Genetics, Vol. 166, 1673-1686, April 2004, Copyright © 2004

Yeast MPH1 Gene Functions in an Error-Free DNA Damage Bypass Pathway That Requires Genes From Homologous Recombination, but Not From Postreplicative Repair

K. Anke Schürera, Christian Rudolpha, Helle D. Ulrichb, and Wilfried Kramera
a Department of Molecular Genetics and Preparative Molecular Biology, Institute for Microbiology and Genetics, University of Göttingen, D-37077 Göttingen, Germany
b Max-Planck-Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology, D-35043 Marburg, Germany

Corresponding author: Wilfried Kramer, Institute for Microbiology and Genetics, University of Göttingen, Grisebachstrasse 8, D-37077 Göttingen, Germany., wkramer{at}uni-molgen.gwdg.de (E-mail)

Communicating editor: L. S. SYMINGTON


*  ABSTRACT
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

The MPH1 gene from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, encoding a member of the DEAH family of proteins, had been identified by virtue of the spontaneous mutator phenotype of respective deletion mutants. Genetic analysis suggested that MPH1 functions in a previously uncharacterized DNA repair pathway that protects the cells from damage-induced mutations. We have now analyzed genetic interactions of mph1 with a variety of mutants from different repair systems with respect to spontaneous mutation rates and sensitivities to different DNA-damaging agents. The dependence of the mph1 mutator phenotype on REV3 and REV1 and the synergy with mutations in base and nucleotide excision repair suggest an involvement of MPH1 in error-free bypass of lesions. However, although we observed an unexpected partial suppression of the mph1 mutator phenotype by rad5, genetic interactions with other mutations in postreplicative repair imply that MPH1 does not belong to this pathway. Instead, mutations from the homologous recombination pathway were found to be epistatic to mph1 with respect to both spontaneous mutation rates and damage sensitivities. Determination of spontaneous mitotic recombination rates demonstrated that mph1 mutants are not deficient in homologous recombination. On the contrary, in an sgs1 background we found a pronounced hyperrecombination phenotype. Thus, we propose that MPH1 is involved in a branch of homologous recombination that is specifically dedicated to error-free bypass.


ALL organisms studied in more detail so far possess a large arsenal of DNA repair systems to remove lesions that constantly arise from both endogenous and environmental sources. In most cases, a prerequisite for removal of a lesion without altering the informational content of the DNA is the availability of an undamaged copy, which is usually provided by the complementary strand. If, however, a hitherto unrepaired or new DNA damage appears in a replication fork, where both strands are separated, it cannot be repaired without taking additional measures. Such damage poses a severe threat to the survival of a cell, since many DNA lesions will arrest the replication machinery. Replicative DNA polymerases are very accurate enzymes with error rates usually in the range of 10–5 per replicated nucleotide (SCHAAPER 1993 Down; ROBERTS and KUNKEL 1999 Down). The major discrimination factor between correct and incorrect base pairs seems to be the geometrical fit into the active site of the polymerase (KUNKEL and BEBENEK 2000 Down; KOOL 2002 Down). From this it is conceivable that a modified template nucleotide can prevent further replication and hence cell division, which by definition is equivalent to cell death.

One cellular mechanism to cope with this problem is translesion synthesis (TLS) by specialized DNA polymerases (for review see, e.g., WANG 2001 Down; FRIEDBERG et al. 2002 Down; GOODMAN 2002 Down). The ability of these polymerases to copy a damaged template is probably due to a relaxed binding site (FRIEDBERG et al. 2001 Down). On the other hand, these polymerases often have a strongly reduced fidelity in copying undamaged templates compared to replicative DNA polymerases (KOKOSKA et al. 2002 Down). In yeast, Pol {eta} (Rad30) and Rev1 have been identified as translesion polymerases, where Pol {eta} is an enzyme that can catalyze error-free bypass of thymidine dimers (JOHNSON et al. 1999 Down; WASHINGTON et al. 2000 Down) and Rev1 has a dCMP transferase activity (NELSON et al. 1996A Down) that has been invoked in the bypass of apurinic/apyrimidinic sites (AP sites; NELSON et al. 2000 Down), although this function is still debated (HARACSKA et al. 2001 Down). Another enzyme involved in translesion synthesis is polymerase {zeta}, which consists of the two subunits Rev3 and Rev7. The catalytic subunit of Pol {zeta} is encoded by the REV3 gene (MORRISON et al. 1989 Down). Pol {zeta} has an accuracy resembling that of other replicative polymerases (JOHNSON et al. 2000 Down) and is thus, rather, a high-fidelity polymerase. Although Pol {zeta} is able to bypass lesions (NELSON et al. 1996B Down; HARACSKA et al. 2003 Down), it does so with only low efficiency compared to human polymerase {iota}, for example (JOHNSON et al. 2000 Down). However, Pol {zeta} quite efficiently elongates mismatched primers (JOHNSON et al. 2000 Down; HARACSKA et al. 2001 Down, HARACSKA et al. 2003 Down). Thus, the actual lesion bypass is apparently carried out by a specialized translesion or a replicative polymerase, whereas Pol {zeta} is employed for extension of mismatched termini (PRAKASH and PRAKASH 2002 Down; HARACSKA et al. 2003 Down).

