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The Effect of DNA Replication Mutations on CAG Tract Stability in Yeast
Jill Kuglin Schweitzera and Dennis M. Livingstonaa Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology and Biophysics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455-0347
Corresponding author: Dennis M. Livingston, Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology and Biophysics, 4-225 Millard Hall, 435 Delaware St. SE, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455-0347., livin001{at}maroon.tc.umn.edu (E-mail)
Communicating editor: P. L. FOSTER
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
CAG repeat tracts are unstable in yeast, leading to frequent contractions and infrequent expansions in repeat tract length. To compare CAG repeats to other simple repeats and palindromic sequences, we examined the effect of DNA replication mutations, including alleles of pol
, pol
, pol
, and PCNA (proliferating cell nuclear antigen), on tract stability. Among the polymerase mutations, the pol
mutation (pol3-14) destabilizes tracts with either CAG or CTG as the lagging strand template. One pol
mutation, pol1-1, destabilizes the orientation with CAG as the lagging strand template, but it has little effect on the CTG orientation. In contrast, the pol1-17 mutation has no effect on either orientation. Similarly, mutations in the proofreading functions of pol
and pol
, as well as a temperature-sensitive pol
mutation, pol2-18, have no effect on tract stability. Three PCNA mutations, pol30-52, pol30-79, and pol30-90, all have drastic effects on tract stability. Of the three, pol30-52 is unique in yielding small tract changes that are indicative of an impairment in mismatch repair. These results show that while CAG repeats are destabilized by many of the same mutations that destabilize other simple repeats, they also have some behaviors that are suggestive of their potential to form hairpin structures.
REPEATED DNA sequences are inherently unstable because of their ability to misalign during cellular processes that separate the two strands of DNA. Such misalignments can lead to expansions or deletions within the repeated sequence. Different types of repeated sequences, varying in length and sequence of the repeated unit, exhibit unique patterns and degrees of instability. Repetitions of the trinucleotide CAG and its complement, CTG, display instability that was initially recognized because several neurodegenerative diseases in humans are caused by expansions of these repeat tracts (![]()
Studies of CAG tracts placed within yeast chromosomes show that while these repeat tracts share an inherent instability with other simple repeated sequences, such as repetitions of the dinucleotide GT, there are features of CAG tract instability that may be distinct (![]()
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The reasons for this unique instability are becoming clearer. Many in vitro studies have shown that CAG and CTG oligonucleotides can form stable hairpin structures (![]()
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indicated that CAG/CTG repeats can form hairpins in vivo (![]()
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To more fully understand how CAG tracts may be influenced by cellular processes that manipulate DNA, we have been studying CAG tracts embedded in a yeast chromosome (![]()
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![]()
/rad27
mutant lacking the flap endonuclease needed to process the ends of Okazaki fragments. CAG repeat tracts are highly unstable in a rth1
/rad27
mutant, undergoing frequent expansions as well as contractions (![]()
![]()
![]()
In this report, we have examined mutations in different components of the replication machinery in yeast (![]()
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
Yeast strains:
All strains are based on the isogenic pair of parental strains SSL204a and SSL204
(![]()
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|
The various replication mutations were all introduced into wild-type SSL204a and
using the two-step replacement method (![]()
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Changes in CAG tract length:
To examine the effect of DNA replication mutations on CAG repeat tract instability, we grew cells at 30° (unless stated otherwise). This temperature is semipermissive for the heat-sensitive polymerase mutations used in this study. To ascertain tract length changes, we started by choosing 5 colonies for each strain and tract orientation (Figure 1). These 5 parental colonies were dispersed into single cells and grown on agar to produce a collection of sibling colonies. DNA was purified from 32 sibling colonies that arose from each of the 5 parental colonies.
The purified DNA was used as a template for PCR with primers that flank the repeat tract as described previously (![]()
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![]()
|
|
Our analysis of tract length changes relied on the phenomenon that as the parental colony grows, some cells undergo tract length changes that result in sectors of cells within the parental colony that have an altered tract length (Figure 1). To ascertain the percentage of cells with altered tract length, we dispersed the parental colony and permitted individual cells to grow. By sampling the sibling colonies, we were able to recognize those that came from sectors with altered repeat tract lengths by the absence of the parental-length tract. In place of the parental-length tracts, siblings arising from cells within the sectors displayed a PCR product of altered length. The length of the altered product could be measured within one or two repeat units, using the size standards that are run in the gel and by the stutter bands that often descend from the longest products (Figure 2 and Figure 3). Small changes of less than five repeats could be measured accurately from the stutter bands (Figure 3). Rather than list all the length changes, we have reported their mean sizes (Table 1). A complete data set is available upon request.
|
Most parental colonies do not have a large amount of sectoring and, consequently, many of the sibling colonies display the parental-length PCR product. In some cases, the PCR products from sibling colonies not only display the parental-length product, but also a prominent product of altered length. These were not counted in our analyses because they are indicative of sectoring that occurs during growth of the sibling cell colony.
