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Biased Short Tract Repair of Palindromic Loop Mismatches in Mammalian Cells
Danielle G. Taghiana, Heather Hougha, and Jac A. Nickoloffaa Department of Cancer Biology, Harvard University School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
Corresponding author: Jac A. Nickoloff, Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, School of Medicine, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131, jnickoloff{at}salud.unm.edu (E-mail).
Communicating editor: L. S. SYMINGTON
| ABSTRACT |
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Mismatch repair of palindromic loops in the presence or absence of single-base mismatches was investigated in wild-type and mismatch-binding defective mutant Chinese hamster ovary cells. Recombination intermediates with a maximum heteroduplex DNA (hDNA) region of 697 bp contained a centrally located, phenotypically silent 12-base palindromic loop mismatch, and/or five single-base mismatches. In wild-type cells, both loops and single-base mismatches were efficiently repaired (80100%). When no other mismatches were present in hDNA, loops were retained with a 1.61.9:1 bias. However, this bias was eliminated when single-base mismatches were present, perhaps because single-base mismatches signal nick-directed repair. In the multiple marker crosses, most repair tracts were long and continuous, with preferential loss of markers in cis to proximal nicks, consistent with nicks directing most repair in this situation. However, ~25% of repair tracts were discontinuous as a result of loop-specific repair, or from segregation or short tract repair of single-base mismatches. In mutant cells, single-base mismatches were repaired less frequently, but the loop was still repaired efficiently and with bias toward loop retention, indicating that the defect in these cells does not affect loop-specific repair. Repair tracts in products from mutant cells showed a wide variety of mosaic patterns reflecting short regions of repair and segregation consistent with reduced nick-directed repair. In mutant cells, single-base mismatches were repaired more efficiently in the presence of the loop than in its absence, a likely consequence of corepair initiated at the loop.
MISMATCHED bases in DNA may arise from errors during DNA replication, from chemical modification of DNA, and during homologous recombination between nonidentical sequences. During replication, base misincorporation creates single-base mispairs, while DNA polymerase slippage on repeated sequences (e.g., microsatellite sequences) may create mismatched loop structures. During recombination, heterologous point mutations, insertions and deletions can produce heteroduplex DNA (hDNA) with mismatched bases and loops. Mismatch repair deficient bacteria (![]()
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Both general and specific mismatch repair pathways exist in Escherichia coli (for review see ![]()
G-C and G-A
G-C repair, respectively. E. coli correct most single-base mismatches and small loops (<4 bases) efficiently, but C-C and larger loop mismatches are corrected only as part of a tract initiated by another mismatch (![]()
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae and mammalian cells, analogous processes and protein homologs to the mutHLS system have been identified. Two yeast proteins, Msh2p and Msh6p recognize and form a complex on mismatched bases. Pms1p and Mlh1p then bind to this complex, creating a substrate suitable for excision and resynthesis by other enzymes. Similar reactions are seen in human cells with GT binding protein (GTBP, an Msh6p homolog), and hPms2 (a Pms1p homolog) (![]()
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The in vitro and in vivo correction of all possible single-base mismatches has been reported (![]()
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In E. coli, repair bias can be strand dependent (mutHLS pathway) or mismatch dependent (mutT and mutY pathways). In mammalian cells, nicks and DNA methylation status were examined as possible factors influencing repair bias. In one study, methylation status and nicks were found to influence strand discrimination in African green monkey kidney CV-1 cells (![]()
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A study with an extrachromosomal recombination system that creates hDNA in recombination intermediates flanked by nicks on opposite strands suggested that nicks direct repair of single-base mismatches, and analyses of recombination frequencies suggested that a 14-base palindromic loop may be recognized and repaired independently of nicks, with repair biased toward loop retention (![]()
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Plasmid DNA:
Plasmids were constructed by standard procedures (![]()
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Cell culture and recombination assays:
CHO cells were cultured as described previously (![]()
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Analysis of recombinant products:
Ten µg of genomic DNA were digested with EcoRI, which excises integrated recombinant plasmids (Figure 1D), and religated at low concentration (50 µg/ml) to favor recircularization of the excised plasmid over ligation to other DNA fragments. DNAs were precipitated, electroporated into recombination-defective E. coli strain HB101 cells (![]()
Segregation analysis:
To measure repair efficiency, identical experiments to those described above were performed, except that at least six plasmid DNAs were rescued and analyzed from each transfectant. When all rescued plasmids had identical patterns it was taken as evidence for repair (0.03 confidence level). Mixed patterns were expected when one or more mismatches escape repair and segregate at the first round of replication following integration, producing a sectored colony. Segregation was sometimes scored using a PCR assay. Genomic DNA was amplified with primers complementary to the SV40 promoter (5'-GGCCTCTGAGCTATTCC AGA-3') and to the 3' end of neo (5'-CGAAATCTCGTGATGGCAGG-3'), yielding a 1.2-kbp product. Products with a single pattern for an RFLP were scored as having undergone repair, and mixed patterns were scored as segregation events. Because mixed patterns could also result if genomic DNA was prepared from independent transfectants, electroporated cells were distributed at low density (resulting in <3 colonies/24 wells). Under these conditions, a single well was unlikely to contain multiple transfectants (P < 0.05; Poisson distribution), thus ensuring that each colony arose from a single transfected cell. False sectors could also arise if a transfectant contained multiple copies of recombinant molecules. Thus, segregation analysis was performed only with transfectants containing one copy of an integrated recombinant molecule (about 50% of transfectants), as identified by Southern hybridization using a 32P-labeled neo probe. Digestions with StuI (one site in recombinants) and BstXI (no site in recombinants) are diagnostic for tandem and non-tandem integrated molecules, respectively. Statistical analyses were performed using Fisher's exact tests.
