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The Nature of Mutations Induced by Replication-Transcription Collisions

The DNA replication and transcription machineries share a common DNA template and thus can collide with each other co-directionally or head-on(1,2). Replication-transcription collisions can cause replication fork arrest, premature transcription termination, DNA breaks, and recombination intermediate...

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Autores principales: Sankar, T. Sabari, Wastuwidyaningtyas, Brigitta D., Dong, Yuexin, Lewis, Sarah A., Wang, Jue D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4945378/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27362223
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature18316
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author Sankar, T. Sabari
Wastuwidyaningtyas, Brigitta D.
Dong, Yuexin
Lewis, Sarah A.
Wang, Jue D.
author_facet Sankar, T. Sabari
Wastuwidyaningtyas, Brigitta D.
Dong, Yuexin
Lewis, Sarah A.
Wang, Jue D.
author_sort Sankar, T. Sabari
collection PubMed
description The DNA replication and transcription machineries share a common DNA template and thus can collide with each other co-directionally or head-on(1,2). Replication-transcription collisions can cause replication fork arrest, premature transcription termination, DNA breaks, and recombination intermediates threatening genome integrity(1–10). Collisions may also trigger mutations, which are major contributors of genetic disease and evolution(5,7,11). However, the nature and mechanisms of collision-induced mutagenesis remain poorly understood. Here we reveal the genetic consequence of replication-transcription collisions in actively dividing bacteria to be two classes of mutations: duplications/deletions and base substitutions in promoters. Both signatures are highly deleterious but are distinct from the well-characterized base substitutions in coding sequence. Duplications/deletions are likely caused by replication stalling events that are triggered by collisions; their distribution patterns are consistent with where the fork first encounters a transcription complex upon entering a transcription unit. Promoter substitutions result mostly from head-on collisions and frequently occur at a nucleotide conserved in promoters recognized by the major sigma factor in bacteria. This substitution is generated via adenine deamination on the template strand in the promoter open complex, as a consequence of head-on replication perturbing transcription initiation. We conclude that replication-transcription collisions induce distinct mutation signatures by antagonizing replication and transcription, not only in coding sequences but also in gene regulatory elements.
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spelling pubmed-49453782017-01-07 The Nature of Mutations Induced by Replication-Transcription Collisions Sankar, T. Sabari Wastuwidyaningtyas, Brigitta D. Dong, Yuexin Lewis, Sarah A. Wang, Jue D. Nature Article The DNA replication and transcription machineries share a common DNA template and thus can collide with each other co-directionally or head-on(1,2). Replication-transcription collisions can cause replication fork arrest, premature transcription termination, DNA breaks, and recombination intermediates threatening genome integrity(1–10). Collisions may also trigger mutations, which are major contributors of genetic disease and evolution(5,7,11). However, the nature and mechanisms of collision-induced mutagenesis remain poorly understood. Here we reveal the genetic consequence of replication-transcription collisions in actively dividing bacteria to be two classes of mutations: duplications/deletions and base substitutions in promoters. Both signatures are highly deleterious but are distinct from the well-characterized base substitutions in coding sequence. Duplications/deletions are likely caused by replication stalling events that are triggered by collisions; their distribution patterns are consistent with where the fork first encounters a transcription complex upon entering a transcription unit. Promoter substitutions result mostly from head-on collisions and frequently occur at a nucleotide conserved in promoters recognized by the major sigma factor in bacteria. This substitution is generated via adenine deamination on the template strand in the promoter open complex, as a consequence of head-on replication perturbing transcription initiation. We conclude that replication-transcription collisions induce distinct mutation signatures by antagonizing replication and transcription, not only in coding sequences but also in gene regulatory elements. 2016-07-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4945378/ /pubmed/27362223 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature18316 Text en Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms Reprints and permissions information is available at www.nature.com/reprints.
spellingShingle Article
Sankar, T. Sabari
Wastuwidyaningtyas, Brigitta D.
Dong, Yuexin
Lewis, Sarah A.
Wang, Jue D.
The Nature of Mutations Induced by Replication-Transcription Collisions
title The Nature of Mutations Induced by Replication-Transcription Collisions
title_full The Nature of Mutations Induced by Replication-Transcription Collisions
title_fullStr The Nature of Mutations Induced by Replication-Transcription Collisions
title_full_unstemmed The Nature of Mutations Induced by Replication-Transcription Collisions
title_short The Nature of Mutations Induced by Replication-Transcription Collisions
title_sort nature of mutations induced by replication-transcription collisions
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4945378/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27362223
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature18316
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