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DNA Sequence Analysis of Spontaneous Mutagenesis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Bernard A. Kunza, Karthikeyan Ramachandrana, and Edward J. Vonarxaa School of Biological and Chemical Sciences, Deakin University, Geelong, Victoria, 3217, Australia
Corresponding author: Bernard A. Kunz, School of Biological and Chemical Sciences, Deakin University, Geelong, Victoria, 3217 Australia, bkunz{at}deakin.edu.au (E-mail).
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
To help elucidate the mechanisms involved in spontaneous mutagenesis, DNA sequencing has been applied to characterize the types of mutation whose rates are increased or decreased in mutator or antimutator strains, respectively. Increased spontaneous mutation rates point to malfunctions in genes that normally act to reduce spontaneous mutation, whereas decreased rates are associated with defects in genes whose products are necessary for spontaneous mutagenesis. In this article, we survey and discuss the mutational specificities conferred by mutator and antimutator genes in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The implications of selected aspects of the data are considered with respect to the mechanisms of spontaneous mutagenesis.
SPONTANEOUS mutations play a fundamental role in evolution and have been implicated in aging, carcinogenesis, and human genetic disease (![]()
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DNA lesions can arise naturally through intracellular metabolism or the intrinsic instability of DNA. For example, there is evidence consistent with spontaneous alkylation, deamination, and loss of DNA bases, as well as their modification by reactive oxygen species (![]()
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Two general strategies have been used in attempts to better understand the mechanisms responsible for spontaneous mutagenesis. The first is to characterize strains that have enhanced spontaneous mutation rates. The rationale for this route is that mutator phenotypes are expected to result from defects in genes whose products act to minimize genetic instability. Indeed, as expected, such studies have revealed that spontaneous mutations can arise through failure of DNA repair or processes that maintain the accuracy of DNA replication (![]()
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Early studies of spontaneous mutagenesis in mutator and antimutator strains relied on genetic analysis of reversion, suppression, or forward mutation (for reviews, see ![]()
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In this article, we review the modulation of spontaneous mutagenesis in mutator and antimutator strains of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, as revealed by DNA sequence analysis. First, we discuss briefly the selected aspects of systems used in the analysis of mutagenesis. Next, sequence changes arising spontaneously in a wild-type background are considered to establish the types of mutations that do occur and provide a basis for comparison. We then survey the effects of eliminating genes whose inactivation leads to a mutator or antimutator phenotype on the magnitude and specificity of spontaneous mutagenesis. Finally, we focus on a select number of findings with implications for the mechanisms of spontaneous mutagenesis in eukaryotic cells.
| Assay systems |
|---|
In vivo mutagenesis assay systems can be based on the characterization of forward or reverse mutations on a target gene (assay gene). Sequence analyses using forward systems have been reported for the CAN1, LYS2, SUP4-o, and URA3 genes. Commonly used reversion systems are based on ade2, his7, hom3, or lys2 alleles. Mutant strains are usually constructed by deleting part or all of the gene, disrupting the gene sequence by inserting additional DNA into the gene, or by introducing point mutations into the gene. Deletion of a significant portion or all of the gene is the preferable method because this usually results in complete loss of the gene's function. In contrast, disruptions and point mutations may result in partial retention or alteration of gene function, and different point mutations especially may produce different phenotypic effects. Assay genes can be located on a chromosome or a centromeric plasmid. This type of plasmid mimics chromosome behavior with respect to replication during S phase, copy number (predominantly single copy), and replicative stability (![]()
Forward systems are preferable in the study of mutagenesis because they can detect a wide variety of alterations at many sites within a gene. In contrast, reversion systems only detect specific changes and cannot be used to obtain mutational spectra or to map distributions of mutations. The advantage of a reversion system is that once the relevant change is known, sequencing is not usually required, thereby allowing rapid screening of a large number of samples. In this case, however, genotypic and phenotypic reversion to wild type are assumed to involve the same sequence change, but this may not necessarily be so. For example, intragenic suppression may be indistinguishable phenotypically from locus reversion. Reversion systems will not be considered further in this review.
