Contributions of replicative and translesion DNA polymerases to mutagenic bypass of canonical and atypical UV photoproducts

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Abstract

UV exposure induces a mutation signature of C > T substitutions at dipyrimidines in skin cancers. We recently identified additional UV-induced AC > TT and A > T substitutions that could respectively cause BRAF V600K and V600E oncogenic mutations. The mutagenic bypass mechanism past these atypical lesions, however, is unknown. Here, we whole genome sequenced UV-irradiated yeast and used reversion reporters to delineate the roles of replicative and translesion DNA polymerases in mutagenic bypass of UV-lesions. Our data indicates that yeast DNA polymerase eta (pol η) has varied impact on UV-induced mutations: protecting against C > T substitutions, promoting T > C and AC > TT substitutions, and not impacting A > T substitutions. Surprisingly, deletion rad30Δ increased novel UV-induced C > A substitutions at CA dinucleotides. In contrast, DNA polymerases zeta (pol ζ) and epsilon (pol ε) participated in AC > TT and A > T mutations. These results uncover lesion-specific accurate and mutagenic bypass of UV lesions, which likely contribute to key driver mutations in melanoma.

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Vandenberg, B. N., Laughery, M. F., Cordero, C., Plummer, D., Mitchell, D., Kreyenhagen, J., … Roberts, S. A. (2023). Contributions of replicative and translesion DNA polymerases to mutagenic bypass of canonical and atypical UV photoproducts. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-38255-5

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