Affiliation:
1. Department of Pathology, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-0602
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
, the apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonucleases Apn1 and Apn2 act as alternative pathways for the removal of various 3′-terminal blocking lesions from DNA strand breaks and in the repair of abasic sites, which both result from oxidative DNA damage. Here we demonstrate that Tpp1, a homologue of the 3′ phosphatase domain of polynucleotide kinase, is a third member of this group of redundant 3′ processing enzymes. Unlike Apn1 and Apn2, Tpp1 is specific for the removal of 3′ phosphates at strand breaks and does not possess more general 3′ phosphodiesterase, exonuclease, or AP endonuclease activities. Deletion of
TPP1
in an
apn1 apn2
mutant background dramatically increased the sensitivity of the double mutant to DNA damage caused by H
2
O
2
and bleomycin but not to damage caused by methyl methanesulfonate. The triple mutant was also deficient in the repair of 3′ phosphate lesions left by Tdp1-mediated cleavage of camptothecin-stabilized Top1-DNA covalent complexes. Finally, the
tpp1 apn1 apn2
triple mutation displayed synthetic lethality in combination with
rad52
, possibly implicating postreplication repair in the removal of unrepaired 3′-terminal lesions resulting from endogenous damage. Taken together, these results demonstrate a clear role for the lesion-specific enzyme, Tpp1, in the repair of a subset of DNA strand breaks.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
79 articles.
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