Mammalian abasic site base excision repair

Srivastava, Deepak K. ; Vande Berg, Brian J. ; Prasad, Rajendra ; Molina, James T. ; Beard, William A. ; Tomkinson, Alan E. ; Wilson, Samuel H. (1998) Mammalian abasic site base excision repair Journal of Biological Chemistry, 273 . pp. 21203-21209. ISSN 0021-9258

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Official URL: http://www.jbc.org/content/273/33/21203.short

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.273.33.21203

Abstract

Base excision repair (BER) is one of the cellular defense mechanisms repairing damage to nucleoside 5'-monophosphate residues in genomic DNA. This repair pathway is initiated by spontaneous or enzymatic N-glycosidic bond cleavage creating an abasic or apurinic-apyrimidinic (AP) site in double-stranded DNA. Class II AP endonuclease, deoxyribonucleotide phosphate (dRP) lyase, DNA synthesis, and DNA ligase activities complete repair of the AP site. In mammalian cell nuclear extract, BER can be mediated by a macromolecular complex containing DNA polymerase β (β-pol) and DNA ligase I. These two enzymes are capable of contributing the latter three of the four BER enzymatic activities. In the present study, we found that AP site BER can be reconstituted in vitro using the following purified human proteins: AP endonuclease, β-pol, and DNA ligase I. Examination of the individual enzymatic steps in BER allowed us to identify an ordered reaction pathway: subsequent to 5' "nicking"of the AP site-containing DNA strand by AP endonuclease, β-pol performs DNA synthesisprior to removal of the 5'-dRP moiety in the gap. Removal of the dRP flap is strictly required for DNA ligase I to seal the resulting nick. Additionally, the catalytic rate of the reconstituted BER system and the individual enzymatic activities was measured. The reconstituted BER system performs repair of AP site DNA at a rate that is slower than the respective rates of AP endonuclease, DNA synthesis, and ligation, suggesting that these steps are not rate-determining in the overall reconstituted BER system. Instead, the rate-limiting step in the reconstituted system was found to be removal of dRP (i.e. dRP lyase), catalyzed by the amino-terminal domain of β-pol. This work is the first to measure the rate of BER in anin vitro reaction. The potential significance of the dRP-containing intermediate in the regulation of BER is discussed.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
ID Code:34017
Deposited On:04 Jul 2012 03:41
Last Modified:04 Jul 2012 03:41

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