MutT protein specifically hydrolyses a potent mutagenic substrate for DNA synthesis

H Maki, M Sekiguchi - Nature, 1992 - nature.com
H Maki, M Sekiguchi
Nature, 1992nature.com
ERRORS in the replication of DNA are a major source of spontaneous mutations, and a
number of cellular functions are involved in correction of these errors to keep the frequency
of spontaneous mutations very low1. We report here a novel mechanism which prevents
replicational errors by degrading a potent mutagenic substrate for DNA synthesis. This error-
avoiding process is catalysed by a protein encoded by the mutT gene of Escherichia coli,
mutations of which increase the occurrence of A· T-→ C· G transversions 100 to 10,000 …
Abstract
ERRORS in the replication of DNA are a major source of spontaneous mutations, and a number of cellular functions are involved in correction of these errors to keep the frequency of spontaneous mutations very low1. We report here a novel mechanism which prevents replicational errors by degrading a potent mutagenic substrate for DNA synthesis. This error-avoiding process is catalysed by a protein encoded by themutT gene of Escherichia coli, mutations of which increase the occurrence of A · T-→ C · G transversions 100 to 10,000 times the level of the wild type2. Spontaneous oxidation of dGTP forms 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2'-dGTP (8-oxodGTP), which is inserted opposite dA and dC residues of template DNA with almost equal efficiency, and the MutT protein specifically degrades 8-oxodGTP to the monophosphate. This indicates that elimination from the nucleotide pool of the oxidized form of guanine nucleotide is important for the high fidelity of DNA synthesis.
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