Contribution of Partial Charge Interactions and Base
Stacking to the Efficiency of Primer Extension at and beyond Abasic
Sites in DNA
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Abstract
During DNA synthesis, base stacking and Watson–Crick
(WC)
hydrogen bonding increase the stability of nascent base pairs when
they are in a ternary complex. To evaluate the contribution of base
stacking to the incorporation efficiency of dNTPs when a DNA polymerase
encounters an abasic site, we varied the penultimate base pairs (PBs)
adjacent to the abasic site using all 16 possible combinations. We
then determined pre-steady-state kinetic parameters with an RB69 DNA
polymerase variant and solved nine structures of the corresponding
ternary complexes. The efficiency of incorporation for incoming dNTPs
opposite an abasic site varied between 2- and 210-fold depending on
the identity of the PB. We propose that the A rule can be extended
to encompass the fact that DNA polymerase can bypass dA/abasic sites
more efficiently than other dN/abasic sites. Crystal structures of
the ternary complexes show that the surface of the incoming base was
stacked against the PB’s interface and that the kinetic parameters
for dNMP incorporation were consistent with specific features of base
stacking, such as surface area and partial charge–charge interactions
between the incoming base and the PB. Without a templating nucleotide
residue, an incoming dNTP has no base with which it can hydrogen bond
and cannot be desolvated, so that these surrounding water molecules
become ordered and remain on the PB’s surface in the ternary
complex. When these water molecules are on top of a hydrophobic patch
on the PB, they destabilize the ternary complex, and the incorporation
efficiency of incoming dNTPs is reduced