Mutational spectra derived from different assay systems should be compared with caution because of the inherent characteristics of the systems. Ideally an assay system should involve a target gene large enough to allow all possible types of mutation to occur and be recovered. While a larger target gene should be more representative of the genome, practical difficulties in sequencing could negate this advantage. Multiple sequencing sessions may be required to identify mutations in a large target. Even if a mutation is identified near the sequencing primer, the entire target has to be sequenced to verify that there are no additional alterations. Another desirable feature is a wide variety of sequence contexts, which helps maximize detection of sequence-specific effects. The proportion of intronic sequences in the assay system, however, should be low because many intronic mutations may not produce phenotypic changes. If nondetectable mutations are not randomly distributed with respect to class or location throughout the target gene, then mutational specificity will be biased and the mutational data will not be representative of the true spectrum. Thus, if possible, the ability of the system to detect all possible substitutions at all positions within the target should be characterized. If this requirement is not met, the interpretation of the spectral data should acknowledge this limitation. Irrespective of the size or sequence content of the assay target, a statistically significant number of mutants must be examined to construct a meaningful spectrum. Small data sets increase the probability that spectral features are caused by chance.
| Spontaneous DNA sequence alterations |
|---|
To date, mutations that occur spontaneously in wild-type cells have been characterized using the yeast centromere plasmid-borne SUP4-o allele, the URA3 gene integrated at the chromosomal HIS3 locus, and the endogenous CAN1 gene (![]()
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Spontaneous single base pair substitutions have been recovered at 65 of the 66 exon sites, and one of the two intron positions where such changes can be detected in SUP4-o with the genetic screen used. However, only 75% of the substitutions detectable in the exons (129 out of 174) and intron (three out of four) of the gene have been found to occur spontaneously so far, and some positions are mutated much more frequently than others. Both types of transition and all four transversions have been identified in SUP4-o (Table 2), but there is a slight excess of transversions (transversion:transition ratio = 1.44:1). Furthermore, events at G·C pairs outnumber those at A·T pairs by nearly 4:1 (367:97), a ratio that is almost threefold greater than that expected (1.5:1) on the basis of random occurrence of mutations at the G·C (41) and A·T (28) sites that can be detectably mutated. Collectively, the data suggest that the occurrence and repair/correction/editing of spontaneous DNA damage or replication errors in yeast is influenced by sequence context. In addition to single events, a tandem double and a tandem triple substitution, as well as two nontandem double substitutions, have been found in SUP4-o.
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Some differences are apparent for substitution mutagenesis at the URA3 and CAN1 genes. The relative proportions of A·T
G·C transitions and A·T
T·A transversions at URA3 differ, and transversions outnumbered transitions 3.3:1 compared with SUP4-o, but there were also fourfold more substitutions at G·C pairs, as observed for SUP4-o. No substitutions were detected at A·T pairs in CAN1, and the fractions of the three substitutions at G·C pairs differ from the corresponding values for SUP4-o, although the transversion:transition ratios (1.6) are similar for SUP4-o and CAN1. These differences may reflect experimental dissimilarities, the very small numbers of mutations analyzed for URA3 and CAN1, or limitations caused by the redundancy of the genetic code on the types of substitutions that can be selected at individual sites in a protein-encoding gene.
Single and multiple base pair deletions (the latter ranging from eight to 807 base pairs in length) or insertions account for 18% of the SUP4-o mutations in the wild-type background. The majority (44 out of 49) of single base pair losses occurred in runs of two, three, or five base pairs with many of the deletions (40), as well as all (five) of the single base pair additions, taking place in a tract of five G·C pairs. The seven deletions and insertions at URA3 and CAN1 also occurred mainly in base pair runs. This pattern is consistent with a mutational mechanism involving misalignment of template and primer strands during replication through runs of repeated base pairs (![]()
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A duplication of seven base pairs and several more complex events were also detected. The complex events include a mutant with nontandem deletions of one and 32 base pairs, two mutants each having a single base pair substitution adjacent to a single base pair deletion, and five mutants having the sequence 5'-GATCTCA-3' replaced with 5'-CCGGG-3'. The latter change was most likely caused by processing of a DNA secondary structure that was formed by pairing within a quasipalindromic sequence (![]()
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The available data provide evidence that a large variety of DNA sequence alterations can occur spontaneously in yeast, pointing to the complexity of spontaneous mutagenesis in this organism. They also support hypotheses that implicate roles for DNA sequencedirected events in the generation of spontaneous mutations in eukaryotic cells.
| Specificity of mutator and antimutator alleles |
|---|
In the next sections, we describe briefly the mutational specificities of defects that confer mutator or antimutator phenotypes. The genes involved are cataloged according to the processes that they influence: proofreading, mismatch correction, DNA repair [nucleotide excision repair (NER), base excision repair, RAD6-dependent repair, and recombinational repair], and nucleotide metabolism. The data are summarized in detail in Table 1 and Table 2, which also provide the relevant references.
