The Fifth Domain in the G-Quadruplex-Forming Sequence of the Human NEIL3 Promoter Locks DNA Folding in Response to Oxidative Damage.
Carla A OmagaAaron M FlemingCynthia J BurrowsPublished in: Biochemistry (2018)
DNA oxidation is an inevitable and usually detrimental process, but the cell is capable of reversing this state because the cell possesses a highly developed set of DNA repair machineries, including the DNA glycosylase NEIL3 that is encoded by the NEIL3 gene. In this work, the G-rich promoter region of the human NEIL3 gene was shown to fold into a dynamic G-quadruplex (G4) structure under nearly physiological conditions using spectroscopic techniques (e.g., nuclear magnetic resonance, circular dichroism, fluorescence, and ultraviolet-visible) and DNA polymerase stop assays. The presence of 8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanine (OG) modified the properties of the NEIL3 G4 and entailed the recruitment of the fifth domain to function as a "spare tire", in which an undamaged fifth G-track is swapped for the damaged section of the G4. The polymerase stop assay findings also revealed that owing to its dynamic polymorphism, the NEIL3 G4 is more readily bypassed by DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment) than well-known oncogene G4s are. This study identifies the NEIL3 promoter possessing a G-rich element that can adopt a G4 fold, and when OG is incorporated, the sequence can lock into a more stable G4 fold via recruitment of the fifth track of Gs.
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