Since many lesions are noninstructive, TLS will often result in mutations. Evidently, cells have also developed error-free mechanisms for the bypass of lesions during replication (for review of such mechanisms in Escherichia coli, see, e.g., COX 2001 Down; MICHEL et al. 2001 Down, MCGLYNN and LLOYD 2002A Down, MCGLYNN and LLOYD 2002B Down). The situation differs depending on whether the damage is on the template for the leading or the lagging strand. Lagging-strand synthesis can proceed with the synthesis of the next Okazaki fragment and the remaining gap (SVOBODA and VOS 1995 Down) may subsequently be filled by recombination. For the leading strand, however, primer synthesis is strictly regulated to once per cell cycle (KATAYAMA 2001 Down; BELL and DUTTA 2002 Down; NASHEUER et al. 2002 Down). Therefore, resumption of replication after damage-induced polymerase arrest cannot be achieved by synthesis of a new primer downstream of the lesion, but replication can proceed only if the lesion is bypassed or removed. Apparently, arrest of the leading-strand polymerase does not cause an immediate fork arrest, but lagging-strand synthesis still continues (SVOBODA and VOS 1995 Down; CORDEIRO-STONE et al. 1999 Down; PAGES and FUCHS 2003 Down). Hence, the terminated leading strand could be elongated with the lagging strand as template, which would allow error-free extension of the leading strand beyond the lesion. A possible intermediate in this process could be a D-loop resulting from invasion of the leading strand into the sister chromatid or a Holliday junction formed by fork regression (FUJIWARA and TATSUMI 1976 Down; HIGGINS et al. 1976 Down). In E. coli, formation of such intermediates seems to require RecA (ROBU et al. 2001 Down; LUSETTI and COX 2002 Down) and/or RecG (MCGLYNN and LLOYD 2000 Down, MCGLYNN and LLOYD 2002A Down). The decision to use either TLS or error-free bypass in yeast is at least in part governed by modification of PCNA by ubiquitin and SUMO (HOEGE et al. 2002 Down; STELTER and ULRICH 2003 Down).

In this study we describe the analysis of genetic interactions of mph1 mutants with a variety of mutants from different pathways of the cellular response to DNA damage. We have previously shown that mph1 mutants have a REV3-dependent mutator phenotype and that MPH1 is probably not a member of base excision or nucleotide excision repair (SCHELLER et al. 2000 Down). The genetic interactions that we found in this study strongly suggest that Mph1 is involved in a pathway for error-free bypass and that this pathway requires components from the homologous recombination system, but is distinct from the Rad5-dependent error-free branch of the postreplicative repair pathway.


*  MATERIALS AND METHODS
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

Media:

  • YPD: 2% D-glucose (MERCK, Darmstadt, Germany, or Roth, Karlsruhe, Germany), 2% bacto peptone (Difco Becton Dickinson, Sparks, MD), and 1% yeast extract (Oxoid, Basingstoke, Great Britain) in water purified with a Milli-Q water purification system (Millipore, Bedford, MA), autoclaved for 20 min at 121°. For plates, 1.6% agar (agar bacteriological no. 1; Oxoid, Basingstoke, UK) was added before autoclaving.

  • Synthetic complete medium: 2% D-glucose (autoclaved separately or together with agar, if preparing plates), 0.17% Difco yeast nitrogen base without amino acids and without ammonium sulfate, 0.51% ammonium sulfate, and 680 mg/liter synthetic complete mixture. Synthetic complete mixture contained the following components weighed in as powder and added before autoclaving (final concentrations are indicated): adenine 40 mg/liter, L-arginine 30 mg/liter, L-histidine 20 mg/liter, L-isoleucine 20 mg/liter, L-leucine 30 mg/liter, L-lysine-HCl 30 mg/liter, L-methionine 20 mg/liter, L-phenylalanine 50 mg/liter, L-serine 100 mg/liter, L-threonine 150 mg/liter, L-tryptophane 30 mg/liter, L-tyrosine 30 mg/liter, uracil 20 mg/liter, L-valine 100 mg/liter.

  • Drop-out media: Synthetic complete medium lacking nutrilite supplements. For example, "uracil-less" medium is without uracil (SC –ura).

  • Canavanine medium: SC –arg containing 40 mg/liter canavanine, added as filter-sterilized 2% stock solution in water after autoclaving when medium was partially cooled.

  • 5-Fluoroorotic acid plates: SC plates containing, in addition, 50 mg/liter uracil and 1 g/liter 5-fluoroorotic acid (5-FOA; added after autoclaving as powder when medium was partially cooled).

  • G418 plates: YPD plates containing G418 (200 µg/ml; Calbiochem, San Diego), added as powder after autoclaving when medium was partially cooled.

For sterile filtered media, all components were dissolved in water and filtered through Vacuflo PV 050/3 disposable sterile filter units (0.2-µm pore size; Schleicher & Schuell, Dassel, Germany).

Strains and plasmids:
All mutant strains except those used for determination of mitotic recombination rates (see below) were constructed in a CEN.PK2-1C background (ura 3-52 leu2-3,112 his3{Delta}1 trp1-289, MAL-2-8c SUC2 MATa, from Peter Kötter; ENTIAN et al. 1999 Down) by one-step gene disruption (ROTHSTEIN 1991 Down). Transformations were carried out as described (GIETZ et al. 1992 Down). DNA fragments for deletion construction were obtained by either cleavage of plasmids listed in Table 1 or PCR (WACH et al. 1994 Down, WACH et al. 1997 Down). PCR primers contained 40 nucleotide tails from the 5'- or 3'-flanking region, respectively, of the gene to be deleted. Transformants were streaked for single cells on selective medium and single-cell colonies were tested by PCR for correct construction of the deletion. When the hisG::URA3::hisG cassette (ALANI et al. 1987 Down) was used, ura3 recombinants were selected by streaking for single cells on 5-FOA medium (SIKORSKI and BOEKE 1991 Down). Both 5'- and 3'-flanks were verified using primer pairs, where one primer was located in the selective marker and one primer in the flanking region of the deleted gene, but outside of the DNA fragment used for transformation. Primer sequences are available from the authors upon request. For storage, a freshly grown overnight culture in YPD was adjusted to 7% (v/v) DMSO and kept at –70°.


