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Hypersensitivity of mouse embryonic fibroblast cells defective for DNA polymerases η, ι and κ to various genotoxic compounds: Its potential for application in chemical genotoxic screening.

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Genotoxic agents cause modifications of genomic DNA, such as alkylation, oxidation, bulky adduct formation, and strand breaks, which potentially induce mutations and changes to the structure or number of genes.… Click to show full abstract

Genotoxic agents cause modifications of genomic DNA, such as alkylation, oxidation, bulky adduct formation, and strand breaks, which potentially induce mutations and changes to the structure or number of genes. Majority of point mutations are generated during error-prone bypass of modified nucleotides (translesion DNA synthesis, TLS); however, when TLS fails, replication forks stalled at lesions eventually result in more lethal effects, formation of double-stranded breaks (DSBs). Here we compared sensitivities to various compounds among mouse embryonic fibroblasts derived from wild-type and knock-out mice lacking one of the three Y-family TLS DNA polymerases (Polη, Polι, and Polκ) or all of them (TKO). The compounds tested in this study include genotoxins such as methyl methanesulfonate (MMS) and nongenotoxins such as ammonium chloride. We found that TKO cells exhibited the highest sensitivities to most of the tested genotoxins, but not to the non-genotoxins. In order to quantitatively evaluate the hypersensitivity of TKO cells to different chemicals, we calculated ratios of half-maximal inhibitory concentration for WT and TKO cells. The ratios for 9 out of 10 genotoxins ranged from 2.29 to 5.73, while those for 5 nongenotoxins ranged from 0.81 to 1.63. Additionally, the two markers for DNA damage, ubiquitylated proliferating cell nuclear antigen and γ-H2AX after MMS treatment, were accumulated in TKO cells more greatly than in WT cells. Furthermore, following MMS treatment, TKO cells exhibited increased frequency of sister chromatid exchange compared with WT cells. These results indicated that the hypersensitivity of TKO cells to genotoxins resulted from replication fork stalling and subsequent DNA double-strand breaks, thus demonstrating that TKO cells should be useful for evaluating chemical genotoxicity.

Keywords: dna; tko cells; dna polymerases; mouse embryonic; hypersensitivity

Journal Title: DNA repair
Year Published: 2018

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