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Volume 17, Number 22,
Issue of November 15, 1997
DNA Replication and Postreplication Mismatch Repair in Cell-Free
Extracts from Cultured Human Neuroblastoma and Fibroblast Cells
Pascale David1,
Edna Efrati1,
Georges Tocco1,
Sharon Wald Krauss2, and
Myron F. Goodman1
1 Department of Biological Sciences, Hedco Molecular
Biology Laboratories, University of Southern California, Los Angeles,
California 90089-1340, and 2 Department of Biophysics and
Biomolecular Structure, University of California, Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
DNA synthesis and postreplication mismatch repair were measured
in vitro using cell-free extracts from cultured human
SY5Y neuroblastoma and WI38 fibroblast cells in different growth
states. All extracts, including differentiated SY5Y and quiescent WI38 fibroblasts, catalyzed SV40 origin-dependent DNA synthesis, totally dependent on SV40 T-antigen. Thus, although differentiated
neuroblastoma and quiescent fibroblasts cells were essentially
nondividing, their extracts were competent for DNA replication using
DNA polymerases
,
, and possibly
, with proliferating cell
nuclear antigen. Nonreplicative DNA synthesis and lesion bypass by
either
- or
-polymerases were detected independently in extracts
using primed or gapped single-stranded DNA templates. Long-patch
postreplication mismatch repair was measured for the first time in
neuroblastoma cell-free extracts. Extracts from subconfluent and
high-density SY5Y cells catalyzed postreplication mismatch repair with
efficiencies comparable to those of HeLa cell extracts. No significant
differences were observed in repair between SY5Y differentiated and
undifferentiated cell extracts. Mismatch repair efficiencies were
threefold lower in extracts from subconfluent WI38 cells, and repair in
WI38 quiescent cells was fourfold less than in subconfluent cells,
suggesting that mismatch repair may be regulated. The spectrum of
mismatch repair in SY5Y extracts closely resembled the mismatch removal specificities of HeLa extracts: T · G and G · G mismatches were repaired most efficiently; C · A, A · A, A · G and a
five-base loop were repaired with intermediate efficiency; repair of
G · A, C · C, and T · T mismatches was extremely
inefficient.
Key words:
DNA replication;
mismatch repair;
abasic lesion bypass;
SY5Y neuroblastoma;
WI38 fibroblasts;
human cell-free extracts;
differentiation;
Pol
;
Pol
INTRODUCTION
DNA constantly undergoes structural
modifications in vivo, caused by exogenous and endogenous
sources triggering DNA repair. Base excision repair (BER) of single
nucleotide (nt) gaps eliminates apurinic and apyrimidinic (abasic)
sites resulting from spontaneous loss of bases and corrects T · G
mispairs caused by deamination of methylated cytosine (Bestor and
Coxon, 1993
; Lindahl, 1993
). Nucleotide excision repair (NER) acts to
remove UV damage, generating patches of 12 nt in prokaryotes and 29 nt
in eukaryotes (Sancar, 1996
). Postreplication mismatch repair (MMR), a
long-patch nucleotide excision repair pathway, is required to maintain
genetic integrity in actively dividing cells. In contrast to BER, MMR
can correct a wide variety of mismatched base pairs and small unpaired
loops requiring excision and resynthesis of hundreds to perhaps
thousands of nucleotides and thus requires coordinated action of
mismatch binding proteins, endonucleases and exonucleases, ligases, and DNA polymerases (Kolodner, 1996
; Modrich and Lahue, 1996
). MMR deficiencies in prokaryotes produce strong mutator phenotypes (Lu et
al., 1983
), and defective MMR may be the primary cause of pathogenicity
in Escherichia coli and Salmonella strains
(LeClerc et al., 1997
). In eukaryotes, defective MMR is responsible for a wide spectrum of cancers, including a hereditary form of colon cancer
(Leach et al., 1993
; Bronner et al., 1994
).
Mutations occurring in nondividing cells may also have important
biological consequences. Frameshifts were found in nondividing E. coli (Foster, 1993
) and recently in mRNA from Brattleboro rat neuronal cells (Evans et al., 1994
) and in proteins in human brain neurons (Evans et al., 1996
). The appearance of frameshifts and other
mutations in nondividing cells implies a capacity for DNA synthesis,
perhaps requiring MMR to reduce errors. MMR proteins can bind to
natural base mispairs as well as to UV and chemically induced DNA
lesions (Duckett et al., 1996
), suggesting that MMR may not be
restricted to repairing DNA polymerase-catalyzed errors.
Studies on DNA replication and repair activities in nondividing cell
populations such as brain are complicated by issues of quantity and
heterogeneity of cell types in a tissue. In this paper, we investigate
DNA synthesis and MMR in vitro using two different cultured
cell systems, SY5Y neuroblastoma cells and WI38 fibroblasts, in which
essentially homogeneous cell populations can be uniformly induced to
slow their growth rates or even to stop dividing. SY5Y, a subclone of
the human neuroblastoma cell line SK-N-SH, is a nearly diploid cell
population that undergoes terminal differentiation when treated with
agents such as retinoic acid (Sidell et al., 1983
), nerve growth factor
(Perez-Polo et al., 1979
; LoPresti et al., 1992
),
12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) (Pahlman et al.,
1990
), or staurosporine (Shea and Beermann, 1991
; Jalava et al., 1993
).
