Miguel Garcia-Diaz
National Institutes of Health
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Featured researches published by Miguel Garcia-Diaz.
Molecular Cell | 2004
Miguel Garcia-Diaz; Katarzyna Bebenek; Joseph M. Krahn; Luis Blanco; Thomas A. Kunkel; Lars C. Pedersen
Human DNA polymerase lambda (Pol λ) is a family X member with low frameshift fidelity that has been suggested to perform gap-filling DNA synthesis during base excision repair and during repair of broken ends with limited homology. Here, we present a 2.1 A crystal structure of the catalytic core of Pol λ in complex with DNA containing a two nucleotide gap. Pol λ makes limited contacts with the template strand at the polymerase active site, and superimposition with Pol β in a ternary complex suggests a shift in the position of the DNA at the active site that is reminiscent of a deletion intermediate. Surprisingly, Pol λ can adopt a closed conformation, even in the absence of dNTP binding. These observations have implications for the catalytic mechanism and putative DNA repair functions of Pol λ.
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2007
Andrea F. Moon; Miguel Garcia-Diaz; Katarzyna Bebenek; Bryan J Davis; Xuejun Zhong; Dale A. Ramsden; Thomas A. Kunkel; Lars C. Pedersen
DNA polymerase μ (Pol μ) is a family X enzyme with unique substrate specificity that contributes to its specialized role in nonhomologous DNA end joining (NHEJ). To investigate Pol μs unusual substrate specificity, we describe the 2.4 Å crystal structure of the polymerase domain of murine Pol μ bound to gapped DNA with a correct dNTP at the active site. This structure reveals substrate interactions with side chains in Pol μ that differ from other family X members. For example, a single amino acid substitution, H329A, has little effect on template-dependent synthesis by Pol μ from a paired primer terminus, but it reduces both template-independent and template-dependent synthesis during NHEJ of intermediates whose 3′ ends lack complementary template strand nucleotides. These results provide insight into the substrate specificity and differing functions of four closely related mammalian family X DNA polymerases.
Cell | 2006
Miguel Garcia-Diaz; Katarzyna Bebenek; Joseph M. Krahn; Lars C. Pedersen; Thomas A. Kunkel
Insertions and deletions in coding sequences can alter the reading frame of genes and have profound biological consequences. In 1966, Streisinger proposed that these mutations result from strand slippage, which in repetitive sequences generates misaligned intermediates stabilized by correct base pairing that support polymerization. We report here crystal structures of human DNA polymerase lambda, which frequently generates deletion mutations, bound to such intermediates. Each contains an extrahelical template nucleotide upstream of the active site. Surprisingly, the extra nucleotide, even when combined with an adjacent mismatch, does not perturb polymerase active site geometry, which is indistinguishable from that for correctly aligned strands. These structures reveal how pol lambda can polymerize on substrates with minimal homology during repair of double-strand breaks and represent strand-slippage intermediates consistent with Streisingers classical hypothesis. They are thus relevant to the origin of single-base deletions, a class of mutations that can confer strong biological phenotypes.
DNA Repair | 2008
G. Andrés Cisneros; Lalith Perera; Miguel Garcia-Diaz; Katarzyna Bebenek; Thomas A. Kunkel; Lee G. Pedersen
DNA polymerases play a crucial role in the cell cycle due to their involvement in genome replication and repair. Understanding the reaction mechanism by which these polymerases carry out their function can provide insights into these processes. Recently, the crystal structures of human DNA polymerase lambda (Pollambda) have been reported both for pre- and post-catalytic complexes [García-Díaz et al., DNA Repair 3 (2007), 1333]. Here we employ the pre-catalytic complex as a starting structure for the determination of the catalytic mechanism of Pollambda using ab initio quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical methods. The reaction path has been calculated using Mg(2+) and Mn(2+) as the catalytic metals. In both cases the reaction proceeds through a two-step mechanism where the 3-OH of the primer sugar ring is deprotonated by one of the conserved Asp residues (D490) in the active site before the incorporation of the nucleotide to the nascent DNA chain. A significant charge transfer is observed between both metals and some residues in the active site as the reaction proceeds. The optimized reactant and product structures agree with the reported crystal structures. In addition, the calculated reaction barriers for both metals are close to experimentally estimated barriers. Energy decomposition analysis to explain individual residue contributions suggests that several amino acids surrounding the active site are important for catalysis. Some of these residues, including R420, R488 and E529, have been implicated in catalysis by previous mutagenesis experiments on the homologous residues on Polbeta. Furthermore, Pollambda residues R420 and E529 found to be important from the energy decomposition analysis, are homologous to residues R183 and E295 in Polbeta, both of which are linked to cancer. In addition, residues R386, E391, K422 and K472 appear to have an important role in catalysis and could be a potential target for mutagenesis experiments. There is partial conservation of these residues across the Pol X family of DNA polymerases.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2006
