Abstract
To understand the role of POL30 in mutation suppression, 11 Saccharomyces cerevisiae pol30 mutator mutants were characterized. These mutants were grouped based on their mutagenic defects. Many pol30 mutants harbor multiple mutagenic defects and were placed in more than one group. Group A mutations (pol30-52, -104, -108, and -126) caused defects in mismatch repair (MMR). These mutants exhibited mutation rates and spectra reminiscent of MMR-defective mutants and were defective in an in vivo MMR assay. The mutation rates of group A mutants were enhanced by a msh2or a msh6 mutation, indicating that MMR deficiency is not the only mutagenic defect present. Group B mutants (pol30-45, -103, -105, -126, and -114) exhibited increased accumulation of either deletions alone or a combination of deletions and duplications (4 to 60 bp). All deletion and duplication breakpoints were flanked by 3 to 7 bp of imperfect direct repeats. Genetic analysis of one representative group B mutant, pol30-126, suggested polymerase slippage as the likely mutagenic mechanism. Group C mutants (pol30-100, -103, -105, -108, and -114) accumulated base substitutions and exhibited synergistic increases in mutation rate when combined with msh6 mutations, suggesting increased DNA polymerase misincorporation as a mutagenic defect. The synthetic lethality between a group A mutant, pol30-104, and rad52 was almost completely suppressed by the inactivation of MSH2. Moreover, pol30-104 caused a hyperrecombination phenotype that was partially suppressed by a msh2 mutation. These results suggest that pol30-104 strains accumulate DNA breaks in a MSH2-dependent manner.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank John Weger and Pamela Hunt for DNA sequence analysis. We also thank Takuro Nakagawa, Abhijit Datta, Kyung Jae Myun, Alex Shoemaker, Richura Das Gupta, and Neelam Amin for helpful discussions and comments on the manuscript and Alex Shoemaker and Neelam Amin for resequencing the pol30-126 allele.
This work was supported by NIH grants GM50006 to R.D.K. and GM36510 to C.H.