Publication | Open Access
Human Pol ζ purified with accessory subunits is active in translesion DNA synthesis and complements Pol η in cisplatin bypass
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Citations
42
References
2014
Year
Molecular RegulationPol ζMolecular BiologyMolecular ResearchTranscriptional RegulationAccessory SubunitsGene TransferDna ReplicationCellular BiologyCell BiologyChromatin FunctionMolecular MedicineGene FunctionProtein BiosynthesisChromatinCisplatin BypassChromatin StructureHuman Pol ζChromatin RemodelingDna Polymerase ζNatural SciencesAdditional Accessory SubunitsMedicineCell Development
DNA polymerase ζ (Pol ζ) is a eukaryotic B-family DNA polymerase that specializes in translesion synthesis and is essential for normal embryogenesis. At a minimum, Pol ζ consists of a catalytic subunit Rev3 and an accessory subunit Rev7. Mammalian Rev3 contains >3,000 residues and is twice as large as the yeast homolog. To date, no vertebrate Pol ζ has been purified for biochemical characterization. Here we report purification of a series of human Rev3 deletion constructs expressed in HEK293 cells and identification of a minimally catalytically active human Pol ζ variant. With a tagged form of an active Pol ζ variant, we isolated two additional accessory subunits of human Pol ζ, PolD2 and PolD3. The purified four-subunit Pol ζ4 (Rev3-Rev7-PolD2-PolD3) is much more efficient and more processive at bypassing a 1,2-intrastrand d(GpG)-cisplatin cross-link than the two-subunit Pol ζ2 (Rev3-Rev7). We show that complete bypass of cisplatin lesions requires Pol η to insert dCTP opposite the 3' guanine and Pol ζ4 to extend the primers.
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