Proofreading:
DNA pols
,
, and
are the proofreading-proficient polymerases identified in yeast (![]()
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and
exhibit a mutator phenotype with a mutation rate increase of up to 130-fold for pol
Exo- over wild type. The pol
Exo- mutator confers a much less pronounced mutator effect that is consistent with mammalian DNA pol
being more accurate than pol
during in vitro replication (![]()
Exo- mutator effect (~10-fold increase in mutation rate) also suggests that the higher fidelity of pol
results more from presynthetic error control mechanisms than from proofreading. Analysis of mutations generated in SUP4-o and URA3 by the pol
Exo- mutator, as well as mutations in URA3 by the pol
Exo- mutator, revealed that increases in single base pair events (substitutions, deletions, and insertions) accounted for virtually the entire increase in the mutation rates. (No sequence data were presented for spontaneous mutagenesis at URA3 in the wild-type background, so the magnitude of the rate increases for the individual classes of mutation could not be determined. Single base pair mutations, however, were the only types of event recovered at URA3 in the mutator strains.) Among the single base pair substitutions detected in SUP4-o, the G·C
C·G and A·T
T·A transversions exhibited the smallest and greatest rate increases, respectively. C/C mismatches are corrected postreplicatively much less efficiently in Saccharomyces cerevisiae than are G/G mismatches (![]()
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produces relatively few C/C mispairs when replicating SUP4-o. This interpretation is supported for pol
and is extended to pol
by the failure to detect any G·C
C·G transversions among 91 single base pair substitutions induced within a chromosomal copy of the URA3 gene by a pol
Exo- or pol
Exo- mutator. The SUP4-o data also suggest that pol
proofreads A/A and/or T/T mismatches more efficiently than other base mismatches, a possibility that is consistent with the relative inefficiency with which T/T mismatches in SUP4-o are corrected (![]()
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Exo- mutator was influenced by the orientation of the SUP4-o gene with respect to the origin of replication (![]()
Exo- or pol
Exo- mutators (![]()
Exo- background are similar to certain orientation-dependent differences detected for SUP4-o.
The mut7-1 allele confers a temperature-sensitive defect in pol
that results in a mutator phenotype. It is not known, however, whether the mutation influences the polymerizing or proofreading activities of the polymerase. Several observations argue against a proofreading defect. Elimination of proofreading by pol
is not lethal, whereas mut7-1 confers temperature-sensitive lethality. Furthermore, it is clear that the mutator effect is much smaller than that observed for the proofreading deficiency, although viability at 30° indicates that the full effect of the mut7-1 allele is not apparent at this temperature. In addition, multiple base pair deletions, complex changes, and G·C
C·G transversions were recovered at URA3 in the mut7-1 background, but not at URA3 for the pol
Exo- mutator. One must be cautious in interpreting the latter findings because the data necessary to determine the magnitude of the mut7-1 mutator effect at 32° and 34° were not presented, and at 30°, as many as 25% of the mutations analyzed could have been spontaneous in origin.
Mismatch correction:
The specificities of mutators caused by inactivation of the PMS1, MSH2, and MLH1 or MSH3 plus MSH6 mismatch repair genes have been characterized. The mutation rates were increased in all mismatch correction-deficient strains relative to the wild type, reflecting the importance of mismatch correction in maintaining genetic stability. At SUP4-o, for which specificity data for the wild-type background were provided, only the rates of single base pair events were increased in pms1, msh2, and mlh1 strains, with deletions/insertions showing the greatest increases. Recently, MSH2 was reported to be required for correction of a 26-base pair insertion mismatch formed in cells undergoing meiosis (![]()
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Nucleotide excision repair:
RAD1 encodes an endonuclease that is thought to function in a complex with Rad10p, incising the DNA backbone 5' to the lesion (![]()
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) that is believed to function in translesion synthesis (![]()
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The RAD3 gene encodes an ATPase/helicase that is not only necessary for NER, but that is also involved in transcription (![]()
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RAD6-dependent repair:
Members of the RAD6 epistasis group for UV sensitivity are thought to function in postreplication repair or damage tolerance via translesion synthesis (![]()
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The RAD6 gene product is an ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme that is capable of ubiquitinating histones H2A, H2B, and H3 in vitro ( ![]()
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T·A transversions, and Ty insertions. The substitutions were not caused by a failure to correct mismatches that could have given rise to the detected base changes. Not only were the Ty insertions increased in number, but they also occurred at considerably more locations throughout SUP4-o than observed for the wild-type strain, suggesting that protein ubiquitination influences both the rate and target site specificity of Ty retrotransposition. Promotion of the four different types of mutation by the rad6 mutator was REV3 dependent, but the REV3 requirement was not uniform for each of the three mutational classes, with REV3 function necessary for 6098% of the changes, depending on the class of mutation.