WI38 cells are normal diploid human fibroblasts with a defined
replicative lifespan in culture (Hayflick and Moorhead, 1961
; Hayflick,
1965
). After SV40 transformation, WI38 human fibroblasts cells become
immortal. Each of these cell systems allows us to analyze
origin-dependent DNA replication, abasic lesion bypass, and mismatch
repair relative to cellular proliferative state.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Nucleotides. Nonradioactive nucleotides were
purchased from Pharmacia (Piscataway, NJ). [
-32P]dATP
was purchased from ICN Radiochemicals (Costa Mesa, CA).
DNA substrates. The plasmid DNA used for replication
reactions was pSV011, which contains the SV40 origin of replication
(200 bp fragment) from HindIII to SphI
(nucleotides 5171-128) in a pUC18 plasmid and is 2.9 kb long
(Tsurimoto et al., 1989
)
For studies of insertion opposite an abasic site, 42 mer DNA templates
with and without a tetrahydrofuran abasic lesion (Eritja et al., 1987
)
and various primers were synthesized on an Applied Biosystems (Foster
City, CA) 392 DNA/RNA synthesizer.
For mismatch repair studies M13mp2 mutants were a gift from Dr. T. Kunkel (National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Research
Triangle Park, NC). M13mp2 single-stranded (+) DNA and RFI DNA were
propagated in E. coli CSH50 and isolated. A double-stranded M13mp2 molecule containing a defined mispair, and a nick on the (
)
strand at a unique AvaII site was prepared according to the methods of Kunkel and Soni (1988)
and Thomas et al., (1991)
.
Bacterial strains. Strains CSH 50 and NR 9162 were kindly
provided by Dr. T. Kunkel (National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences).
Cell lines. HeLa S-3 cells, human cervical carcinoma cells,
were obtained from the Cell Culture Core Facility at the Norris Cancer
Hospital and Research Institute (Los Angeles, CA). SY5Y human
neuroblastoma cells were a gift from Dr. C. E. Finch (Department of Gerontology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA).
WI38 cells (CCl 75; diploid human fetal lung fibroblasts) and WI38-SV40
cells (CCL 75.1; SV40-transformed WI38 fibroblasts) were purchased from
the American Type Culture Collection (Rockville, MD).
Cell culture conditions and preparation of cell-free
extracts. All cultures were maintained at 37°C in a humidified
5% CO2 atmosphere. HeLa S-3 cells were grown as spinner
cultures in S-MEM (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) with 10% fetal calf serum.
The cells were harvested by centrifugation in the upper part of their
log phase growth. WI38 cells and SV40-transformed WI38 cells were grown in DMEM (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD) containing 10% fetal calf serum (HyClone, Logan, UT), 4 mM glutamine, and
antibiotics (50 U/ml penicillin and 50 µg/ml streptomycin). Human
fibroblasts were used at passages 20-24 at which >90% were capable
of DNA synthesis. "Proliferating" fibroblast cultures were actively
dividing and subconfluent. "Quiescent," nondividing, fibroblasts
were harvested 72-96 hr after having been shifted from medium
containing 10% serum into medium containing 0.2% serum.
SY5Y cells were cultured in RPMI 1640 supplemented with 10% fetal calf
serum (Gemini Bioproducts, Calabassas, CA) and 10 µg/ml penicillin-streptomycin (Sigma). SY5Y cells were counted by trypan blue exclusion and plated at a density of 0.3 × 105 cells/cm2. Undifferentiated
cells were harvested at a density of 1 × 105
cells/cm2 ("subconfluent" cells) or 2.5 × 105 cells/cm2 ("high
density"). To induce differentiation, SY5Y cells were exposed to 10 µM retinoic acid (Sigma) in growth medium, and the medium
was changed every other day for 9 d. Differentiated cells had a
diminished growth rate as well as morphological changes, notably
extended neuritic processes and large growth cones.
HeLa and SY5Y cell-free extracts were prepared according to published
protocols (Wold et al., 1989
) with minor modifications. For
differentiated SY5Y cell extracts, retinoic acid-treated cells were
used. WI38 cell-free extracts were prepared as described (Krauss et
al., 1997
).
In vitro SV40 DNA replication. Replication reactions (50 µl) contained 30 mM HEPES, pH 7.8, 7 mM
MgCl2, 200 µM each CTP, GTP, and UTP,
4 mM ATP, 100 µM each dCTP, dGTP, dTTP, and
[
-32P]dATP (4000 cpm/pmol), 40 mM creatine
phosphate, 100 µg/ml creatine phosphokinase, 600 ng of substrate DNA,
1 µg of SV40 large T-antigen (Chimerx, Milwaukee, WI), and the amount
of extract protein indicated. Reactions without T-antigen were used as
negative controls. After incubation at 37°C for different periods,
reactions were quenched by adding an equal volume of "stop
solution" (2% SDS, 2 mg/ml proteinase K, and 50 mM EDTA)
and further incubation for 30-60 min at 37°C. Reaction products were
purified by extraction with phenol-chloroform-isoamyl alcohol
followed by ethanol precipitation. The DNA was resuspended in TE (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, and 1 mM EDTA) and
separated on a 1% agarose gel. Aliquots from the various samples were
treated with DpnI (New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA).