 
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Table 1. Isogenic derivatives of S. cerevisiae strain CEN.PK2-1c

Mutation rates:
Mutation rates were determined by the method of the median (LEA and COULSON 1948 Down). Eleven 30-ml test tubes each containing 7 ml YPD were inoculated to a cell density of 20 cells/ml with an overnight culture of the respective strain. The tubes were incubated for 3 days (4 days for slow-growing mutant strains) at 30° with agitation. Aliquots from all 11 cultures were plated onto canavanine medium to determine the number of mutants in each culture. Viable titer was determined by plating appropriate dilutions of two randomly chosen cultures onto SC –arg plates. Cultures were stored at 4° and cell density of the median culture was determined in a hematocytometer. The mean of the viable titers was used in the calculation of the mutation rate. (Where indicated, hematocytometer counts were employed.) For all mutant strains, the mutation rate of the wild type and the mph1 mutant was determined in parallel using the same batch of medium for growth. For calculating relative mutation rates, the mutation rate of the respective mutant was normalized to that of the wild type determined in parallel in that particular experiment.

Determination of induced mutation frequency:
Cells were grown overnight in sterile filtered YPD. Cultures were diluted in fresh YPD to give a cell density of ~1 x 107 cells/ml and incubated for 75 min at 30°. Cultures were arrested by adding {alpha}-mating factor to a final concentration of 4 µg/ml. After incubation at 30° for 90 min with agitation, the same amount of {alpha}-factor was added again. After an additional incubation for 60 min at 30°, cells where washed twice with water and resuspended in YPD to give a cell density of 5 x 106 cells/ml. Cultures were divided in 2-ml samples and incubated for 120 min with 4-nitroquinoline-1-oxide (4-NQO) added to the medium. Samples were washed with cold water, resuspended in cold YPD, and kept on ice to minimize cell growth. Aliquots were plated onto canavanine plates to determine the number of mutants and onto YPD plates to determine the viable titer.

Drop dilution assay to determine sensitivity to DNA-damaging agents:
Methyl methanesulfonate (MMS) and 4-NQO were from Fluka Chemie GmbH (Buchs, Switzerland). For sensitivity tests, the respective strains were grown overnight in liquid YPD at 30°. In the morning, strains were diluted ~1:10 in fresh YPD and grown at 30° for another 4 hr. In the meantime, YPD plates containing the respective chemicals were prepared. Chemicals were not added before the medium had cooled to <60°. Cell density was determined with a hematocytometer and adjusted to 1 x 107 cells/ml. Three serial 1:10 dilutions were prepared (up to 1 x 104 cells/ml). A total of 10 µl of the adjusted cell suspension and of the serial dilutions (containing 105, 104, 103, and 102 cells, respectively) were spotted onto YPD plates without added chemicals as control and onto YPD plates containing MMS or 4-NQO. Plates were incubated for 2–3 days at 30°.

Mitotic recombination rates:
Mitotic recombination rates were determined according to DORA et al. 1999 Down. Strains used were NLBL1 [MAT{alpha} ade5 met13-c (temperature sensitive) cyh2R trp5 LEU1 CLY8 his7-1 tyr1-2 lys2-2 ade2-1 ura3-1 CAN1] and NLBL3 (MATa ADE5 met13-d CYH2 TRP5 leu1 ADE6 CLY8 his7-2 tyr1-1 lys2-1 ade2-1 ura3-1 can1R). NLBL1 mph1::hisG was constructed according to SCHELLER et al. 2000 Down and NLBL3 mph1::kanMX4 was constructed with a disruption cassette derived by PCR from pFA6a (WACH et al. 1994 Down). NLBL1 sgs1::kanMX4, NLBL1 sgs1::kanMX4 mph::hisG, and NLBL3 sgs1::kanMX4 were constructed by introducing a PCR-derived sgs1::kanMX4 disruption cassette (WACH et al. 1994 Down) into NLBL1, NLBL1 mph1::hisG, and NLBL3, respectively. NLBL3 sgs1::kanMX4 mph1::hisG was derived from NLBL3 sgs1::kanMX4 according to SCHELLER et al. 2000 Down. Diploids were selected on SC –leu –trp after mass mating of appropriate haploid strains on solid YPD and stored at –70° in 7% DMSO.

For determination of mitotic recombination, diploids from frozen stock cultures were streaked for single cells on SC –leu –trp plates and grown at 30°. A red colony from each diploid was picked, resuspended in sterile water, and cell density was determined in a hematocytometer. Eleven 30-ml test tubes, each containing 10 ml YPD+ (YPD media supplemented with 75 µg/ml each of adenine, histidine, leucine, lysine, tryptophane, tyrosine, methionine, and uracil), were inoculated to a cell density of four cells/ml and incubated for 3 days at 30° with agitation. Appropriate dilutions were plated onto SC –lys, SC –his, and SC –met for heteroallelic recombinants and onto canavanine medium for single-site conversions. Viable titer was determined on SC plates. Colonies were counted after incubation for 4 days at 30° or 37° for SC –met plates. Mitotic recombination rates were determined by the method of the median (LEA and COULSON 1948 Down).


*  RESULTS
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

In our previous analysis of the MPH1 gene (SCHELLER et al. 2000 Down) we could not detect epistatic relationships for any of the following repair pathways that were analyzed: base excision repair (BER), nucleotide excision repair (NER), postreplicative repair (PRR), or homologous recombination (HR), with the possible exception of rad52 with respect to sensitivity to DNA-damaging agents. We suspected that the accessibility of DNA to genotoxic chemicals may be altered in mph1 mutants. We therefore measured the amount of DNA damage by PCR in a polymerase blocking assay (JENNERWEIN and EASTMAN 1991 Down; JENKINS et al. 2000 Down), but we could not obtain any evidence for a significant increase of DNA damage in mph1 mutants in comparision to wild type after treatment with 4-NQO, MMS, and UV (data not shown).

