Novel mechanisms for the removal of strong replication-blocking HMCES- and thiazolidine-DNA adducts in humans

Author:

Sugimoto Yohei12,Masuda Yuji12ORCID,Iwai Shigenori3,Miyake Yumi4,Kanao Rie12,Masutani Chikahide12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Genome Dynamics, Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, Nagoya University, Furo-cho, Chikusa-ku , Nagoya 464-8601, Japan

2. Department of Molecular Pharmaco-Biology, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, 65 Tsurumai-cho, Showa-ku , Nagoya 466-8550, Japan

3. Graduate School of Engineering Science, Osaka University, 1-3 Machikaneyama , Toyonaka , Osaka 560-8531, Japan

4. Forefront Research Center, Graduate School of Science, Osaka University, 1-1 Machikaneyama , Toyonaka , Osaka 560-0043, Japan

Abstract

Abstract Apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites are DNA lesions created under normal growth conditions that result in cytotoxicity, replication-blocks, and mutations. AP sites are susceptible to β-elimination and are liable to be converted to DNA strand breaks. HMCES (5-hydroxymethylcytosine binding, ES cell specific) protein interacts with AP sites in single stranded (ss) DNA exposed at DNA replication forks to generate a stable thiazolidine protein-DNA crosslink and protect cells against AP site toxicity. The crosslinked HMCES is resolved by proteasome-mediated degradation; however, it is unclear how HMCES-crosslinked ssDNA and the resulting proteasome-degraded HMCES adducts are processed and repaired. Here, we describe methods for the preparation of thiazolidine adduct-containing oligonucleotides and determination of their structure. We demonstrate that the HMCES-crosslink is a strong replication blocking adduct and that protease-digested HMCES adducts block DNA replication to a similar extent as AP sites. Moreover, we show that the human AP endonuclease APE1 incises DNA 5′ to the protease-digested HMCES adduct. Interestingly, while HMCES-ssDNA crosslinks are stable, the crosslink is reversed upon the formation of dsDNA, possibly due to a catalytic reverse reaction. Our results shed new light on damage tolerance and repair pathways for HMCES-DNA crosslinks in human cells.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

DAIKO FOUNDATION

Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology

Nagoya University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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