RAD18 encodes a protein that contains DNA- and nucleotide-binding motifs and that has an ATPase activity (![]()
T·A transversions is increased, by about eightfold. Again, this effect is not caused by a mismatch correction deficiency. Intriguingly, extracts of rad18 cells are defective in nicking supercoiled plasmid DNA containing methylene blue plus light-induced DNA lesions (T. Y.-K. CHOW and B. A. KUNZ, unpublished results). These lesions include 8-hydroxyguanine (![]()
T·A transversions during DNA replication (![]()
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T·A transversions by DNA damage, and the function of RAD18 in spontaneous mutagenesis might be to direct the complex to the relevant lesions. Thus, it is not surprising that the production of G·C
T·A transversions by the rad18 mutator also is REV3 dependent, and that the degree of REV3 dependency is similar to that observed for rad6-mediated G·C
T·A transversion.
RAD27 apparently functions in a novel mutation avoidance pathway that minimizes the occurrence of duplications of sequences flanked by short direct repeats. The rad27 mutator greatly increased the rate of these events and promoted complex sequence changes. In contrast to all yeast mutators characterized to date, the rate of single base pair events did not appear to be increased. Because only a small number of mutations were analyzed, however, it remains possible that the rate of single base pair substitutions, deletions, or insertions is enhanced by rad27, but to a much lesser extent than the rates for the events detected.
As mentioned above, the REV3 gene product is a DNA polymerase that is likely to be required for translesion synthesis (![]()
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Inactivation of the DNA damage-inducible gene DDR48 also has been reported to confer an antimutator phenotype (![]()
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Recombinational repair:
The rad52 gene has been implicated in the recombinational repair of DNA double-strand breaks and in postreplication repair of UV-induced DNA damage in NER-deficient cells (![]()
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Base excision repair:
APN1 encodes the major apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) endonuclease involved in base excision repair in S. cerevisiae (![]()
C·G events was 59-fold greater in the apn1 strain. Elimination of the N3-methyladenine glycosylase (MAG) in the apn1 mutant decreased the A·T
C·G transversion rate by 83% relative to the apn1 strain and reduced the rate of total substitutions to that for the wild-type parent. These results suggest that replication past unrepaired AP sites resulting from spontaneous DNA alkylation is largely responsible for the substitution specificity of the apn1 mutator. The data also point to activation of Ty retrotransposition by spontaneously occurring DNA damage.
UNG1 encodes the yeast uracil-DNA-glycosylase (![]()
A·T transitions accounting for 93% of the mutator effect. This result is consistent with failure to remove uracil resulting from spontaneous deamination of cytosine.
Nucleotide metabolism:
There is considerable evidence that regulation of intracellular DNA precursor levels is an important factor in minimizing spontaneous genetic instability (![]()
A·T transitions and a corresponding increase in the fraction of A·T
G·C transitions might have been expected. Although the proportion of G·C
A·T events decreased by 50%, the fraction of A·T
G·C events did not change significantly, and there was an increase in the proportion of G·C
C·G and A·T
C·G transversions. Rather than misincorporation during replicative DNA synthesis, these substitutions are likely to be caused by misincorporation of dCTP during repair of apurinic sites because the dcd1 mutator effect is eliminated by inactivation of APN1 (B. A. KUNZ, unpublished results).
Insights from DNA sequence analysis:
Characterization of the specificities of yeast mutator and antimutator alleles has revealed that defects in various genes elicit a range of distinct spontaneous mutational spectra. Furthermore, dissimilarities in spectra have been observed for alleles of the same gene (rad3-1 vs. rad3-102) or for genes thought to be involved in the same repair process (rad1 and rad3, rad6, and rad18). Such findings point to unexpected subtleties in the control of genetic stability in S. cerevisiae and presumably in other eukaryotic organisms. Next, we highlight several observations that bear on the mechanistic aspects of spontaneous mutation.