Genetic interactions with DNA repair pathways:
In addition to the DNA repair mutants that already had been investigated in our previous study (SCHELLER et al. 2000 Down), we extended this analysis to cover several repair pathways more thoroughly and to include some new repair pathways. Mutants studied here were from BER mag1 and apn1, from transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair (TC-NER) rad26 and rad28, from the nonhomologous end-joining pathway (NHEJ) yku70, yku80, and lig4, and a mutant of the recently described MGS1 gene that has been implicated in polymerase processivity (HISHIDA et al. 2001 Down, HISHIDA et al. 2002 Down; BRANZEI et al. 2002 Down). From postreplicative repair we analyzed rad5, rad6, rad18, ubc13, mms2, and rev1 (Table 4) and from homologous recombination rad51, rad52, and rad55 (Table 5). Spontaneous forward mutation rates to canavanine resistance of the other mutants are shown in Table 2. The rates for wild type and the relative increases for the mph1 mutant vary between different experiments, as can also be seen in Table 3 Table 4 Table 5. We ascribe this phenomenon in part to statistical fluctuation inherent in the method of determining mutation rates, but also to differences in the exposure to environmental mutagens during growth. Since a large portion of spontaneous mutations, in particular in mph1 mutants, arise by Rev3-mediated mutagenic bypass of DNA lesions (QUAH et al. 1980 Down; SCHELLER et al. 2000 Down), the number of mutations should correlate with the concentration of mutagenic agents in the growth medium (see Fig 1). Browning reactions like caramelization and the Maillard reaction (the complex reactions resulting from heating of mixtures of proteins and carbohydrates) are known to create mutagenic substances (POWRIE et al. 1986 Down). Whereas mph1 mutants grown in autoclaved medium showing considerable browning usually have an up to 12-fold increase in mutation rate, they displayed only an ~5-fold increase in mutation rate compared to wild type if grown in sterile filtered rich medium (mutation rates: wild type, 1.2 x 10–7; mph1, 6.1 x 10–7). Since these factors, as well as the exposure to other environmental mutagens such as oxygen, are difficult to control accurately, we always determined the mutation rate of the wild type and the mph1 mutant in parallel using the same batch of medium and the same culturing conditions. Thus, although the absolute rates may vary from experiment to experiment, the internal relations between the mutation rates should remain preserved.



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Figure 1. The frequency of damage-induced mutations, determined as described in MATERIALS AND METHODS, is increased in mph1 mutants. Values for wild type, rev3, and rev3 mph1 are the means of three independent experiments each. Error bars are standard deviations. Values for mph1 are the means of six independent experiments. The values for each experiment are indicated by the shaded outlines of circles, containing the number of the respective experiment.


 
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Table 2. Influence of defects in different repair pathways on the forward mutation rate of mph1 mutants to canavanine resistance


 
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Table 3. Synergy of apn1 and apn2 with mph1 with respect to forward mutation rates to canavanine resistance


 
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Table 4. Influence of mutations involved in PRR on the forward mutation rate of mph1 mutants to canavanine resistance


 
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Table 5. Influence of mutants from homologous recombination on the mph1 forward mutator phenotype to canavanine resistance

As can be seen in Table 2, no striking effect on the spontaneous mutation rates was observed for the mph1 double mutants with mutants from NHEJ (yku70, yku80, lig4) and from TC-NER (rad26, rad28), which seem to be approximately additive. The mutation rate was well below additivity only for the rad28 mph1 double mutant. For all the single mutants mentioned above—with the exception of lig4—we found a reduced spontaneous mutation rate. This may indicate that rad26 and rad28 are also involved in translesion synthesis, but we have not yet followed this observation any further. The mag1 mph1 and mgs1 mph1 double mutants were slightly synergistic.

The number of mutations in mph1 mutants is dependent on the amount of DNA damage:
The probably synergistic mutator phenotype of the DNA repair mutants mag1 and rad14 (SCHELLER et al. 2000 Down) with mph1 could indicate that in mph1 mutants the increased amount of DNA damage caused by the respective repair defect is preferentially channeled into translesion synthesis, whereas in MPH1 cells it is processed in an error-free manner. Analysis of mutants in APN1, encoding the major AP endonuclease in yeast (POPOFF et al. 1990 Down), supported this hypothesis. As can be seen in Table 3, the apn1 mph1 double mutant displayed a considerable synergistic phenotype with respect to the spontaneous mutation rate. That the increase in spontaneous mutations in the double mutant is actually due to increased TLS is demonstrated by its dependence on REV3 (Table 3). Furthermore, complementation of the phenotype by a plasmid-borne MPH1 (data not shown) indicates that the effect is due to the deletion of the MPH1 gene and not, e.g., to some unwanted background mutation that might have occurred during strain construction.

A prediction from the hypothesis stated above would be that an additional deletion of APN2, also encoding an AP endonuclease, would further increase the synergistic effect, since even more unrepaired AP sites can be expected (JOHNSON et al. 1998 Down). We therefore constructed several mutants with different combinations of apn1, apn2, and mph1 and determined the spontaneous mutation rates to canavanine resistance as shown in Table 3. Whereas apn2 alone does not exert any effect on the mutator phenotype of mph1 mutants, the triple mutant apn1 apn2 mph1 has by far the strongest mutator phenotype. Thus, apparently the increase of AP sites in the apn1 apn2 double mutant results in a strong increase of mutagenic bypass in the absence of MPH1. One possible explanation for these effects would be that MPH1 is an accessory factor to BER. This, however, is unlikely, since synergy was also observed with rad14 defective in NER (SCHELLER et al. 2000 Down) The conclusion is further supported by the analysis of the sensitivity to the DNA-damaging agents MMS and 4-NQO as shown in Fig 2. MMS is a methylating agent that produces primarily N7-methylguanine followed by N3-methyladenine (PEGG 1984 Down), whereas 4-NQO predominantly forms aminoquinoline 1-oxide adducts with N2 and C8 of guanine and N6 of adenine (TURESKY 1994 Down). First, the sensitivity of apn1 and mph1 to MMS is apparently synergistic. Second, whereas apn1 and apn2 are, as expected, not sensitive to 4-NQO, introduction of an additional mph1 mutation confers a 4-NQO sensitivity that is comparable to that of the mph1 single mutant.