| RESULTS |
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Experimental design:
Mismatch repair was studied using a two-plasmid extrachromosomal recombination assay that creates hDNA intermediates in vivo (![]()
Recombination assays were performed by cotransfecting pairs of linearized plasmids into CHO cells and selecting for integrated neo+ recombinants with G418. pSV2neo derivatives were linearized at a ClaI site located upstream of the S(B) frameshift, and pneoAn derivatives were linearized at an NheI site at the extreme 5' end of the neo fragment. We and others (![]()
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G-C repair bias (C. A. BILL, W. A. DURAN, and J. A. NICKOLOFF, unpublished results). This bias is consistent with the well-known G-T
G-C repair systems in bacteria (![]()
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In the present crosses, the two initiating DSBs flank a 697-bp region containing five markers predicted to produce single-base mismatches and/or a 12-base palindromic loop mismatch. Depending on the extent of exonuclease digestion, SSA intermediates may include more or less hDNA in the region between the DSBs, with maximum hDNA (697 bp) formed if exonuclease digestion extends from broken ends to (or past) DSB positions in recombining partners. Lesser digestion would produce less hDNA and annealed plasmids would contain flaps with 3' ends; such flaps could be removed by homologs of yeast Rad1p/10p endonuclease (![]()
50%), requiring 349523 bases to be removed from either end. The fifth marker (P685) may occur in hDNA less often, which is not surprising since this requires the removal of at least 685 bases from the 5' DSB. The loop mismatch is equidistant from the two DSBs and is therefore expected to occur in hDNA at maximum rates.
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Mismatches are subject to repair either before or after integration. Mismatches in integrated recombinant molecules that escape repair will segregate during the next cell division and produce sectored colonies. As all markers are silent, there is no selective pressure for or against them. Recombinant products were rescued into recA- E. coli, or were PCR amplified, and all heteroallelic markers were scored to determine mismatch repair direction. Segregation analysis was performed on a subset of products to determine the efficiency of repair for each mismatch (see MATERIALS AND METHODS). Crosses were performed in CHO K1c cells (wild-type), a mismatch-binding defective CHO line called clone B, and its wild-type parent, called MTCHO+ (![]()
Characterization of recombination substrates:
Recombination substrates were electroporated into cells individually to determine background transfection frequencies (Table 1). pSV2neoS(B) yielded no G418r colonies, indicating that the S(B) frameshift does not revert at detectable levels. Also, pSV2neoS(B) does not confer kanr to E. coli transformants. Control CHO transfections with pSV2neo and pSV2neoX yielded G418r colonies at similar levels, confirming the phenotypic silence of the XhoI linker insertion; the eleven single-base changes are also silent (![]()
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Mismatch repair favors retention of palindromic loops:
Previous analysis of recombination frequencies suggested that a 14 -base palindromic loop mismatch was repaired with bias toward loop retention in CHO K1c cells (![]()
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Single-base mismatches eliminate loop repair bias:
To determine whether nearby mismatches influence the direction of loop repair, we performed two crosses in which hDNA included up to five single-base mismatches in addition to the loop (crosses 2A and 2B, Figure 2). In contrast to crosses with only the loop mismatch, equal loop retention and loss were observed in the presence of single-base mismatches, regardless of which strand contained the loop (Table 3). These results are consistent with the loop being repaired by a nick-directed mechanism signaled by single-base mismatches (see DISCUSSION).