Restriction digests (20 µl) containing >200 ng of DNA and 20 units
of DpnI were incubated for 30 min at 37°C. Dried gels were
analyzed using a PhosphorImager (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA).
Primer extension and bypass of abasic lesions. 5
-End
labeling of primers with 32P was performed as described
previously by Efrati et al. (1997)
. Primers were annealed to 42 mer
templates with or without a site-directed abasic lesion
(1,4-anhydro-2-deoxy-D-ribitol). When assaying for polymerase
(Pol
) activity in the extracts, primer extension reactions were performed with no NaCl present and a 15 mer primer annealed to the template. When assaying polymerase
(Pol
)
activity, the reaction buffer contained 100 mM NaCl (see
below), and to the primer template used with Pol
conditions another
downstream 22 mer 5
-phosphorylated oligonucleotide was annealed
forming a 5 base gap. The 5
-phosphate group as well as a gap size of <6 bases are required for processive behavior by Pol
(Singhal and
Wilson, 1993
). Reactions were performed by mixing equal volumes (5 µl) of annealed primer template and deoxyribonucleotide in Pol
reaction buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 10 mM
MgCl2, 0.2 mg/ml bovine serum albumin, and 1 mM
-mercaptoethanol) or Pol
reaction buffer (35 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 6.7 mM
MgCl2, 100 mM NaCl, 0.2 mg/ml bovine
serum albumin, 1.5 mM dithiothreitol, and 2% glycerol).
The final concentration of primer template was 3.8 nM. All
four deoxynucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs) were provided at a final
concentration of 100 µM. The indicated amount of protein (extract) was added, and reactions were incubated at 37°C for 10-45
min at which time they were terminated by adding two volumes of 20 mM EDTA and 95% formamide before heating to 100°C for 5 min. Samples were loaded onto 18% polyacrylamide gels, and the extended single-stranded DNA primers were separated according to length
by electrophoresis. Gel bands were analyzed using a PhosphorImager
(Molecular Dynamics).
Mismatch repair assay. A circular DNA M13mp2 substate
contained a mismatch located at a single site in a lacZ
reporter gene (Thomas et al., 1991
) and a site-specific nick, at a
unique AvaII restriction site, in the (
) strand at
position
264, where position +1 is the first transcribed nucleotide
of the LacZ gene. Thus, the continuous strand is the (+) strand viral
DNA, whereas the discontinuous strand is derived from the (
) strand
of AvaII-linearized RF DNA. Reactions (25 µl) contained 30 mM HEPES, pH 7.8, 7 mM MgCl2, 200 µM each CTP, GTP, and UTP,
4 mM ATP, 100 µM each dCTP, dATP, dGTP, and
dTTP, 40 mM creatine phosphate, pH 7.8, 100 µg/ml creatine phosphokinase, 15 mM sodium phosphate, pH 7.5, 1 fmol (5 ng) of substrate DNA, and the amount of extract protein
indicated. Reactions were incubated for 30 min at 37°C. The reaction
was terminated by the addition of an equal volume of stop solution (2%
SDS, 2 mg/ml proteinase K, and 50 mM EDTA) and further
incubation at 37°C for 30 min. The substrate DNA was recovered,
purified, transfected into MMR-defective E. coli strain NR
9162 (mutS) by electroporation, and plated to score plaques
as described (Kunkel and Soni, 1988
; Thomas et al., 1991
). Taking
G · G88 as an example, repair of the (
) strand
preserves a TGA codon in the (+) strand, giving rise to a white plaque
phenotype; repair of the (+) strand changes the codon to TCA, yielding
a blue plaque phenotype (Thomas et al., 1991
). Importantly, mixed
bursts represent unrepaired molecules. Thus, a decrease in the
population of mixed burst plaques is a measure of overall repair
efficiency (Thomas et al., 1991
). G · G-specific repair of the
nicked strand is observed as an increased number of white plaques and
decrease in the number of both mixed and blue plaques (Thomas et al.,
1991
). Total repair efficiency is calculated as 100 × (1
the ratio of percentages of mixed bursts from extract-treated and
untreated samples).