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Figure 2. Influence of an mph1 mutation on the sensitivity of various apn1, apn2, and PRR mutants to MMS and 4-NQO. Drop dilution assays were carried out as described in MATERIALS AND METHODS. The concentration of the chemical in the plate for each pair of strains (without and with the mph1 mutation) is given between the spots of the respective pair (1 mM MMS corresponds to 0.0085% and 1 µM 4-NQO to 0.19 µg/ml).

From the lack of a spontaneous mutator phenotype of the various AP endonuclease mutants (Table 3) one may conclude that almost all spontaneously occurring AP sites can be processed by an MPH1-dependent error-free pathway. This seems also to be true for lesions that are subject to processing by Mag1 (Table 2), but to a lesser extent for lesions subject to NER, as indicated by the weak mutator phenotype of the rad14 single mutant (SCHELLER et al. 2000 Down).

The phenotypes of the mutants described above suggest a correlation between the number of DNA lesions and the number of mutations arising in mph1 mutants. To test this more directly, we measured the dose response curves for induced mutations vs. concentration of 4-NQO. The cells were arrested in G1 with {alpha}-factor and incubated after release of the arrest with different low concentrations of 4-NQO until the cells reached G2. In this way we assured that the cells had completed one S-phase in the presence of the mutagen. The results are shown in Fig 1. Although the number of induced mutations varied considerably between single experiments, we generally found that the increase in the number of canavanine-resistant mutants with increasing mutagen concentrations was more pronounced in mph1 cells than in wild type. The REV3 dependence of induced mutations in both wild type and the mph1 mutant demonstrates that the increased number of induced mutations in mph1 mutants is due to translesion synthesis.

Interactions with mutants from postreplicative repair:
PRR has long been discussed to be required for lesion bypass during replication. We therefore decided to analyze interactions with mutants from postreplicative repair in more detail. The results are shown in Table 4. rad6 and rad18 mutations virtually abolished the mutator phenotype of mph1 mutants. Since both genes are required for REV3-dependent TLS (XIAO et al. 2000 Down), a phenotype similar to a rev3 deletion had to be expected. Surprisingly, however, a similar effect was observed for a rad5 mutation. Although RAD5 has alternatively been described as REV2 (LAWRENCE and CHRISTENSEN 1978 Down), a gene involved in UV mutagenesis, later investigations placed it into the error-free pathway since no significant influence of a rad5 mutation on most damage-induced mutations could be detected (JOHNSON et al. 1992 Down). The Rad5 protein has been demonstrated to interact with the Mms2/Ubc13 dimer (ULRICH and JENTSCH 2000 Down; ULRICH 2003 Down), which is a ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme assembling unusual K63-linked polyubiquitin chains (HOFMANN and PICKART 1999 Down) and is involved in error-free PRR (BROOMFIELD et al. 1998 Down; HOFMANN and PICKART 1999 Down). Whereas the effects of mms2 and mph1 are somewhat additive, as observed before (SCHELLER et al. 2000 Down), ubc13 was hypostatic to mph1 with respect to mutator phenotype.

REV1 encodes a dCMP transferase, which has been implicated in the bypass of AP sites by both biochemical and genetic analysis (NELSON et al. 1996A Down, NELSON et al. 2000 Down). In another study, however, evidence was presented that Rev1 plays only a minor role in bypass of abasic sites (HARACSKA et al. 2001 Down). Although the role of Rev1 for AP bypass is still debated, it seems clear that Rev1 has a more general function in the bypass of lesions (BAYNTON et al. 1999 Down; NELSON et al. 2000 Down; HARACSKA et al. 2001 Down). In our analysis, rev1 had a phenotype similar to that of rev3 (SCHELLER et al. 2000 Down). The spontaneous mutation rate of a rev1 mutant is lower than that of wild type, and an additional rev1 mutation reduces the mutator phenotype of mph1 to twice the wild-type level (Table 4). The strong synergism of sensitivity to DNA-damaging agents as shown in Fig 2 is similar to that observed for rev3 (Fig 2; SCHELLER et al. 2000 Down). From the synergistic interactions of the mutator phenotype of mph1 apn1 and mph1 apn1 apn2 mutants we conclude that lesions normally processed by an MPH1-dependent error-free pathway are channeled into translesion synthesis. The sensitivities of rev1 mph1 and rev3 mph1 double mutants indicate that additional blockage of TLS results in a significant increase of cell death in the presence of DNA damage, which is also supported by the increase in sensitivity to MMS, but not to 4-NQO, that is conferred by an additional apn1 mutation in an mph1 rev3 background.

In summary, the analysis of the mutator phenotypes shows (sometimes incomplete) epistasis of rad6, rad18, rev3, rev1, and rad5 to mph1. These epistatic relationships, however, do not pertain to the sensitivity to DNA-damaging agents. As shown in Fig 2, all the double mutants of mph1 with mutants in PRR are considerably more sensitive to DNA damage than the respective single mutants. Therefore, this analysis shows that MPH1 is not a member of the RAD6 epistasis group with respect to DNA damage sensitivity.