The A rule vs. endogenous abasic sites in eukaryotic cells:
The mutational specificity of AP sites was first explored in transfection experiments in which single-stranded bacteriophage DNA was introduced into E. coli, with the specific changes established by analysis of the DNA recovered from the cells (![]()
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1 mutator effect indicates that unrepaired endogenous AP sites have significant mutagenic potential in eukaryotes but, surprisingly, with a mutational specificity different from that expected on the basis of the A rule (![]()
1 mutator effect is dramatically reduced by a deletion in DCD1 (B. A. KUNZ, unpublished results), which results in a decrease in the intracellular dGTP pool (![]()
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Roles of pol
in DNA replication:
DNA pols
,
, and
are implicated in the replication of eukaryotic cellular DNA (![]()
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most likely functions in the initiation of leading strand and Okazaki fragment synthesis, but the precise roles of pols
and
are still under debate. The mutational specificity data for yeast DNA pol
that lacks 3'
5' exonuclease activity (Table 1 and Table 2) might be interpreted to suggest that pol
replicates only one of the two DNA strands at a yeast replication fork, leaving open the possibility that pol
replicates the other strand. This interpretation of the specificity data for pol
is based on the following rationale. The type and location of errors that result from replication by DNA polymerases depend in part on the sequence of the template DNA (![]()
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A single DNA replication fork does traverse the plasmid-borne SUP4-o gene (![]()
(Table 1 and Table 2), but it does not influence mismatch correction in this gene (![]()
encountering a different sequence context upon inversion of SUP4-o, therefore replicating just one template strand at the DNA replication fork. Two other interpretations of these data, however, must be considered. First, the leading and lagging strand replication complexes most likely involve at least some different accessory factors. Dissimilarities (aside from polymerases) in the constitutions of the complexes might lead to different fidelities of DNA replication, and the failure of pol
to proofread might amplify these differences in accuracy. Consequently, even if pol
replicated both DNA templates, the pattern of errors produced for the two orientations of SUP4-o might still differ, although it is difficult to say whether this would be true for the overall mutation rate. Second, it is conceivable that replication in vivo by eukaryotic DNA polymerases is dissociated from proofreading by the same enzymes. In this case, the specificity data might suggest that it is the proofreading rather than polymerizing activity of pol
that operates on only one of the two template strands. If so, then one would have to question why pol
corrects errors on only one of the two strands it replicates and why a different 3'
5' exonuclease corrects the other strand. Regardless of such conundrums, the differences in mutational specificity upon inversion of SUP4-o also suggest that for any gene, the spectrum and distribution of spontaneous mutations may depend in part on the position and orientation of the gene with respect to the nearest active origin of replication.
Specificity of mismatch repair:
The yeast mismatch correction genes MLH1, MSH2, and PMS1 have been shown to participate in a system that recognizes single base pairs and deletion/insertion mispairs (![]()
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Contribution of translesion synthesis to spontaneous mutagenesis:
Evidence has been presented that bacteriophage T4 and E. coli antimutators are very specific and, therefore, may influence only particular pathways for error discrimination (![]()
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60% of the spontaneous single base pair substitutions and deletions might be caused by translesion synthesis. If so, the Rev3 DNA polymerase might be involved in processing many different lesions, and, therefore, a substantial fraction of spontaneous mutagenesis in yeast might reflect mechanisms for tolerance rather than error-prone repair of DNA damage. The fact that the rev3 antimutator counteracts several rad mutators, although to different extents (![]()
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Inducibility of Ty transposition by spontaneous DNA damage:
Insertion of the Ty retrotransposon into SUP4-o was increased in strains having apn1, rad1, or rad6 deletions (Table 2). APN1 is required for the repair of abasic sites and free radical-induced strand breaks, and defects in RAD1 (NER) and RAD6 (postreplication repair?) sensitize cells to a variety of DNA-damaging agents. Thus, spontaneously occurring DNA lesions might mobilize Ty elements (![]()
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank our collaborators and the many investigators who provided the plasmids that were used to make the strains described in this article. Work from B.A.K.'s laboratory was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, the Medical Research Council of Canada, and the Australian Research Council.
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