Woodside Adrienne M, Guengerich F Peter
Department of Biochemistry and Center in Molecular Toxicology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee 37232-0146, USA.
Biochemistry. 2002 Jan 22;41(3):1039-50. doi: 10.1021/bi011496f.
Many DNA-carcinogen adducts not only compromise polymerase fidelity but also inhibit replication. This polymerase stalling or "idling" may then contribute to misincorporations if the polymerase is not completely blocked, such as the G:C to A:T mutations caused by O(6)-substituted guanines. Kinetic experiments were conducted to address the mechanism of polymerase stalling of T7 DNA polymerase exo(-) (T7(-)) and HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT) during replication of primer/template DNA containing guanine (G), O(6)-methylguanine (O(6)-MeG), or O(6)-benzylguanine (O(6)-BzG), thus, extending work presented in the preceding paper in this issue [Woodside, A. M., and Guengerich, F. P. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 1027-1038]. Substitution of a thio-substituted dNTP did not appear to strongly affect the chemistry of phosphodiester bond formation because the rate decreased <3-fold. Although the for "productive" binding increased for both T7(-) and RT as a function of the O6 substituent, fluorescence titrations indicate that the ground-state DNA binding was not affected for O(6)-alkylG substrates. DNA dissociation rates (k(off)) did not differ between unmodified and adduct-containing substrates. The presence of the correct nucleotide stabilized EDNA interactions, resulting in a 10-fold slower k(off). Pre-steady-state experiments done in the presence of trap DNA revealed two rates of incorporation at the adduct, differing approximately 100-fold. Kinetic modeling fit the experimentally determined data (i.e., low burst amplitude at the adduct) only if the mechanism included an inactive EDNA*dNTP complex. In summary, several lines of evidence indicate that the existence of a nonproductive polymerase complex best explains polymerase kinetics at DNA-carcinogen adducts, specifically O(6)-alkylguanine.
许多DNA致癌物加合物不仅会损害聚合酶的保真度,还会抑制复制。如果聚合酶没有被完全阻断,这种聚合酶停滞或“闲置”可能会导致错误掺入,例如由O(6)-取代鸟嘌呤引起的G:C到A:T突变。进行了动力学实验,以研究T7 DNA聚合酶外切酶(-)(T7(-))和HIV-1逆转录酶(RT)在含有鸟嘌呤(G)、O(6)-甲基鸟嘌呤(O(6)-MeG)或O(6)-苄基鸟嘌呤(O(6)-BzG)的引物/模板DNA复制过程中聚合酶停滞的机制,从而扩展了本期前一篇论文[Woodside, A. M., and Guengerich, F. P. (2002) Biochemistry 41, 1027 - 1038]中提出的工作。硫代取代的dNTP的取代似乎并没有强烈影响磷酸二酯键形成的化学过程,因为速率降低了不到3倍。尽管对于T7(-)和RT,“有效”结合的解离常数随着O6取代基的增加而增加,但荧光滴定表明,对于O(6)-烷基G底物,基态DNA结合不受影响。未修饰底物和含加合物底物之间的DNA解离速率(k(off))没有差异。正确核苷酸的存在稳定了EDNA相互作用,导致k(off)减慢10倍。在存在捕获DNA的情况下进行的预稳态实验揭示了加合物处的两种掺入速率,相差约100倍。动力学建模仅在机制包括无活性的EDNA*dNTP复合物时才符合实验确定的数据(即加合物处的低爆发幅度)。总之,几条证据表明,非生产性聚合酶复合物的存在最能解释DNA致癌物加合物,特别是O(6)-烷基鸟嘌呤处的聚合酶动力学。