Published January 1, 2022 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Effects of replication domains on genome-wide UV-induced DNA damage and repair

  • 1. Sabanci Univ, Fac Engn & Nat Sci, Istanbul, Turkey
  • 2. Natl Chung Hsing Univ, Grad Inst Biochem, Taichung, Taiwan
  • 3. Univ N Carolina, Chapel Hill Sch Med, Dept Biochem & Biophys, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USA

Description

Nucleotide excision repair is the primary repair mechanism that removes UV-induced DNA lesions in placentals. Unrepaired UV-induced lesions could result in mutations during DNA replication. Although the mutagenesis of pyrimidine dimers is reasonably well understood, the direct effects of replication fork progression on nucleotide excision repair are yet to be clarified. Here, we applied Damage-seq and XR-seq techniques and generated replication maps in synchronized UV-treated HeLa cells. The results suggest that ongoing replication stimulates local repair in both early and late replication domains. Additionally, it was revealed that lesions on lagging strand templates are repaired slower in late replication domains, which is probably due to the imbalanced sequence context. Asymmetric relative repair is in line with the strand bias of melanoma mutations, suggesting a role of exogenous damage, repair, and replication in mutational strand asymmetry.

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