Statistical analysis:
To ascertain whether repeat tracts are more unstable in mutant cells than in the wild-type cells, we compared the sets of data from each mutant, i.e., the number of changes per sample of 32 sibling colonies from 5 independent parental colonies, to the corresponding set of data from the wild-type cells (Table 1). The statistical test we applied was a randomization test that calculates the probability that, by chance, we found more high values within the set of 5 mutant samples than we did within the set of 5 wild-type samples. First, we calculated the probability that all 5 values for the mutant are larger by chance than the 5 values from the wild type. This probability is 1/252 (P = 0.004) {5/10 x 4/9 x 3/8 x 2/7 x 1/6}. Second, we calculated the probability that the set of 5 mutant samples had the 4 largest values plus a specific 1 of the 5 smallest values. This probability is again 1/252 {4/10 x 3/9 x 2/8 x 1/7 x 5/6}. Because there are 5 ways to include the 4 highest values plus any 1 of the 5 lowest values, we multiplied the probability by 5 to obtain the overall probability of 5/252 (P = 0.02). Thus, accepting P < 0.05 as the limit for statistical significance, we judge the increase in tract length changes in mutants to result from the mutation, rather than by chance, when either all 5 of the mutant values are higher than the 5 wild-type values, or when 4 of the mutant values are the highest 4 among the combined data for mutant and wild type.
| RESULTS |
|---|
Introduction of replication mutations into strains bearing repeat tracts:
To create a collection of isogenic strains bearing repeat tracts that differ only in the polymerase and PCNA mutations, we first introduced the polymerase and PCNA mutations into one of our isogenic parental strains (either SSL204a or
, ![]()
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The nature of tract length changes in yeast:
We ascertain tract stability by examining whether sibling colonies that arise from the dispersal of cells of a parental colony no longer contain a repeat tract of parental length, but one of an altered length (Figure 1). Tracts of the D orientation are more unstable than tracts in the C orientation, both in wild-type and mutant cells (Table 1). For example, in the data generated for this study of wild-type cells, we found that one tract length change occurred among 160 sibling colonies for tract C, while for tract D, we found 29 tract length changes among 158 siblings (Table 1). This difference arises because the ADE2 clone in which we have inserted the repeat tract contains an ARS element, tract C using CAG as the lagging strand template, and tract D using CTG as the lagging strand template (Figure 1). With few exceptions, the majority of tract length changes found in wild-type and mutant cells, regardless of tract orientation, are contractions that remove five or more repeat units (Table 1). Tract expansions also occur, but they are rarer. Similarly, changes of three or fewer repeat units are rare, except in mismatch repair mutants (![]()
CAG tract instability in polymerase mutants:
CAG tract stability was examined in yeast strains containing mutations in the major replicative polymerases,
,
, and
. Polymerase
initiates DNA synthesis during both leading and lagging strand replication (![]()
mutations, pol1-1 (![]()
![]()
and primase (![]()
(![]()
mutants are phenotypically temperature sensitive, they have disparate effects on CAG tract stability. In the pol1-1 mutant, tract C, which is oriented with CAG in the lagging strand template, is destabilized. The frequency of changes rose from 1 in 160 sibling colonies in wild-type cells to 13 among 159 sibling colonies in this mutant (Table 1). In the same mutant, for tract D, which is oriented with CTG in the lagging strand template, the difference between the mutant and wild-type values are not significant by the randomization test (see MATERIALS AND METHODS). Thus, we conclude that the pol1-1 mutation destabilizes the C orientation, but has little or no effect on the D orientation. Trials with the pol1-17 mutant showed that neither tract is destabilized significantly by this mutation (Table 1).
