학술논문

Lagging-strand replication shapes the mutational landscape of the genome.
Document Type
Article
Source
Nature. 2/25/2015, Vol. 518 Issue 7540, p502-506. 5p. 1 Diagram, 12 Graphs.
Subject
*OKAZAKI fragments
*DNA-binding proteins
*DNA replication
*GENETIC mutation
*GENOMICS
Language
ISSN
0028-0836
Abstract
The origin of mutations is central to understanding evolution and of key relevance to health. Variation occurs non-randomly across the genome, and mechanisms for this remain to be defined. Here we report that the 5′ ends of Okazaki fragments have significantly increased levels of nucleotide substitution, indicating a replicative origin for such mutations. Using a novel method, emRiboSeq, we map the genome-wide contribution of polymerases, and show that despite Okazaki fragment processing, DNA synthesized by error-prone polymerase-α (Pol-α) is retained in vivo, comprising approximately 1.5% of the mature genome. We propose that DNA-binding proteins that rapidly re-associate post-replication act as partial barriers to Pol-δ-mediated displacement of Pol-α-synthesized DNA, resulting in incorporation of such Pol-α tracts and increased mutation rates at specific sites. We observe a mutational cost to chromatin and regulatory protein binding, resulting in mutation hotspots at regulatory elements, with signatures of this process detectable in both yeast and humans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]