Mismatch repair tracts are predominantly long and nick directed:
Three crosses with multiple single-base mismatches in CHO K1c cells (crosses 2A, 2B, and 3) allowed an examination of mismatch repair tract lengths and structures. The SSA model predicts that markers downstream of the ClaI site (B733, N871, N928, P1030, X1135, and H1239) will not be included in hDNA. Consistent with this prediction and previous results (![]()
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Evidence for short tract repair:
Although most products had continuous marker patterns consistent with long repair tracts, discontinuous patterns were found in 29% of products from crosses 2A and 2B in CHO K1c cells. Discontinuous patterns are best explained as resulting from hDNA repair. Although such tracts could result from short tract and/or partial repair, segregation analysis (described below) indicates that most result from short tract repair. Most of these products had a single discontinuity, but four (Figure 3, types 10, 1719) had two discontinuities. Among cross 2A and 2B products with discontinuous tracts, the loop repaired independently of the two flanking markers 45% of the time (i.e., its repair was not directed from a nick). Interestingly, there was a twofold bias toward loop retention among this subset of products, which is similar to the bias observed in the absence of single-base mismatches. Thus, biased, loop-specific repair contributed significantly to the production of discontinuous tracts in crosses 2A and 2B (Figure 3), suggesting a degree of loop repair independent of nicks even in the presence of single-base mismatches. Surprisingly, the loop and B349, though only 10 bp apart, were repaired independently in 17% of all products, indicating that palindromic loop repair tracts can be relatively short.
Differential loop and single-base mismatch repair efficiencies in mismatch-binding defective cells:
Segregation analysis was performed for crosses 1B, 2B, and 3 in wild-type and mutant cells to determine rates of marker involvement in hDNA and repair efficiencies for the loop and single-base mismatches. The loop segregated at low rates in both wild-type and mismatch defective cells, and in the presence or absence of single-base mismatches (Table 4 and Figure 5). In crosses 2B and 3, single-base mismatches also segregated at low rates in wild-type cells (015% of products had one or more segregating markers), but at high rates in mutant cells (3553%; P < 0.0002 for combined cross 2B and 3 data). Thus, the defect in the mutant cells has no effect on loop repair, but markedly reduces repair of single-base mismatches.
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Tract structures were determined for 69 products of crosses 2B and 3 in mutant cells. Thirty-eight had no segregating markers and the tract distributions for these products (not shown) were similar to those of wild-type cells (Figure 3). The remaining 31 products had one or more segregating markers, and were distributed among 29 different tract types (Figure 5). This wide variety of structures displayed striking mosaic patterns, reflecting frequent independent repair/segregation of adjacent markers. Together these results suggest that long-tract, nick-directed repair is reduced, but not eliminated in the mutant cells. Segregation was seen at all markers predicted to be in hDNA by the SSA model, providing evidence for hDNA formation via strand annealing in the region between the initiating DSBs.
As mentioned above, nick-directed repair would tend to reduce biases that arise from mismatch-specific repair. Thus, a clearer picture of loop repair bias can be gained by examining products in which the loop was repaired independently of repair tracts initiating at either nick. For cross 2B in mutant cells, there were nine such products (types 17 in Figure 5, plus two others that are not shown in which complete repair occurred) and seven of these nine products retained the loop (3.5:1 bias). Thus, these mutant cells are competent in biased loop repair.
Minimum rates of hDNA formation:
All markers except P685 showed significantly increased rates of segregation in mutant vs. wild-type cells (Figure 6; P values ranged from 0.0004 to 0.05), a clear indication of a mismatch repair defect in the mutant cells. As discussed above, the paucity of P685 segregations likely reflects a low rate of hDNA formation at this marker. For nonsegregating markers, continuous marker patterns could arise from nick-directed repair of hDNA or from intermediates with limited or no hDNA. Despite this uncertainty, hDNA (and hence repair) can be inferred for many nonsegregating markers in products with discontinuous patterns. This is true specifically when a marker is flanked by segregating markers and/or by markers repaired in opposite directions. Examples of such "non-nick-directed repair" for cross 3 include B349 in product types 2, 5, 6, 7, 11, and 12, and A430 in product types 37, 9, 10, 12, 14, and 16 (Figure 5). We can calculate minimum rates of hDNA formation for each marker from the sum of segregation events plus non-nick-directed repair events. Cross 3 in clone B cells displayed the highest segregation rate and hence provides the best estimate of the rate of hDNA formation at each marker. As shown in Figure 6, all markers except P685 were included in hDNA at minimum rates of ~50%.
