During base excision repair, DNA polymerase β fills 1-6-nucleotide gaps processively, reflecting a contribution of both its 8- and 31-kDa domains to DNA binding. Here we report the fidelity of pol β during synthesis to fill gaps of 1, 5, 6, or >300 nucleotides. Error rates during distributive synthesis by recombinant rat and human polymerase (pol) β with a 390-base gap are similar to each other and to previous values with pol β purified from tissues. The base substitution fidelity of human pol β when processively filling a 5-nucleotide gap is similar to that with a 361- nucleotide gap, but 'closely-spaced' substitutions are produced at a rate at least 60-fold higher than for distributive synthesis. Base substitution fidelity when filling a 1-nucleotide gap is higher than when filling a 5- nucleotide gap, suggesting a contribution of the 8-kDa domain to the dNTP binding pocket and/or a difference in base stacking or DNA structure imposed by pol β. Nonetheless, 1-nucleotide gap filling is inaccurate, even generating complex substitution-addition errors. Finally, the single-base deletion error rate during processive synthesis to fill a 6-nucleotide gap is indistinguishable from that of distributive synthesis to fill a 390- nucleotide gap. Thus the mechanism of processivity by pol β does not allow the enzyme to suppress template misalignments.
CITATION STYLE
Osheroff, W. P., Jung, H. K., Beard, W. A., Wilson, S. H., & Kunkel, T. A. (1999). The fidelity of DNA polymerase β during distributive and processive DNA synthesis. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 274(6), 3642–3650. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.274.6.3642
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