Chemically induced
DNA lesions can become DNA replication substrates
that are bypassed by low-fidelity DNA polymerases. Following nucleotide
misinsertion opposite a DNA lesion, the extension step can contribute
to preserving such errors and lead to genomic instability and cancer.
DNA polymerase ζ, a B-family polymerase, is proficient as an
extender polymerase that catalyzes elongation; however, the chemical
factors that impact its DNA replication are not understood. This study
addresses the question of how DNA polymerase ζ achieves extension
by examining the ability of recombinant human DNA polymerase ζ
to extend from a series of methylated guanine lesions. The influence
of H-bonding was examined by placing structurally altered nucleoside
analogues and canonical bases opposite G, O6-MeG, N1-MeG, and N2-MeG. We determined that terminal base pairs with the highest
proclivity for H-bonding were most efficiently extended in both primer
extension assays and steady-state kinetic analysis. In contrast, when
no H-bonding was possible at the DNA terminus, the least efficient
steady-state kinetics were observed. To evaluate H-bonding protein
minor groove interactions that may underlie this phenomenon, we performed
computational modeling with Escherichia coli DNA
polymerase II, a homologue for DNA polymerase ζ. The modeling
data together with the primer extension assays demonstrate the importance
of having a carbonyl group on the primer strand that can interact
with a lysine residue found to be conserved in many B-family polymerases,
including human Pol ζ. These data provide a model whereby interbase
H-bonding interactions at the DNA terminus promote lesion bypass and
extension by human DNA polymerase ζ