Recombinational and mutagenic repair of psoralen interstrand cross-links in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

被引:29
作者
Greenberg, RB
Alberti, M
Hearst, JE
Chua, MA
Saffran, WA
机构
[1] CUNY Queens Coll, Dept Chem & Biochem, Flushing, NY 11367 USA
[2] Univ Calif Berkeley, Lawrence Berkeley Natl Lab, Dept Chem, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1074/jbc.M103588200
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Psoralen photoreacts with DNA to form interstrand cross-links, which can be repaired by both nonmutagenic nucleotide excision repair and recombinational repair pathways and by mutagenic pathways. In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, psoralen cross-links are processed by nucleotide excision repair to form double-strand breaks (DSBs). In yeast, DSBs are repaired primarily by homologous recombination, predicting that cross-link and DSB repair should induce similar recombination end points. We compared psoralen cross-link, psoralen monoadduct, and DSB repair using plasmid substrates with site-specific lesions and measured the patterns of gene conversion, crossing over, and targeted mutation. Psoralen cross-link induced both recombination and mutations, whereas DSBs induced only recombination, and monoadducts were neither recombinogenic nor mutagenic. Although the cross-link- and DSB-induced patterns of plasmid integration and gene conversion were similar in most respects, they showed opposite asymmetries in their unidirectional conversion tracts: primarily upstream from the damage site for cross-links but downstream for DSBs. Cross-links induced targeted mutations in 5% of the repaired plasmids; all were base substitutions, primarily T --> C transitions. The major pathway of psoralen cross-link repair in yeast is error-free and involves the formation of DSB intermediates followed by homologous recombination. A fraction of the cross-links enter an error-prone pathway, resulting in mutations at the damage site.
引用
收藏
页码:31551 / 31560
页数:10
相关论文
共 58 条
[1]  
AGUILERA A, 1989, GENETICS, V123, P683
[2]   MITOTIC GENE CONVERSION LENGTHS, CO-CONVERSION PATTERNS, AND THE INCIDENCE OF RECIPROCAL RECOMBINATION IN A SACCHAROMYCES-CEREVISIAE PLASMID SYSTEM [J].
AHN, BY ;
LIVINGSTON, DM .
MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY, 1986, 6 (11) :3685-3693
[3]  
ALANI E, 1994, GENETICS, V137, P19
[4]   RECENT ADVANCES IN PSORALEN PHOTOTOXICITY MECHANISM [J].
AVERBECK, D .
PHOTOCHEMISTRY AND PHOTOBIOLOGY, 1989, 50 (06) :859-882
[5]  
Averbeck D, 1998, PHOTOCHEM PHOTOBIOL, V68, P289, DOI 10.1562/0031-8655(1998)068<0289:DPRGIA>2.3.CO
[6]  
2
[7]   Asymmetric recognition of psoralen interstrand crosslinks by the nucleotide excision repair and the error-prone repair pathways [J].
Barre, FX ;
Asseline, U ;
Harel-Bellan, A .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 1999, 286 (05) :1379-1387
[8]   Covalent crosslinks introduced via a triple helix-forming oligonucleotide coupled to psoralen are inefficiently repaired [J].
Barre, FX ;
Giovannangeli, C ;
Hélène, C ;
Harel-Bellan, A .
NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 1999, 27 (03) :743-749
[9]   Analysis of damage tolerance pathways in Saccharomyces cerevisiae:: a requirement for Rev3 DNA polymerase in translesion synthesis [J].
Baynton, K ;
Bresson-Roy, A ;
Fuchs, RPP .
MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY, 1998, 18 (02) :960-966
[10]   Initiation of DNA interstrand cross-link repair in humans: the nucleotide excision repair system makes dual incisions 5' to the cross-linked base and removes a 22- to 28-nucleotide-long damage-free strand [J].
Bessho, T ;
Mu, D ;
Sancar, A .
MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY, 1997, 17 (12) :6822-6830