Interaction with homologous recombination:
We also analyzed the interaction of mph1 with rad51, rad52, and rad55 mutants affected in HR. The respective forward mutation rates to canavanine resistance are shown in Table 5. As can be seen, we found epistatic relationships for rad51 and rad55. While we had reported an additive relationship for rad52 in our previous analysis (SCHELLER et al. 2000 Down), we now observed a mostly epistatic interaction of rad52 to mph1 in several repetitions of the experiment. Nevertheless, there was some variation in the relationship, with the mutation rate of the double mutant sometimes being slightly higher or lower than that of the rad52 single mutant. At present, we cannot decide whether this is due to statistical fluctuations or to subtle experimental differences.

The epistasis of mutants from homologous recombination to mph1 was also found for sensitivities to DNA-damaging agents as shown in Fig 3. The double mutants of mph1 with rad51, rad52, and rad55 display almost the same sensitivity as the respective rad single mutants.



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Figure 3. Influence of an mph1 mutation on the sensitivity of mutants from homologous recombination to MMS and 4-NQO. Drop dilution assays were carried out as described in MATERIALS AND METHODS. The concentration of the chemical in the plate for each pair of strains (without and with mph1 mutation) is given between the spots of the respective pair (1 mM MMS corresponds to 0.0085% and 1 µM 4-NQO to 0.19 µg/ml).

Mitotic recombination rates:
From these epistatic interactions one might suspect that Mph1 is an accessory factor to homologous recombination. We previously observed that spore survival coming from homozygous mph1 diploids is not reduced (SCHELLER et al. 2000 Down), arguing against an involvement in meiotic recombination. To test the effect of mph1 on mitotic recombination, we determined spontaneous mitotic recombination rates for wild-type and homozygous mph1 diploids. As shown in Table 6, the recombination rates for heteroallelic markers in mph1 mutants were not reduced compared to wild type. The mph1 mutant instead showed, if at all, a slightly increased recombination rate. In an sgs1 background, however, mph1 clearly conferred a hyperrecombination phenotype. sgs1 mutants have been reported previously to exhibit a spontaneous hyperrecombination phenotype by themselves (WATT et al. 1996 Down; MYUNG et al. 2001 Down). The sgs1 mph1 double mutant displayed a further strong increase in recombination rates. We therefore conclude that mph1 mutants are not deficient in homologous recombination. (Circumstantial evidence for this is also provided by our nonquantitative observation that it is no more difficult to construct mutations by one-step gene disruption in an mph1 background than in wild type.) On the contrary, in the system under investigation Mph1 instead may exert an antirecombinogenic effect, at least in an sgs1 background.


 
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Table 6. Mitotic recombination rates in wild-type and homozygous mph1 and sgs1 diploids

Interaction among mph1, rad5, and rad51:
The epistatic interactions observed with mutants from HR and rad5 prompted us to analyze the genetic interactions between these genes. The forward mutation rates to canavanine resistance are shown in Table 7. rad5 is epistatic not only to the mutator phenotype of mph1 but also to that of rad51. The rad5 rad51 mph1 triple mutant has a phenotype similar to that of the rad5 rad51 double mutant. Therefore, the epistasis of rad51 to mph1 is also maintained in the absence of Rad5, which is also true for sensitivity to DNA-damaging agents, as shown in Fig 3. But again, as already observed for mph1 (see Fig 2), the epistasis of rad5 to rad51 (and rad52) does not apply to DNA damage sensitivity, at least not to 4-NQO, which is in accord with the findings for UV sensitivity of rad5 rad52 mutants (JOHNSON et al. 1992 Down; ULRICH 2001 Down). For sensitivity to MMS, rad5 is not epistatic to mph1 but possibly to rad51 and rad52. This may mean that Mph1 acts after the enzymes of homologous recombination for MMS-induced lesions.


 
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Table 7. Interaction of rad5, rad51, and mph1 with respect to the forward mutator phenotype to canavanine resistance


*  DISCUSSION
*TOP
*ABSTRACT
*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
*LITERATURE CITED

In the present study we have analyzed the genetic interactions of mph1 mutants with mutants from BER and NER, from PRR, and from HR. The phenotypes analyzed were spontaneous mutation rates and sensitivity to MMS and 4-NQO.

The following genetic interactions seem particularly relevant to the better understanding of the cellular role of Mph1:

  1. mph1 was synergistic with respect to spontaneous mutator phenotype with the NER mutant rad14 (SCHELLER et al. 2000 Down) and the BER mutants mag1 and apn1. The synergistic effect was most pronounced for apn1 apn2 double mutants, where both known AP endonucleases of yeast are inactivated. For these mutants, the sensitivity to MMS (but not to 4-NQO) also was synergistic.

  2. From PRR, rad6, rad18, rad5, rev3, and rev1 were (at least partially) epistatic to mph1 for the spontaneous mutator phenotype, but not for DNA damage sensitivity.

  3. rad51, rad52, and rad55 from HR were epistatic to mph1 with respect to both spontaneous mutation rates and DNA damage sensitivity.

  4. The DNA damage sensitivities of rev3 mph1 and rev1 mph1 double mutants were synergistic, as has been reported for rad51 rev3 double mutants before (RATTRAY et al. 2002 Down).

  5. A rad5 deletion, which partially suppressed the mph1 mutator phenotype, had a very similiar effect on rad51 mutants and the rad5 rad51 double mutation was epistatic to mph1.

  6. mph1 mutants had slightly increased mitotic heteroallelic recombination rates, which were synergistic with sgs1.

Several conclusions can be drawn from these genetic interactions:

  1. In the absence of Mph1, DNA lesions that are normally processed by Mph1 are channeled mainly into TLS. The spontaneous mutator phenotype of mph1 mutants is due exclusively to TLS, since it is (almost) completely dependent on REV3 and REV1. AP sites are processed predominantly by Mph1, since the synergism for both the spontaneous mutator phenotype and the sensitivity to MMS is very pronounced in apn1 and apn1 apn2 mutants and since these mutants do not exhibit a spontaneous mutator phenotype in the presence of MPH1. The synergistic MMS sensitivity also strongly suggests that Mph1 is not an accessory factor to BER. The most obvious conclusion from these observations is an involvement of Mph1 in error-free bypass of lesions.