Next, we examined mutations in polymerases
and
, two other polymerases that are essential for chromosomal replication in yeast (![]()
![]()
mutation, pol3-14, causes yeast cells to arrest as doublets within 5 hr after being shifted to the nonpermissive temperature, 38° (![]()
To further characterize the effect of the pol3-14 mutation, the stability of tract D was also examined in this mutant at a lower temperature, 23°, and at a shorter repeat tract length. At 23°, the instability of tract D in the pol3-14 mutant is reduced to near the wild-type frequency, which is consistent with the thermolability of the pol3-14 gene product. Similarly, the shorter tracts of the D orientation, ~30 repeat units, are more stable in the pol3-14 mutant at 30°. For comparison, we have presented the results from wild-type cells and a rth1
/rad27
mutant for similar short tracts of the D orientation (Table 1). The results show that the behavior of a short tract of the D orientation in the pol3-14 mutant is closer to its behavior in wild-type cells than to its behavior in rth1
/rad27
mutant cells.
We also tested CAG tract instability in a pol3-14 rad52
double mutant (Table 1). Previous studies examining the excision of a large hairpin noted that the effect of a temperature-sensitive pol3 mutation was dependent on a functional RAD52 gene (see DISCUSSION; ![]()
We tested a mutation in pol
, pol2-18, that causes cessation of cell division and DNA synthesis within 4 hr after cells are shifted to the nonpermissive temperature, 37° (![]()
and
, pol3-01 (![]()
![]()
CAG tract instability in PCNA mutants:
CAG repeat tract stability was investigated in three different PCNA mutants, pol30-52, pol30-79, and pol30-90 (![]()
![]()
and
to make them more processive when synthesizing new DNA strands (![]()
![]()
/rad27
mutant using a tract of the same length (![]()
We also observed that there are significantly more small changes in repeat tract length in the pol30-52 mutant than in the pol30-79 or pol30-90 mutants. For tract C in the pol30-52 mutant, 12 changes out of 159 sibling colonies were of 3 repeat units or less, and for tract D in the same mutant, 10 changes out of 158 sibling colonies were of 3 repeat units or less (data not shown). For tract C, neither the pol30-79 nor pol30-90 mutations induced any small changes in repeat tract length. For tract D, there were no changes of 3 repeat units or less in the pol30-79 mutant, while 1 change out of 158 sibling colonies was 2 repeat units in the pol30-90 mutant (data not shown). The statistical significance of the difference was calculated using Fisher's exact test by comparing the number of parental colonies in which small changes occurred between the pol30-52 and pol30-90 mutants. For the pol30-52 mutant, 4 of 5 C tract parental colonies yielded siblings with small changes, and 5 out of 5 D tract parental colonies yielded small changes. In contrast, none of the C tract parental colonies from the pol30-90 mutant yielded siblings with small changes, and only 1 of the D tract parental colonies did so. Using Fisher's exact test, P = 0.048 for tract C and P = 0.0079 for tract D. In addition, among the remaining data sets for long C and D tracts at 30°, we found only 5 other changes of 3 repeat units or less among 2860 sibling colonies. Thus, the small changes, reminiscent of the changes that occur in mismatch repair mutants (![]()
Characterization of CAG tract length changes in polymerase mutants:
We also scrutinized the data for any trends in the pattern of tract length changes in the replication mutants. As is the case in wild-type cells, tract C is more stable than tract D in the replication mutants. However, more examples of expansions were found among siblings containing C tracts than those with D tracts (Table 1). Taking the data for the long C and D tracts as a whole (and excluding the values for the small D tracts that include data for the rth1
/rad27
mutant), we found 32 expansions out of 1912 sibling colonies for tract C and only 8 out of 1903 sibling colonies for tract D. (We have not placed a statistical significance on these values because they were collected among a variety of mutants that may have significant differences among themselves.) This orientation bias is consistent with what has been found in both Escherichia coli (![]()
![]()
Measurement of the sizes of tract length contractions in the wild type and mutants yielded broad distributions that averaged between 26 and 45 repeat units. Comparison of the mutant distributions to the wild-type distribution by a t-test with two tails revealed that the pol3-01 distribution for tract D is significantly different, with P < 0.05, and that the pol3-14 distribution for tract D (71 repeat units at 30°) approaches this significance, with P = 0.051. Because of their relatively low incidence, no tests were done on the tract expansions.
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
In this study, we tested a variety of replication mutations for an effect on CAG tract stability. Many of these mutations impacted CAG tract stability. In some cases, differences in the relative stabilities of the two orientations or in the patterns of changes were observed among the mutants. As described below, the overall pattern of destabilization by the various mutations places CAG repeats in a unique position among other simple repeats and palindromes that have been studied in yeast.