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Corepair of single-base and loop mismatches:
In wild-type cells, all single-base mismatches showed similar segregation rates in the presence or absence of the loop (crosses 2B and 3; data not shown). In mutant cells, each of the four markers >88 bp from the loop also showed similar segregation rates in the presence or absence of the loop. The remaining marker, B349, located only 10 bp from the loop, segregated in mutant cells at a high rate in the absence of the loop (25%), but at a low rate in its presence (3.4%; P = 0.013). Thus, loop-specific repair in the mutant cells correlates with increased repair of B349, a likely consequence of corepair. Although dramatic effects were seen only at the close B349 marker, the presence of the loop also partially offset the difference in repair of single-base mismatches between wild-type and mutant cell lines (Table 4), suggesting that loop-specific repair sometimes leads to corepair of more distant markers.
| DISCUSSION |
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Two prior studies indicated that the extrachromosomal recombination system used in the present study creates mismatches via SSA in a region defined by the positions of DSBs in recombination substrates, and that the resulting recombination intermediates are processed by an efficient, nick-directed repair mechanism (![]()
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SSA is reduced in yeast msh2 and msh3 mismatch repair mutants. This effect is inversely proportional to lengths of shared homology, displaying a twofold reduction with 700 bp of shared homology (![]()
Long tract repair:
The present study and other (![]()
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Biased repair of palindromic loop mismatches:
Insertion mutations produce loop mismatches in hDNA, and loops are also produced by DNA polymerase slippage. Nonpalindromic insertions produce single-stranded loops, whereas palindromic insertions of sufficient length produce stem-loop structures. The 12-bp palindromic insertion used in this study, despite being relatively short, would produce a stem with only G-C base pairs (Figure 1B) and is predicted to form a stable stem-loop structure (
G =
; Oligo 5.0, National Biosciences, Plymouth, MN).
To study repair of loops without bias from nicks, we engineered substrates such that nicks on opposite DNA strands were equidistant from the loop. Several lines of evidence from this and earlier studies indicate that loops are repaired efficiently and independently of nicks. Previous measurements of recombination frequencies suggested biased retention of a frameshift mutation predicted to produce a 14-base palindromic loop mismatch (![]()
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Contrasting results have been obtained for repair of single-stranded loops in mammalian cells. Although single-stranded loops of varying sizes are repaired efficiently, there is a 2:1 bias against loop retention (![]()
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Short tract repair of palindromic loops:
Both prokaryotic and eukaryotic short tract repair systems are mismatch-specific. In E. coli, mutT and mutY pathways process specific base mismatches in short (<10 base) repair tracts (reviewed in ![]()
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G-C repair involves removal of a single nucleotide. Short tract repair in mammalian cells was suggested by the observed independent repair of single-base mismatches separated by 20 bp in 60% of gene targeted products (![]()
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Repair in mismatch-binding defective cells:
Prior data indicated that the mutant CHO line, clone B, has several characteristics in common with mutants defective in mismatch repair, such as tolerance to alkylating agents, increased spontaneous mutagenesis and microsatellite instability, and defects in mismatch binding (![]()
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About half of the clone B products had one or more segregating markers and the other half had no segregating markers. Most marker patterns in products with no segregating markers were continuous and could have resulted from intermediates with extensive hDNA (by nick-directed repair of all markers), or from intermediates with limited or no hDNA. Extensive hDNA forms at least 50% of the time. If hDNA forms more often, our results would suggest that clone B cells perform some nick-directed repair, yielding continuous marker patterns. If hDNA forms only 50% of the time, our results would suggest that clone B cells perform essentially no nick-directed repair. In either case, reduced nick-directed repair may reflect reduced processivity, which could result from a defect in an exonuclease that acts at nicks, or from reduced signaling from mismatches. The mutation in clone B cells is likely subtle (i.e., a single amino acid change) since clone B cells spontaneously revert to wild-type phenotype (![]()
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Our data would further suggest that Msh2 is not involved in loop-specific repair, which is consistent with the observation that although yeast Msh2p and Msh2p/Msh6p bind to palindromic loop mismatches (![]()
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank M. BIGNAMI for providing clone B and MTCHO+ cells; E. M. MILLER for constructing pneoAn11; D. SWEETSER, J. WHELDEN, and N. MISELIS for technical assistance; and C. BILL, D. WEAVER, S. POWELL, and M. OETTINGER for helpful comments. This research was supported by grant CA54079 to J. Nickoloff from the National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health.
Manuscript received August 18, 1997; Accepted for publication November 13, 1997.
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