RESULTS
SV40 origin-dependent DNA replication in neuroblastoma and
fibroblast extracts
We investigated the capacity of cell-free extracts from SY5Y
neuroblastoma cells and WI38 fibroblasts to initiate DNA synthesis from
an SV40 origin of replication on a covalently closed, double-stranded plasmid, pSV011 (Fig. 1). In this assay
system, DNA replication by HeLa cell-free extracts is
T-antigen-dependent and requires the presence of the origin-bearing
plasmid. The DNA products are predominantly RF II (nicked,
double-stranded circles) along with a series of covalently closed
topoisomers running between the RF II and RF I marker DNA, consistent
with product DNA patterns reported previously (Wobbe et al., 1985
; Wold
et al., 1989
; Waga et al., 1994
). To verify that semiconservative
replication was occurring, the product DNA was treated with
Dpn1, which only cuts fully methylated 5
-GATC sequences. As
expected, hemimethylated or nonmethylated product DNAs resulting from
semiconservative replication were resistant to cleavage (data not
shown).
Fig. 1.
Origin-dependent replication using cell-free
extracts from human fibroblasts and SY5Y neuroblastoma cells. DNA
synthesis was performed as described in Materials and Methods (4 hr,
37°C) in the presence or absence of T-antigen. DNA was purified and
subjected to electrophoresis in a 1% agarose gel, followed by ethidium
bromide staining (0.2 mg/ml) and autoradiography. DNA standards were
run in adjacent lanes. The positions of the different forms of
replicated DNA are indicated at the left. HeLa extract
was used as a positive control for replication that was both Tag- and
plasmid-dependent. To verify that semiconservative replication was
occurring, the product DNA was treated with DpnI, which
only cuts fully methylated 5
-GATC sequences. Hemimethylated product
DNAs resulting from semiconservative replication, dependent on the
presence of T-antigen in the reaction, were refractory to cleavage
(data not shown). Extract protein concentration in all the reactions
involving WI38 cells was 2 mg/ml, in reactions with SY5Y was 1 mg/ml,
and in reactions with HeLa was 3 mg/ml. The bands at the
top are caused by radioactive material remaining in the
wells.
[View Larger Version of this Image (40K GIF file)]
Significant DNA synthesis is observed using cell-free extracts prepared
from SV40-transformed WI38 cells, from both proliferating and quiescent
WI38 cells, and from subconfluent and high-density undifferentiated
SY5Y cultures (Fig. 1). In all cases, the replication observed is
T-antigen-dependent. An attractive feature of the neuroblastoma SY5Y
cell line is that cells can be induced to differentiate on exposure to
retinoic acid (Sidell et al., 1983
) or other agents. When SY5Y cells
are grown in the presence of retinoic acid, they proliferate at a much
slower rate than control cultures. In addition, retinoic acid causes
SY5Y cells to undergo distinct morphological alterations so that they
take on the appearance of differentiated neurons. A comparison of SY5Y
cells grown in either the absence or presence of retinoic acid is shown
in Figure 2A. The
typical morphology for undifferentiated neuroblasts is shown in Figure 2A, left. After retinoic acid treatment,
the cells extend long neuritic processes and present large growth cones
(Fig. 2A, right).
Fig. 2.
Differentiation of SY5Y cells by retinoic acid.
A, Phase-contrast micrographs of SY5Y cells with and
without retinoic acid treatment. SY5Y cells were left untreated or were
treated with 10 µM retinoic acid for 9 d. Retinoic
acid induced neurite formation as well as enlargement of cell bodies
(right) compared with untreated SY5Y cells
(left). Magnification, 100×. B, Effect
of retinoic acid on SY5Y cell growth. SY5Y cells were plated at a
density of 0.3 × 105
cells/cm2 in the presence (open
squares) or absence (closed squares) of 10 µM retinoic acid for 9 d. Harvested cells were
centrifuged, resuspended, and counted (trypan blue exclusion) each day.
For each data point, the SE is ~10% of the mean.
[View Larger Version of this Image (74K GIF file)]
In retinoic acid-treated cultures, the number of viable cells (measured
by trypan blue exclusion) did not increase with time, indicating an
exceedingly slow proliferation rate on average (Fig. 2B). In contrast, control cell populations grown
without retinoic acid increased fivefold in 9 d. After
differentiation by exposure to retinoic acid for 9 d, SY5Y
cell-free extracts retained a full and active complement of replication
enzymes capable of supporting origin-dependent DNA synthesis despite a
very low level of proliferation (Fig. 1). Taken together, these data on
SV40 origin-dependent synthesis demonstrate that neuroblastoma and
fibroblast extracts contain proteins that can form an active
replication complex. This complex includes cellular replication DNA
polymerases
and
(and possibly
), along with the
proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) that acts as a sliding
processivity clamp for Pols
and
, clamp-loading accessory
proteins (RFC), and human single-stranded binding protein (Waga et al.,
1994
; Podust et al., 1995
).
DNA Pol
and Pol
in neuroblastoma and fibroblast
cel extracts
The cellular repair DNA Pol
can be assayed independently of
the other polymerases present in cell-free extracts by measuring primer
extension activity under conditions optimal for Pol
. Pol
exhibits maximum activity and processivity for gaps up to six nt long
(Singhal and Wilson, 1993
), in which a 5
-phosphoryl group on the
downstream primer functions as a direct contact point for the repair
enzyme (Singhal and Wilson, 1993
). We measured extension of a
32P-labeled primer to fill in a short, five nt gap in the
presence of 100 mM NaCl (Fig.
