Silencing of human DNA polymerase λ causes replication stress and is synthetically lethal with an impaired S phase checkpoint.
Zucca E, Bertoletti F, Wimmer U, Ferrari E, Mazzini G, Khoronenkova SV, Grosse N, van Loon B, Dianov GL, Hübscher U, Maga G
Nucleic acids research (2012)
Abstract:
Human DNA polymerase (pol) λ functions in base excision repair and non-homologous end joining. We have previously shown that DNA pol λ is involved in accurate bypass of the two frequent oxidative lesions, 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine and 1,2-dihydro-2-oxoadenine during the S phase. However, nothing is known so far about the relationship of DNA pol λ with the S phase DNA damage response checkpoint. Here, we show that a knockdown of DNA pol λ, but not of its close homologue DNA pol β, results in replication fork stress and activates the S phase checkpoint, slowing S phase progression in different human cancer cell lines. We furthermore show that DNA pol λ protects cells from oxidative DNA damage and also functions in rescuing stalled replication forks. Its absence becomes lethal for a cell when a functional checkpoint is missing, suggesting a DNA synthesis deficiency. Our results provide the first evidence, to our knowledge, that DNA pol λ is required for cell cycle progression and is functionally connected to the S phase DNA damage response machinery in cancer cells.
Polymerases:
Topics:
Status:
new | topics/pols set | partial results | complete | validated |
Results:
No results available for this paper.