  2. MPH1 does not belong to the PRR pathway, since all mutants tested (rad6, rad18, rad5, mms2, ubc13, rev3, and rev1) become more sensitive to DNA damage, if MPH1 is deleted. The suppression of the (TLS-dependent) mph1 mutator phenotype by rad6, rad18, rev3, and rev1 can be ascribed to the TLS defect generated by these mutations. The partial suppression by rad5, however, is surprising, since RAD5 belongs to the error-free branch of PRR.

  3. The epistasis of mutations from HR to mph1 shows that error-free bypass involving Mph1 requires HR functions. Also the similiarity in DNA damage sensitivity of rad51 rev3 (RATTRAY et al. 2002 Down) and mph1 rev3 supports this conclusion.

  4. Since mph1 mutants are proficient in mitotic recombination, it can be concluded that Mph1 functions specifically in a branch of HR responsible for error-free bypass of DNA lesions, but not for general recombination. We suggest the term MPH1-HR for this pathway.

Relation of error-free PRR and MPH1-mediated error-free bypass:
A central enzyme in error-free PRR is Rad5. RAD5 belongs to the RAD6 epistasis group and has been assigned to the error-free branch of PRR, since rad5 mutants are not generally defective in UV-induced mutagenesis (JOHNSON et al. 1992 Down). However, UV-induced reversion of several ochre alleles is markedly reduced in rad5 mutants in an apparently allele-specific manner (LAWRENCE and CHRISTENSEN 1978 Down; JOHNSON et al. 1992 Down). Rad5 possesses an ATPase activity that is stimulated by single-stranded DNA (JOHNSON et al. 1994 Down) and a RING finger domain that is required for interaction with Ubc13 (ULRICH and JENTSCH 2000 Down; ULRICH 2003 Down), which is a ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme that, in cooperation with Mms2, assembles unusual K63-linked polyubiquitin chains (HOFMANN and PICKART 1999 Down). Rad5 also interacts with Rad18, a protein with single-strand DNA-binding activity that recruits Rad6 to DNA (BAILLY et al. 1994 Down). These interactions allow a multimeric complex containing Rad6, Rad18, Rad5, Ubc13, and Mms2 to be formed (ULRICH and JENTSCH 2000 Down). Rad6, which is also a ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme (JENTSCH et al. 1987 Down), can monoubiquitinate PCNA at K164 (HOEGE et al. 2002 Down), which is a mandatory prerequisite for translesion synthesis to occur (STELTER and ULRICH 2003 Down). The monoubiquitinated PCNA can be decorated by action of Rad5 and the Mms2/Ubc13 heterodimer with K63-linked polyubiquitin chains (HOEGE et al. 2002 Down), which, on the basis of the phenotypes of mms2 and ubc13 mutants, are thought to be required for error-free PRR. Both MMS2 and UBC13 have been genetically assigned to the error-free branch of PRR (BROOMFIELD et al. 1998 Down; BRUSKY et al. 2000 Down). Interestingly, although mms2 and ubc13 were found to be epistatic to each other (HOFMANN and PICKART 1999 Down; BRUSKY et al. 2000 Down), the phenotypes in combination with rad6 were found to differ in one instance: Whereas mms2 was hypostatic to rad6 (BROOMFIELD et al. 1998 Down), ubc13 was found to slightly suppress the UV and MMS sensitivity of rad6 in one particular study (BRUSKY et al. 2000 Down). We found that mph1 and mms2 were (sub)additive with respect to spontaneous mutation rates, whereas ubc13 was hypostatic to mph1. Therefore, ubc13 and mms2 mutations may not be completely functionally equivalent, as one would have expected on the basis of the finding that the heterodimer is necessary for assembly of K63-linked polyubiquitin chains (HOFMANN and PICKART 1999 Down).

The additive UV sensitivity of mms2 and rad4 from NER (BROOMFIELD et al. 1998 Down) suggests that Mms2 is not involved in DNA repair but rather, like Mph1, in error-free bypass of lesions. The synergistic DNA damage sensitivity of both mms2 and ubc13 with rev3 (BROOMFIELD et al. 1998 Down; BRUSKY et al. 2000 Down; XIAO et al. 2000 Down) also suggests that the major "rescue" pathway in case of failure is TLS, similar to the bypass involving Mph1 and homologous recombination. The MMS2/UBC13 bypass seems to work independently from the MPH1-HR bypass, since the UV sensitivity of mms2 and ubc13 is approximately additive with that of rad52 (ULRICH 2001 Down). In cases where the MMS2/UBC13 pathway is to be used, the MPH1-HR pathway might be suppressed by SRS2, which is very reasonable to assume in light of the ability of Srs2 to disrupt Rad51 filaments (KREJCI et al. 2003 Down; VEAUTE et al. 2003 Down). This would explain the suppression of the spontaneous mutator phenotype of mms2 and the MMS sensitivity of mms2 rev3 by srs2 (BROOMFIELD and XIAO 2002 Down) as well as the specificity of the suppression for the error-free branch of PRR (ULRICH 2001 Down). This idea has been expressed previously in a less explicit manner to explain the dependence of the suppression of rad6 sensitivity by srs2 on homologous recombination (SCHIESTL et al. 1990 Down). According to this line of reasoning, however, it follows from the mutator phenotypes of mph1, rad51, rad52, and rad55 mutants that the MPH1-HR pathway is not always silenced by Srs2. At present it is unclear which conditions may lead to use of either one or the other pathway. Judging from the strong synergism of mph1 with apn1 apn2 in comparision with the other repair mutants (mag1, rad14), one might suspect that the nature of the lesion could play a role in this decision process.