3A). For comparison, the same
extracts were used to copy DNA using conditions favoring synthesis by
Pol
(Fig. 3B).
Fig. 3.
Abasic lesion bypass by cell-free extracts
from human fibroblasts and neuroblastoma under A, Pol
-favoring conditions, and B, Pol
-favoring
conditions. Reactions were performed and analyzed as described in
Materials and Methods. Cell-free extracts containing 3 µg/reaction of
WI38 or 2 µg/reaction of SY5Y or HeLa cells were added to annealed
primer template. Left, Primer extension on a normal
non-lesion-bearing template; right, primer extension on a template with an abasic site, X. The DNA template sequence is shown
on the left of A and B.
P, Position of the nonextended primer.
[View Larger Version of this Image (60K GIF file)]
Primer termination bands are observed opposite each of the normal
template sites (Fig. 3A, left). The low-intensity
bands at central T and 5
-adjacent C sites indicate that the polymerase incorporates nucleotides with relatively high processivity at these
sites, consistent with the behavior of purified Pol
(Singhal and
Wilson, 1993
; Efrati et al., 1997
). A transient displacement or melting
of the 5
end of the downstream primer allows the incorporation of as
many as seven nt when copying the natural template strand (Fig.
3A, left). Similar weak primer displacement
synthesis has been demonstrated using purified human Pol
on the
same primer template construct shown in Figure 3 (data not shown). DNA
synthesis is strongly inhibited by the chain terminator dideoxy-TTP,
further documenting that Pol
rather than Pol
is primarily
responsible for filling the five nt gap (Kornberg and Baker, 1992
)
(data not shown).
We also used cell-free extracts to assay Pol
activity on a template
containing a single, site-directed abasic (tetrahydrofuran) lesion X in
the center of the gap (Fig. 3A, right). Purified
Pol
has been shown to copy abasic lesions (X) with relatively high efficiency and relaxed nucleotide insertion specificity (Efrati et al.,
1997
). We measured Pol
activity in cell extracts using a gapped
template containing X (Fig. 3A, right) to see
whether the distinctive properties of the purified repair polymerase in copying the noncoding lesion are discernible in crude samples containing Pol
in the presence of active replicative polymerases (Fig. 1). Unlike most polymerases, which act in accordance with an
"A-rule," strongly favoring incorporation of dAMP opposite X
(Sagher and Strauss, 1983
; Schaaper et al., 1983
; Strauss, 1991
), Pol
favors incorporation of a nucleotide complementary to a template
base immediately downstream from the lesion, i.e., incorporation of
dGMP opposite C by skipping over the lesion, generating a single-base deletion (Efrati et al., 1997
). This skipping mode of synthesis that we
have called "dNTP-stabilized misalignment" could occur if the
tetrahydrofuran moiety were located out of the helical plane, as
diagrammed in Figure 4 (Efrati et al.,
1997
).
Fig. 4.
Primer template misalignment models for synthesis
at an abasic site. In the dNTP-Stabilized Misalignment
model (left), the abasic lesion is out of the helical
plane with no H-bonds downstream to stabilize it. Instead, the incoming
dNTP (dCTP), bound in the Pol
-active site, forms
H-bonds with the downstream template base (G). In
the Standard Misalignment model (right),
the lesion is also out of the helical plane, but the misaligned
template strand forms H-bonds with the primer on both sides of the
lesion.
[View Larger Version of this Image (13K GIF file)]
A combination of the two modes of synthesis, misalignment and direct
incorporation opposite the lesion, produces a doublet band situated
opposite X (Efrati et al., 1997
) (Fig. 3A,
right). The doublet band corresponding to the position of
the abasic lesion X is typical of synthesis by purified Pol
on
templates containing an abasic lesion. The lower band originates from
incorporation occurring directly opposite the lesion, and the upper
band corresponds to incorporation of dGMP opposite the downstream
template C on a misaligned primer template DNA (Efrati et al., 1997
)
(Fig. 4); short single-stranded DNA terminated with G migrates more
slowly than DNA terminating with any of the other three bases.
The dark band at the template A site immediately before X arises
because the lesion provides a strong block to continued DNA synthesis
(Fig. 3A, right). Polymerase dissociation at
template site A is favored over nucleotide insertion opposite X. A
comparison of the band intensities at the two template C sites
downstream from the lesion shows that the intensity is generally
greater opposite the C site adjacent to X compared with the last C site (Fig. 3A, right). A relatively weak band opposite
the last C site implies that the five nt gap is filled by addition of
four nt; i.e., the product DNA corresponds to a one nt deletion (Efrati et al., 1997
). In contrast, the intense band opposite the last C in the
unmodified DNA template demonstrates that the entire five nt gap is
copied (Fig. 3A, left). All of the cell-free
extracts contain polymerase activity characteristic of purified Pol
.
Pol
synthesis can be measured in primer extension reactions under
Pol
-favoring conditions, without a downstream oligonucleotide (i.e., without a gap) and in the absence of NaCl (Fig. 3B).