In applying this mutational analysis to the study of CAG repeats, one of the questions we were testing directly was whether the various mutations might exacerbate the instability of CAG repeat tracts. A few of the mutations we used create an absolute loss of activity, such as the exonuclease mutations of pol
and pol
. Other mutations in the DNA polymerase genes are temperature-sensitive, conditional mutations. Studies were carried out at a temperature semipermissive for these mutations. When a conditional mutation grown at the semipermissive temperature effects greater instability, it is an indication that the encoded polymerase plays a role in maintaining the fidelity of the repeat tracts. Failure to observe an effect has an ambiguous meaning. While it could mean that the polymerase plays no role in maintenance of repeat tract stability, it could also mean that the mutation is not severe enough to cause a noticeable change in repeat tract stability.
We note that tracts of the D orientation never undergo the same degree of destabilization in the mutant backgrounds as do tracts of the C orientation (Table 1). This is partially the result of the very high base line value we measure for tract D in wild-type cells that leaves little room for further destabilization. Presumably, this phenomenon occurs because the replication machinery in wild-type cells has little capacity to limit the rate of D tract instability, but it has greater power to limit the rate of C tract stability at the long tract lengths we employ. We also note that the fold differences in frequencies we observe between mutant and wild-type cells are never more than ~10-fold. Most simple repeats studied in similar mutants, such as homonucleotide and dinucleotide repeats, most often yield a greater fold difference in rates between mutant and wild-type cells (![]()
![]()
CAG tract stability in pol
mutants:
Temperature-sensitive mutations in pol
, the polymerase that initiates new DNA strands during replication, affected CAG tract stability in an allele-specific manner. The pol1-1 mutation destabilizes tract C by ~11-fold, but it does not appreciably destabilize tract D. In contrast, pol1-17 has no measurable effect on the stability of either orientation. Other studies have examined hairpin excision in pol
mutants. The excision of an 80-bp hairpin was increased in a pol1-1 mutant (11-fold in rate), but not in another pol
mutant, cdc17-1 (![]()
![]()
copies at the semipermissive temperature, but it might also correlate with the region in which the respective pol
mutations lie. While the pol1-1 mutation is in the N-ter-minal region at amino acid 493, the pol1-17 and cdc17-1 mutations are in the C-terminal half of the protein at residues 1004 and 904, respectively (![]()
![]()
Although the pol1-1 mutation affects CAG tract stability, it destabilizes only tracts of the C orientation significantly. This suggests that when CAG is the lagging strand template (tract C), this mutant pol
allows for a significantly greater degree of replication slippage that it does normally. In contrast, when CTG serves as the lagging strand template (tract D), replication slippage occurs readily in wild-type cells and is not limited by the faulty polymerase.
CAG tract stability in pol
and pol
mutants:
A temperature-sensitive mutation in pol
, pol2-18, does not affect CAG tract stability. Since we only examined one pol2 temperature-sensitive mutant, we cannot rule out the possibility that other pol2 mutants would impact CAG tract stability. However, our result is consistent with Tn5 excision in yeast, which is not increased in two different pol2 mutants (![]()
A temperature-sensitive mutation in pol
, pol3-14, significantly increases the instability of CAG tracts in both orientations. The degree to which the pol3-14 mutation affects the stability of tract C is ~16-fold over wild-type. The effect on tract D at 30° is approximately a threefold increase. In the case of the 80-bp hairpin mentioned above, a temperature-sensitive mutation in pol
(pol3-t) did not affect the level of hairpin excision (![]()
![]()
and pol3-14 suggest that the large number of changes in CAG repeat tract length induced by the pol3-14 mutation occur by pure slippage during replication.
Shorter repeat tracts of the D orientation (3031 repeat units) are relatively stable in the pol3-14 mutant. The stability of such small tracts contrasts with our results with shorter repeat tracts in a rth1
/rad27
mutant (Table 1). For long repeat tracts, the rth1
/rad27
and pol3-14 mutations cause similar degrees of destabilization (![]()
/rad27
induces a high level of instability, whereas pol3-14 does not (Table 1). This difference suggests that the CAG tract destabilization observed in these two mutants may be induced by different mechanisms since the destabilization caused by pol3-14 is much more length dependent than that caused by rth1
/rad27
. This may not be surprising because Rth1p/Rad27p, the flap endonuclease, acts at the ends of newly synthesized Okazaki fragments, while pol
must tract along the entire length of the template strand to synthesize new DNA. In addition, a recent study examining micro- and minisatellite instability found that the pol3-t and rad27
mutations had different effects on the instability of these sequences (![]()
affected tracts with shorter repeat units (mono- and dinucleotides) the most.