The conclusion that can be drawn from these notions is that error-free PRR and MPH1-HR probably act in parallel, but not in intimately connected pathways. This leaves open the question of why a rad5 mutation partially suppresses the mutator phenotype of mph1 and rad51. Formally, two obvious possibilities can explain this phenomenon: Either an alternative error-free pathway is available in the absence of Rad5, whose operation would eliminate the necessity for TLS, or TLS is not fully active in the absence of Rad5. A possible candidate for an alternative, Rad5-independent error-free pathway is the damage-tolerant polymerase {eta}, encoded by RAD30, which can bypass a number of lesions in a relatively accurate manner (JOHNSON et al. 1999 Down; HARACSKA et al. 2000A Down, HARACSKA et al. 2000B Down; WASHINGTON et al. 2000 Down; MINKO et al. 2003 Down). In fact, simultaneous deletion of rad5 and rad30 leads to a strong synergistic increase in the number of damage-induced mutations (MCDONALD et al. 1997 Down), suggesting that in the absence of error-free PRR Rad30 counteracts the mutagenic effects of Rev3-dependent TLS. However, several observations also support a stimulatory contribution of Rad5 to TLS. On the basis of the REV3-dependent spontaneous mutator phenotype of rad5 (CEJKA et al. 2001 Down) it is clear that Rad5 is not essential for TLS. This mutator phenotype, however, is considerably weaker than that of mms2 and ubc13, which would be unexpected if the sole function of Rad5 was to act as a ubiquitin protein ligase for Mms2/Ubc13, but could be explained by a Ubc13- and Mms2-independent stimulatory effect of Rad5 on Rev3. In mph1 or rad51 mutants, this same effect would also be responsible for mutagenic repair of lesions normally processed in an error-free manner by the MPH1-HR pathway, thus explaining the partial suppression of the mph1 and rad51 mutator phenotypes by the rad5 deletion. In addition, the proposed stimulation of TLS by Rad5 might also explain the reduction of UV-induced reversion rates for several ochre alleles in a rad5 background (LAWRENCE and CHRISTENSEN 1978 Down; JOHNSON et al. 1992 Down).

The stimulatory effect of Rad5 on TLS appears to contradict previous findings that the function of Rad5 in error-free PRR is to promote the multiubiquitination of PCNA (HOEGE et al. 2002 Down), while TLS requires PCNA monoubiquitination (STELTER and ULRICH 2003 Down). However, our reasoning can perhaps be reconciled with this model on the basis of the fact that not only monoubiquitination, but also SUMO modification of PCNA stimulates Rev3-dependent spontaneous mutagenesis (STELTER and ULRICH 2003 Down). Given that Rad5 directly interacts with the SUMO conjugating enzyme Ubc9 (HOEGE et al. 2002 Down), it is not unreasonable to expect Rad5 to exert a regulatory effect on the SUMO modification of PCNA, possibly by recruiting the modifying enzyme to a stalled replication fork. Assuming that direct interactions between Rad5 and the SUMO conjugation system indeed affect the activity of Rev3, inactivation of individual domains within the Rad5 protein would naturally have distinguishable consequences. Even the differential effects of Ubc13, which directly interacts with Rad5 by means of the Rad5 RING domain (ULRICH 2003 Down), and of Mms2, whose contact to Rad5 is only indirectly mediated by means of Ubc13 (ULRICH and JENTSCH 2000 Down), would be expected, as Ubc13 could still associate with and affect Rad5 in the absence of Mms2, but not vice versa. Definitive conclusions about the influence of Rad5 on TLS, however, will have to await a molecular analysis of the protein and its various interactions with other factors of the ubiquitin and SUMO conjugation system.

Possible function of Mph1 in MPH1-HR bypass:
Speculations about the role of Mph1 in the MPH1-HR pathway have to take into account that mph1 mutants probably display a slight hyperrecombination phenotype for mitotic heteroallelic recombination, which is clearly apparent in an sgs1 background. This largely excludes the possibility that Mph1 is a general accessory factor for homologous recombination, since in this case a mitotic hyporecombination phenotype should be expected. It seems more likely that Mph1 functions specifically in a subbranch of HR that is dedicated to error-free bypass, which would most plausibly promote information transfer from a sister chromatid. Disruption of such a pathway may not affect interhomolog recombination in diploids or may actually increase it. The pronounced hyperrecombination phenotype of the mph1 mutation in an sgs1 background suggests that Sgs1 can prevent most of these events in mph1 single mutants. We have observed that both the spontaneous deletion rate and the damage-induced deletion frequency of a direct duplication is reduced in a haploid mph1 mutant (C. RUDOLPH, K. SCHÜRER and W. KRAMER, unpublished data), which is in line with the hypothesis of MPH1 affecting recombination between sister chromatids. However, from the present data we are not able to clearly define a function for Mph1. It may also direct the processing of an intermediate created by proteins from homologous recombination into a productive form in terms of error-free bypass, whereas in its absence this intermediate may be processed to an unproductive form that may also lead—at least in the absence of Sgs1—to the formation of mitotic recombinants in diploids.


*  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Birgit Zeike for excellent technical assistance and R. A. Bennett, H. M. Feldmann, P. E. Gibbs, I. D. Hickson, S. P. Jackson, S. Lovett, K. Ohta, R. M. Ramirez, L. Symington, and W. Xiao for the generous gift of strains and plasmids. C.R. was supported by the Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes. This work was supported in part by the European Community's Human Potential Programme under contract HPRN-CT-2002-00240, Genome Stability and Checkpoint Control.

Manuscript received September 26, 2003; Accepted for publication December 31, 2003.


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*MATERIALS AND METHODS
*RESULTS
*DISCUSSION
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