Under these conditions, we analyzed synthesis using normal templates as
well as templates containing an abasic lesion. With both templates, significant synthesis occurred in HeLa cell extracts and in both proliferating subconfluent and high-density undifferentiated SY5Y cells. Growing and quiescent WI38 cell extracts, however, appeared to
have lower Pol
activity. WI38 cells transformed by SV40 exhibited increased Pol
activity (Fig. 3B). Unlike Pol
, Pol
shows barely detectable synthesis opposite X (Fig. 3B,
right). In all cases, DNA synthesis was essentially
unaltered when ddNTPs were included in the reactions (data not shown).
Because chain-terminating ddNTPs are incorporated into DNA by Pol
,
but not by Pol
(Kornberg and Baker, 1992
), this observation further
confirms that this assay measures Pol
activity. In contrast to Pol
, levels of Pol
activity appears to be roughly similar in each
extract (Fig. 3A), in agreement with previous data showing
Pol
levels are insensitive to the proliferative state of the cell
(Hubscher et al., 1977
; Waser et al., 1979
; Krauss and Linn, 1982
; Wahl
et al., 1988
; Wong et al., 1988
; Verri et al., 1992
).
MMR
MMR proteins present in eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells can
correct residual errors incurred after DNA replication. It is an open
question whether MMR activities differ in dividing versus nondividing
cells or are regulated during the cell cycle. To measure MMR in
extracts from subconfluent, high-density, and differentiated neuroblastoma cells, we used an assay that detects repair of a single-base mismatch or deletion loop on M13 bacteriophage DNA (Thomas
et al., 1991
). This assay requires that extracts contain all necessary
activities (i.e., mismatch binding proteins, 3
- and 5
-exonucleases,
and DNA polymerases and helicases) to correct single-base mismatches
and deletion loops (Modrich and Lahue, 1996
).
An analysis of G · G88,
T · G89, and C · C88 repair is
shown in Table 1. The decrease in the number
of mixed and nicked (
) strand plaques for G · G and T · G and
concomitant increase in the number of (+) strand plaques demonstrate
that strand-specific repair is occurring for both mismatches, and that
G · G and T · G appear to be corrected with similar
efficiencies. In the case of C · C, however, the number of mixed
plaques remains constant after treatment with HeLa or SY5Y, indicating
that the C · C mispair is not corrected.
To obtain a mismatch repair spectrum for SY5Y, we investigated 10 sets
of mismatched heteroduplexes, comprising nine single-base mismatches
and a five-base deletion loop (Fig. 5).
HeLa cell extracts are used as a positive control for each substrate.
The data show similar trends in repair efficiencies for the two cell
types. T · G and G · G mismatches are repaired with highest
efficiency. A · A, C · A, A · G, and a five-base deletion
loop are repaired moderately well, but correction of G · A,
C · C, and T · T mispairs is either not detectable or at most
slightly above background (Fig. 5). The neuoroblastoma MMR spectrum
(Fig. 5) is basically consistent with measurements using extracts from
other eukaryotic organisms (Holmes et al., 1990
; Thomas et al., 1991
).
Notably, repair of loops greater than four bases has been observed to
occur in eukaryotes but not in E. coli (Umar et al., 1994
;
Modrich and Lahue, 1996
).
Fig. 5.
Mismatch repair of different heteroduplexes with
HeLa (filled bars) and SY5Y (open
bars) cell-free extracts. Mismatch repair efficiencies of 10 different heteroduplexes (indicated at the bottom) were
determined in reactions performed at 37°C for 30 min in the presence
of 50 µg of protein. Repair of A · G mismatches was examined at
two adjacent DNA positions. The calculation of repair efficiency is
described in Materials and Methods. The data are plotted as the
mean ± SE. n.d., Not detected.
[View Larger Version of this Image (33K GIF file)]
A comparison of repair of the G · G mismatch was made for
different preparations of SY5Y and WI38 cells. We find no significant difference in G · G repair for neuroblastoma extracts prepared from
subconfluent and high-density undifferentiated SY5Y cultures. However,
repair efficiencies for SY5Y cells appear to be measurably greater than
those for cultured fibroblasts (Fig. 6).
In comparison to SY5Y cells, extracts from normal and SV40-transformed
fibroblasts exhibit an approximate twofold reduction in MMR on a
protein basis, and MMR activity in quiescent fibroblasts is lower by
approximately a factor of 8 (Fig. 6).
Fig. 6.
Repair efficiencies of G · G mismatches by
HeLa, SY5Y, and WI38 cell-free extracts. Mismatch repair assays for a
G · G mispair were carried out at 37°C for 30 min in the presence
of 50 µg of protein for the extracts indicated below
the histogram. The data are plotted as the mean ± SE. Percent MMR
was calculated as described in Materials and Methods.
