DNA mismatch repair protects the genome from oxygen-induced replicative mutagenesis

Author:

Lózsa Rita1,Németh Eszter1,Gervai Judit Z1,Márkus Bence G234ORCID,Kollarics Sándor34,Gyüre Zsolt156,Tóth Judit17ORCID,Simon Ferenc34,Szüts Dávid18ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Enzymology, Research Centre for Natural Sciences , H-1117  Budapest , Hungary

2. Stavropoulos Center for Complex Quantum Matter, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame , IN 46556, USA

3. Institute for Solid State Physics and Optics, Wigner Research Centre for Physics , H-1525  Budapest , Hungary

4. Department of Physics, Institute of Physics, Budapest University of Technology and Economics , H-1111 Budapest , Hungary

5. Doctoral School of Molecular Medicine, Semmelweis University , H-1085 Budapest , Hungary

6. Turbine Simulated Cell Technologies , H-1027  Budapest , Hungary

7. Department of Applied Biotechnology and Food Science, Budapest University of Technology and Economics , H-1111 Budapest , Hungary

8. National Laboratory for Drug Research and Development , H-1117  Budapest , Hungary

Abstract

Abstract DNA mismatch repair (MMR) corrects mismatched DNA bases arising from multiple sources including polymerase errors and base damage. By detecting spontaneous mutagenesis using whole genome sequencing of cultured MMR deficient human cell lines, we show that a primary role of MMR is the repair of oxygen-induced mismatches. We found an approximately twofold higher mutation rate in MSH6 deficient DLD-1 cells or MHL1 deficient HCT116 cells exposed to atmospheric conditions as opposed to mild hypoxia, which correlated with oxidant levels measured using electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. The oxygen-induced mutations were dominated by T to C base substitutions and single T deletions found primarily on the lagging strand. A broad sequence context preference, dependence on replication timing and a lack of transcriptional strand bias further suggested that oxygen-induced mutations arise from polymerase errors rather than oxidative base damage. We defined separate low and high oxygen–specific MMR deficiency mutation signatures common to the two cell lines and showed that the effect of oxygen is observable in MMR deficient cancer genomes, where it best correlates with the contribution of mutation signature SBS21. Our results imply that MMR corrects oxygen-induced genomic mismatches introduced by a replicative process in proliferating cells.

Funder

NKFIH

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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