» Articles » PMID: 12509232

Excision of 8-methylguanine Site-specifically Incorporated into Oligonucleotide Substrates by the AlkA Protein of Escherichia Coli

Overview
Publisher Elsevier
Date 2003 Jan 2
PMID 12509232
Citations 4
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

8-Methyl-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-medGuo) has been shown to be a major stable alkylation product of 2'-deoxyguanosine induced by methyl radical attack on DNA. Moreover, by using primer extension assays, the latter DNA modification has recently been reported to be a miscoding lesion by generating G to C and G to T transversions and deletions in vitro. However, no data have been reported up to now, concerning the processing of this C8-alkylated nucleoside by the DNA repair machinery. Therefore, we have investigated the capability of excision of 8-methylguanine (8-meGua) site specifically incorporated into oligonucleotide substrates by several bacterial, yeast and mammalian DNA N-glycosylases. The results show that the 3-methyladenine (3-meAde) DNA glycosylase II (AlkA protein) from Escherichia coli is the only DNA N-glycosylase tested able to remove 8-meGua from double-stranded DNA fragments. Moreover, the activity of AlkA for 8-meGua varied markedly depending on the opposite base in DNA, being the highest with Adenine and Thymine and the lowest with Cytosine and Guanine. The removal of 8-meGua by AlkA protein was compared to that of 7-methylguanine (7-meGua) and hypoxanthine (Hx). The rank of damage as a substrate for AlkA being 7-meGua>8-meGua>Hx. In contrast, the human 3-meAde DNA N-glycosylase (Mpg) is not able to release 8-meGua paired with any of the four DNA bases. We also show that, DNA N-glycosylases involved in the removal of oxidative damage, such as Fpg or Nth proteins from E. coli, Ntg1, Ntg2 or Ogg1 proteins of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, or human Ogg1 do not release 8-meGua placed opposite any of the four DNA bases. Furthermore, HeLa and Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell free protein extracts do not show any cleavage activity at 8-meGua paired with adenine or cytosine, which suggests the absence of base excision repair (BER) of this lesion in mammalian cells.

Citing Articles

Ribonucleotide incorporation by human DNA polymerase η impacts translesion synthesis and RNase H2 activity.

Mentegari E, Crespan E, Bavagnoli L, Kissova M, Bertoletti F, Sabbioneda S Nucleic Acids Res. 2016; 45(5):2600-2614.

PMID: 27994034 PMC: 5389505. DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkw1275.


The Escherichia coli alkylation response protein AidB is a redox partner of flavodoxin and binds RNA and acyl carrier protein.

Mulrooney S, Howard M, Hausinger R Arch Biochem Biophys. 2011; 513(2):81-6.

PMID: 21782785 PMC: 3166795. DOI: 10.1016/j.abb.2011.07.004.


Chemical biology of mutagenesis and DNA repair: cellular responses to DNA alkylation.

Shrivastav N, Li D, Essigmann J Carcinogenesis. 2009; 31(1):59-70.

PMID: 19875697 PMC: 2802671. DOI: 10.1093/carcin/bgp262.


Engineering the quadruplex fold: nucleoside conformation determines both folding topology and molecularity in guanine quadruplexes.

Tang C, Shafer R J Am Chem Soc. 2006; 128(17):5966-73.

PMID: 16637665 PMC: 2597528. DOI: 10.1021/ja0603958.