[View Larger Version of this Image (47K GIF file)]
To address the question of whether there are significant
differences in the MMR activities in undifferentiated versus
differentiated cells, we used the SY5Y system to approximate a
homogeneous population of human neuron-derived cells, i.e.,
uncontaminated with glial cells. Extracts were prepared from SY5Y
cells cultured without or with retinoic acid to compare activities from
proliferating undifferentiated with differentiated cell populations
(Fig. 2). We found no significant difference in MMR efficiencies
comparing proliferating subconfluent, high-density, or differentiated
SY5Y cells (Figs. 6, 7).
Fig. 7.
. Mismatch repair of G · G, T · G, and
C · C mismatches by cell-free extracts of undifferentiated SY5Y
cells and SY5Y cells differentiated by retinoic acid treatment.
Mismatch repair assays using three different heteroduplexes were
performed at 37°C for 30 min in the presence of 50 µg of protein
from extracts of SY5Y cells with or without retinoic acid treatment.
The data are plotted as the mean ± SE. Percent MMR was calculated
as described in Materials and Methods.
[View Larger Version of this Image (30K GIF file)]
DISCUSSION
Understanding mechanisms underlying aberrant DNA synthesis
and long-patch MMR in eukaryotic cells is important for elucidating normal and pathological processes. For example, at least 12 neurodegenerative diseases are characterized by large expansions of
triplet repeats attributed to strand slippage during DNA replication
(Boyer, 1995). Furthermore, frameshifts have been detected in mRNA and
proteins in postmitotic neurons of the Brattleboro rat (Evans et al.,
1994
) and human brain (Evans et al., 1996
). Future DNA sequence
analysis of the relevant genes is needed to confirm that these
frameshifts are encoded in the DNA. It has been proposed (Bridges,
1997
; Finch and Goodman, 1997
) that nonreplicative DNA synthetic
processes may be responsible for generating such mutations in
nondividing prokaryotic (Foster, 1993
) and eukaryotic cells.
Adult brain neurons were recently shown to correct T · G
mismatches, arising from deamination of 5-methyl cytosine, by the BER
pathway (Brooks et al., 1996
). Although Brooks et al. (1996)
suggest
that G · T are the only types of mismatches that can arise in
nondividing cells, there are other potential mechanisms such as
spontaneous loss of DNA bases (Lindahl, 1982
) and oxidative DNA damage
(Farr and Kogoma, 1991
; Pacifici and Davies, 1991
; Michaels and Miller,
1992
) that can give rise to mismatches in nondividing cells. Mismatches
can also be generated during transcription-coupled repair (Hanawalt,
1994
), a process that involves the action of MMR (Mellon and Champe,
1996
). It is therefore important to investigate replication and repair
pathways using human-derived cell systems as an in vitro
model to investigate the biochemistry of replication and
postreplication repair.
Identification of individual DNA polymerases in extracts from
cultured neuroblastoma and fibroblast cells
Studies on DNA polymerases purified from mammalian cells show that
replicative polymerases, Pol
and Pol
, appear to be regulated as
a function of cell cycle (Wahl et al., 1988
; Zeng et al., 1994
), as
does PCNA, the Pol
-associated sliding clamp (Morris and Mathews,
1989
). However, levels of Pol
, involved in DNA repair (Waser et
al., 1979
; Frosina et al., 1996
; Sobel et al., 1996
), remain relatively
constant (Verri et al., 1992
; Hubscher et al., 1977
). We asked whether
extracts prepared from neuroblastoma and fibroblast cells in various
replicative states can catalyze origin-dependent, semiconservative DNA
replication requiring Pols
and
, PCNA, RFC, and RFA (Waga et
al., 1994
). Our data definitively demonstrate that all extracts
examined, even differentiated neuroblastoma cells, are capable of
replication in vitro (Fig. 1).
We analyzed the behavior of Pol
in crude extracts and found that
its properties resemble those of the purified enzyme; it carries out
processive gap-filling synthesis, catalyzes efficient bypass at an
abasic lesion (Figs. 3A, 4) (Efrati et al., 1997
), and is
inhibited by incorporation of a chain-terminating ddNTP (data not
shown). All cell extracts examined contain approximately similar levels
of Pol
activity. In contrast, assays under conditions optimal for
Pol
activity show variable degrees of synthesis with different
cell-free extracts (Fig. 3B). The reduced levels of
incorporation found for WI38 quiescent and subconfluent cells may
reflect the presence of a majority of nondividing cells. Mixing experiments did not detect inhibitors of replication in extracts from
nondividing cells. The presence of similar levels of Pol
-like
activities in subconfluent and high-density populations of SY5Y
neuroblastoma cells is consistent with the inability of undifferentiated SY5Y cells to become contact-inhibited or to cease
dividing.
Postreplication mismatch repair activity in extracts from cultured
neuroblastoma and fibroblast cells
In neuroblastoma cell extracts, we observed DNA
strand-specific mismatch repair for T · G, G · G, C · A,
A · A, and A · G mispairs and a five base loop; G · A,
C · C, and T · T mispairs are essentially not repaired (Fig.
