Altered nucleotide misinsertion fidelity associated with poliota-dependent replication at the end of a DNA template.

Abstract:

A hallmark of human DNA polymerase iota (poliota) is the asymmetric ...
A hallmark of human DNA polymerase iota (poliota) is the asymmetric fidelity of replication at template A and T when the enzyme extends primers annealed to a single-stranded template. Here, we report on the efficiency and accuracy of poliota-dependent replication at a nick, a gap, the very end of a template and from a mispaired primer. Poliota cannot initiate synthesis on a nicked DNA substrate, but fills short gaps efficiently. Surprisingly, poliota's ability to blunt-end a 1 bp recessed terminus is dependent upon the template nucleotide encountered and is highly erroneous. At template G, both C and T are inserted with roughly equal efficiency, whilst at template C, C and A are misinserted 8- and 3-fold more often than the correct base, G. Using substrates containing mispaired primer termini, we show that poliota can extend all 12 mispairs, but with differing efficiencies. Poliota can also extend a tandem mispair, especially when it is located within a short gap. The enzymatic properties of poliota appear consistent with that of a somatic hypermutase and suggest that poliota may be one of the low-fidelity DNA polymerases hypothesized to participate in the hypermutation of immunoglobulin variable genes in vivo.

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