The proofreading functions of polymerases
and
do not appear to play a role in controlling CAG tract instability. The pol3-01 and pol2-4 mutations eliminate the 3' to 5' exonuclease functions of pol
and pol
, respectively (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
and pol
may prevent changes in the length of simple mono- or dinucleotide repeat tracts, but that they are unable to control the changes that occur within CAG repeat tracts. One reason for this difference could be that most of the tract length changes in CAG repeat tracts that occur in yeast do so by collapse of the template strand into a hairpin structure (Figure 4). Because the proofreading functions of the polymerases deal mostly with the nucleotides on the newly synthesized strand, they may not contribute to template strand phenomena. This would also indicate that the proofreading exonuclease activities either do not cause pausing when transversing a template of CAG repeats, or that they are not critical to passage of the polymerase through the repeat tract.
|
CAG tract stability in PCNA mutants:
Three pol30 mutations also destabilize CAG tracts, but they show allelic variation. The three alleles we used have varied phenotypes in vivo and in vitro. The pol30-52 mutation is the most severe. It leads to MMS and cold sensitivity, and it has a defect in mismatch repair that is as severe as a deletion of the mismatch repair gene mlh1 (![]()
![]()
and
(![]()
![]()
-mediated DNA synthesis by 1000-fold, while the pol30-90 protein is defective in pol-
-mediated DNA synthesis, also by 1000-fold. In addition, the pol30-90 protein is defective in its interaction with the flap endonuclease (Rth1p/Rad27p) and in its stimulation of flap endonuclease activity.
Because PCNA is involved in repair as well as replication, the interpretation of CAG tract instability in the pol30 mutants is not straightforward. However, some of the differences in CAG tract instability among the pol30 mutants may be correlated with the phenotypes of these mutants. Our previous work showed that small changes of one to three repeat units in tract length were recovered from mismatch repair mutants (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
/rad27
mutants create a high ratio of tract expansions to tract contractions in CAG repeat tracts (![]()
![]()
) destabilizes CAG tracts more than the pol30-90 mutation (defective for in vitro DNA synthesis with pol
). With the caveat that the translation of the in vitro studies into the in vivo studies that we have carried out does not dictate a one-to-one correspondence, our result correlates with the observation that a pol
mutation (pol3-14) affects CAG tract instability while a pol
(pol2-18) mutation does not.
Contractions in replication mutants:
Somewhat surprising was the consistency among the size distributions of the tract contractions among the various mutants. If the progress of the replication complex through the repeat tracts is slowed by mutations in the DNA polymerases or in PCNA, this might leave longer stretches of the template strand in a state to collapse into the hairpin structures (Figure 4). In turn, this should be evidenced by a lengthening of tract contractions. We found scant evidence for such lengthening. The distributions of the large contractions were broad, and only two examples that were close to a statistical difference were observed. These were for D tracts in the pol3-14 and pol3-01 mutants. Considering that these two mutants represent one mutation that greatly affects tract stability and one that does not, these results do not support the hypothesis that mutations that might slow the progress of the replication complex, as evidenced by greater tract instability, would lead to longer tract contractions. The significance of these results is unclear at this time.
Relationship between CAG repeat tracts and other simple repeats and palindromes:
CAG repeat tracts occupy a unique niche among simple repeats and palindromes in yeast. While their stability is sensitive to many of the same mutations, such as the msh2 and pol3 mutations, which exacerbate the instability of simple repeats of mono- and dinucleotides (![]()
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We are appreciative of the help that Dennis Cook (Department of Applied Statistics, University of Minnesota) provided us in pointing out the use of the randomization test as an unencumbered statistical method to analyze our results. We thank Shanda Reinke for help with the sample preparation. We thank Giovanna Lucchini for plasmid pAP415 and yeast strains TS1-4 and TD28; Jim Haber for plasmids pMj14, YIp5-pol1-17, and YCp-pol2-18; Akio Sugino for plasmids YIpJB1 and YIpAM26; and Peter Burgers for plasmids pBL230-WT, pBL230-79, pBL230-90, and pBL245-52. We acknowledge the help of Pat Foster, Tom Petes, and an anonymous reviewer in providing constructive criticisms. This work was supported by grant PO-1NS33718 from the National Institutes of Health. J.K.S. is also supported by the Louise T. Dosdall Fellowship from the University of Minnesota.
Manuscript received January 27, 1999; Accepted for publication March 29, 1999.
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