5). Efficient repair of T · G mismatches in neuroblastoma extracts
is noteworthy in light of the observation that adult brain neurons can
catalyze T · G
C · G repair (Brooks et al., 1996
). The
substrates used were short DNA heteroduplexes (34 mer) containing a
single mismatched base pair to detect enzymes involved in BER. In
contrast, the nicked M13 DNA heteroduplexes in our study measure
long-patch MMR. MMR repair tracts can be hundreds of bases, reflecting
the distance between a nick and the mismatch (Modrich and Lahue, 1996
).
Nicking at C · A mismatches was not observed in the study of Brooks
et al. (1996)
, whereas significant C · A mismatch repair is
observed in MMR assay (Fig. 5). However, G · A mismatches do not
appear to be corrected by either BER (Brooks et al., 1996
) or NER (Fig. 5).
The mismatch repair profile for neuroblastoma cell extracts (Fig. 5),
closely parallels that observed for HeLa as well as other eukaryotic
cells (Thomas et al., 1991
; Umar et al., 1994
). Measurable C · C
repair appears to be absent in neuroblastoma cells (Fig. 5), as has
been reported for other prokaryotic and eukaryotic systems (Thomas et
al., 1991
); exceptions include CV1 and Drosophila cell
extracts that repair C · C heteroduplexes with high efficiency
(Modrich and Lahue, 1996
) (A. Kaur, M. F. Goodman, and J. Tower,
unpublished observations).
The degree to which MMR proteins may be regulated in eukaryotes is not
known. The E. coli Mut S mismatch binding protein decreases 10-fold when bacteria enter late-stationary phase or are starved for a
carbon source (Feng et al., 1996
). Using G · G mismatches as a
representative measure of mismatch repair efficiency, we find no
evidence for regulation of mismatch repair in subconfluent versus
high-density undifferentiated SY5Y neuroblastoma cells (Fig. 6). We
also observe no measurable difference in G · G, T · G, and
C · C mismatch repair efficiencies comparing SY5Y differentiated and undifferentiated cells (Fig. 7).
Thus, in contrast to E. coli in which the mismatch
recognition protein Mut S is 10-fold lower in stationary compared with exponentially growing cells (Feng et al., 1996
), it appears that postreplication mismatch repair may be present at roughly similar levels in dividing and nondividing SY5Y cells. It is well documented that DNA synthesis is occurring in nondividing prokaryotic cells (Foster, 1993
) and likely to be occurring in eukaryotic cells (Evans et
al., 1994
, 1996
). Perhaps prokaryotes can "afford" to downregulate
MMR, owing to the high fidelity of proofreading-proficient Pols II and
III, shown to be involved in DNA synthesis in nondividing E. coli (Foster et al., 1995
). However, in nondividing eukaryotic cells, it might be necessary to retain active MMR to counteract potentially high levels of proofreading-deficient Pol
-catalyzed errors.
MMR in WI38 cells is lower than in neuroblastoma, with an approximate
fourfold decrease in G · G mismatch repair in quiescent versus
actively growing fibroblasts (Fig. 6). This observation, although
clearly not definitive, is consistent with the observation that some
MMR proteins are regulated during the cell cycle. Pol
and PCNA are
examples of regulated replication proteins that are also required for
HeLa cell mismatch repair in vitro (Umar et al., 1996
;
Longley et al., 1997
). It is somewhat surprising that we find no change
in mismatch repair efficiency in differentiated and nondifferentiated
SY5Y cells. A possible explanation is that although the levels of both
PCNA and Pol
decrease after treatment with retinoic acid (Verri et
al., 1992
), these transformed cells may retain sufficient levels of
both to provide ample MMR activity.
Our data demonstrate that both origin-dependent replication and DNA
repair synthesis can be analyzed in cell-free extracts from cultured,
transformed dividing and differentiated neuronal cells and from normal
human diploid fibroblasts in various growth states. We show for the
first time that postreplication mismatch repair is taking place via a
long-patch NER pathway in cells of neuronal origin; our data complement
an earlier demonstration of the occurrence of BER in adult neurons
(Brooks et al., 1996
). Although SY5Y cells are neuronally derived and
display subsets of neuronal phenotypes (Perez-Polo et al., 1979
;
LoPresti et al., 1992
), measurements in similarly prepared cell-free
extracts from highly purified primary cultures of neurons are required
to establish whether MMR activities in SY5Y cells are indeed comparable
to those of neurons. The involvement of replication enzymes in
postreplication mismatch repair was discovered using E. coli
and HeLa as model systems (Modrich and Lahue, 1996
; Umar et al., 1996
;
Longley et al., 1997
). Because we have shown that analogous activities
can be measured in neuronal and fibroblast cell systems, it may now be
possible to investigate, at a biochemical level, mutational events
occurring in the brain and in an aging model system.
FOOTNOTES
Received July 14, 1997; revised Aug. 25, 1997; accepted Aug. 29, 1997.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants AG11398
and DK32094. We express our gratitude to Dr. Caleb Finch and Dr. Irina
Rozovsky for their generous advice regarding cell culture and for
numerous enlightening discussions.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Myron F. Goodman, Department
of Biological Sciences, University of Southern California, SHS Room
172, University Park, Los Angeles, CA 90089-1340.
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