712

Author

Shilkin, Evgeniy S. ; Petrova, Daria V. ; Novikova, Anna A. et al. / Methylation and hydroxymethylation of cytosine alter activity and fidelity of translesion DNA polymerases. In: DNA Repair. 2024 ; Vol. 141.

BibTeX

@article{cf38fc74d06d44a69b22b6c5b096d2cd,
title = "Methylation and hydroxymethylation of cytosine alter activity and fidelity of translesion DNA polymerases",
abstract = "Epigenetic cytosine methylation covers most of genomic CpG dinucleotides in human cells. In addition to common deamination-mediated mutagenesis at CpG sites, an alternative deamination-independent pathway associated with DNA polymerase activity was previously described. This mutagenesis is characterized by the TCG→TTG mutational signature and is believed to arise from dAMP misincorporation opposite 5-methylcytosine (mC) or its oxidized derivative 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (hmC) by B-family replicative DNA polymerases with disrupted proofreading 3→5′-exonuclease activity. In addition to being less stable and pro-mutagenic themselves, cytosine modifications also increase the risk of adjacent nucleotides damage, including the formation of 8-oxo-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-oxoG), a well-known mutagenic lesion. The effect of cytosine methylation on error-prone DNA polymerases lacking proofreading activity and involved in repair and DNA translesion synthesis remains unexplored. Here we analyze the efficiency and fidelity of translesion Y-family polymerases (Pol κ, Pol η, Pol ι and REV1) and primase-polymerase PrimPol opposite mC and hmC as well as opposite 8-oxoG adjacent to mC in the TCG context. We demonstrate that epigenetic cytosine modifications suppress Pol ι and REV1 activities and lead to increasing dAMP misincorporation by PrimPol, Pol κ and Pol ι in vitro. Cytosine methylation also increases misincorporation of dAMP opposite the adjacent 8-oxoG by PrimPol, decreases the TLS activity of Pol η opposite the lesion but increases dCMP incorporation opposite 8-oxoG by REV1. Altogether, these data suggest that methylation and hydroxymethylation of cytosine alter activity and fidelity of translesion DNA polymerases. ",
keywords = "5-hydroxymethylcytosine, 5-methylcytosine, 8-oxo-2′-deoxyguanosine, CpG dinucleotides, DNA polymerases",
author = "Shilkin, {Evgeniy S.} and Petrova, {Daria V.} and Novikova, {Anna A.} and Boldinova, {Elizaveta O.} and Zharkov, {Dmitry O.} and Makarova, {Alena V.}",
note = "This work was supported by the Russian Science Foundation grant 22\u201324\u201320156 (ESS).",
year = "2024",
month = sep,
doi = "10.1016/j.dnarep.2024.103712",
language = "English",
volume = "141",
journal = "DNA Repair",
issn = "1568-7864",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Methylation and hydroxymethylation of cytosine alter activity and fidelity of translesion DNA polymerases

AU - Shilkin, Evgeniy S.

AU - Petrova, Daria V.

AU - Novikova, Anna A.

AU - Boldinova, Elizaveta O.

AU - Zharkov, Dmitry O.

AU - Makarova, Alena V.

N1 - This work was supported by the Russian Science Foundation grant 22\u201324\u201320156 (ESS).

PY - 2024/9

Y1 - 2024/9

N2 - Epigenetic cytosine methylation covers most of genomic CpG dinucleotides in human cells. In addition to common deamination-mediated mutagenesis at CpG sites, an alternative deamination-independent pathway associated with DNA polymerase activity was previously described. This mutagenesis is characterized by the TCG→TTG mutational signature and is believed to arise from dAMP misincorporation opposite 5-methylcytosine (mC) or its oxidized derivative 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (hmC) by B-family replicative DNA polymerases with disrupted proofreading 3→5′-exonuclease activity. In addition to being less stable and pro-mutagenic themselves, cytosine modifications also increase the risk of adjacent nucleotides damage, including the formation of 8-oxo-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-oxoG), a well-known mutagenic lesion. The effect of cytosine methylation on error-prone DNA polymerases lacking proofreading activity and involved in repair and DNA translesion synthesis remains unexplored. Here we analyze the efficiency and fidelity of translesion Y-family polymerases (Pol κ, Pol η, Pol ι and REV1) and primase-polymerase PrimPol opposite mC and hmC as well as opposite 8-oxoG adjacent to mC in the TCG context. We demonstrate that epigenetic cytosine modifications suppress Pol ι and REV1 activities and lead to increasing dAMP misincorporation by PrimPol, Pol κ and Pol ι in vitro. Cytosine methylation also increases misincorporation of dAMP opposite the adjacent 8-oxoG by PrimPol, decreases the TLS activity of Pol η opposite the lesion but increases dCMP incorporation opposite 8-oxoG by REV1. Altogether, these data suggest that methylation and hydroxymethylation of cytosine alter activity and fidelity of translesion DNA polymerases.

AB - Epigenetic cytosine methylation covers most of genomic CpG dinucleotides in human cells. In addition to common deamination-mediated mutagenesis at CpG sites, an alternative deamination-independent pathway associated with DNA polymerase activity was previously described. This mutagenesis is characterized by the TCG→TTG mutational signature and is believed to arise from dAMP misincorporation opposite 5-methylcytosine (mC) or its oxidized derivative 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (hmC) by B-family replicative DNA polymerases with disrupted proofreading 3→5′-exonuclease activity. In addition to being less stable and pro-mutagenic themselves, cytosine modifications also increase the risk of adjacent nucleotides damage, including the formation of 8-oxo-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-oxoG), a well-known mutagenic lesion. The effect of cytosine methylation on error-prone DNA polymerases lacking proofreading activity and involved in repair and DNA translesion synthesis remains unexplored. Here we analyze the efficiency and fidelity of translesion Y-family polymerases (Pol κ, Pol η, Pol ι and REV1) and primase-polymerase PrimPol opposite mC and hmC as well as opposite 8-oxoG adjacent to mC in the TCG context. We demonstrate that epigenetic cytosine modifications suppress Pol ι and REV1 activities and lead to increasing dAMP misincorporation by PrimPol, Pol κ and Pol ι in vitro. Cytosine methylation also increases misincorporation of dAMP opposite the adjacent 8-oxoG by PrimPol, decreases the TLS activity of Pol η opposite the lesion but increases dCMP incorporation opposite 8-oxoG by REV1. Altogether, these data suggest that methylation and hydroxymethylation of cytosine alter activity and fidelity of translesion DNA polymerases.

KW - 5-hydroxymethylcytosine

KW - 5-methylcytosine

KW - 8-oxo-2′-deoxyguanosine

KW - CpG dinucleotides

KW - DNA polymerases

UR - https://www.scopus.com/record/display.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85197252968&origin=inward&txGid=975b55c859ec9ed6f80daf2ef0a92e0f

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/eea65436-7369-334d-a5ba-9e2f0849977c/

U2 - 10.1016/j.dnarep.2024.103712

DO - 10.1016/j.dnarep.2024.103712

M3 - Article

C2 - 38959714

VL - 141

JO - DNA Repair

JF - DNA Repair

SN - 1568-7864

M1 - 103712

ER -

ID: 60849099