Angel J. Picher; Miguel Garcia-Diaz; Katarzyna Bebenek; Lars C. Pedersen; Thomas A. Kunkel; Luis Blanco
DNA polymerase lambda (Pol λ) is one of several DNA polymerases suggested to participate in base excision repair (BER), in repair of broken DNA ends and in translesion synthesis. It has been proposed that the nature of the DNA intermediates partly determines which polymerase is used for a particular repair reaction. To test this hypothesis, here we examine the ability of human Pol λ to extend mismatched primer-termini, either on ‘open’ template-primer substrates, or on its preferred substrate, a 1 nt gapped-DNA molecule having a 5′-phosphate. Interestingly, Pol λ extended mismatches with an average efficiency of ≈10−2 relative to matched base pairs. The match and mismatch extension catalytic efficiencies obtained on gapped molecules were ≈260-fold higher than on template-primer molecules. A crystal structure of Pol λ in complex with a single-nucleotide gap containing a dG·dGMP mismatch at the primer-terminus (2.40 Å) suggests that, at least for certain mispairs, Pol λ is unable to differentiate between matched and mismatched termini during the DNA binding step, thus accounting for the relatively high efficiency of mismatch extension. This property of Pol λ suggests a potential role as a ‘mismatch extender’ during non-homologous end joining (NHEJ), and possibly during translesion synthesis.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2010
Katarzyna Bebenek; Miguel Garcia-Diaz; Rui-Zhe Zhou; Lawrence F. Povirk; Thomas A. Kunkel
Differences in the substrate specificity of mammalian family X DNA polymerases are proposed to partly depend on a loop (loop 1) upstream of the polymerase active site. To examine if this is the case in DNA polymerase λ (pol λ), here we characterize a variant of the human polymerase in which nine residues of loop 1 are replaced with four residues from the equivalent position in pol β. Crystal structures of the mutant enzyme bound to gapped DNA with and without a correct dNTP reveal that the change in loop 1 does not affect the overall structure of the protein. Consistent with these structural data, the mutant enzyme has relatively normal catalytic efficiency for correct incorporation, and it efficiently participates in non-homologous end joining of double-strand DNA breaks. However, DNA junctions recovered from end-joining reactions are more diverse than normal, and the mutant enzyme is substantially less accurate than wild-type pol λ in three different biochemical assays. Comparisons of the binary and ternary complex crystal structures of mutant and wild-type pol λ suggest that loop 1 modulates pol λ’s fidelity by controlling dNTP-induced movements of the template strand and the primer-terminal 3′-OH as the enzyme transitions from an inactive to an active conformation.
EMBO Reports | 2008
Katarzyna Bebenek; Miguel Garcia-Diaz; Meredith C. Foley; Lars C. Pedersen; Tamar Schlick; Thomas A. Kunkel
The simple deletion of nucleotides is common in many organisms. It can be advantageous when it activates genes beneficial to microbial survival in adverse environments, and deleterious when it mutates genes relevant to survival, cancer or degenerative diseases. The classical idea is that simple deletions arise by strand slippage. A prime opportunity for slippage occurs during DNA synthesis, but it remains unclear how slippage is controlled during a polymerization cycle. Here, we report crystal structures and molecular dynamics simulations of mutant derivatives of DNA polymerase λ bound to a primer–template during strand slippage. Relative to the primer strand, the template strand is in multiple conformations, indicating intermediates on the pathway to deletion mutagenesis. Consistent with these intermediates, the mutant polymerases generate single‐base deletions at high rates. The results indicate that dNTP‐induced template strand repositioning during conformational rearrangements in the catalytic cycle is crucial to controlling the rate of strand slippage.
PLOS ONE | 2009
Gloria Terrados; Jean-Pascal Capp; Yvan Canitrot; Miguel Garcia-Diaz; Katarzyna Bebenek; Tomas Kirchhoff; Alberto Villanueva; François Boudsocq; Valérie Bergoglio; Christophe Cazaux; Thomas A. Kunkel; Jean-Sébastien Hoffmann; Luis Blanco
Background DNA polymerase lambda (Polλ) is a DNA repair polymerase, which likely plays a role in base excision repair (BER) and in non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) of DNA double-strand breaks (DSB). Principal Findings Here, we described a novel natural allelic variant of human Polλ (hPolλ) characterized by a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), C/T variation in the first base of codon 438, resulting in the amino acid change Arg to Trp. In vitro enzyme activity assays of the purified W438 Polλ variant revealed that it retained both DNA polymerization and deoxyribose phosphate (dRP) lyase activities, but had reduced base substitution fidelity. Ectopic expression of the W438 hPolλ variant in mammalian cells increases mutation frequency, affects the DSB repair NHEJ pathway, and generates chromosome aberrations. All these phenotypes are dependent upon the catalytic activity of the W438 hPolλ. Conclusions The expression of a cancer-related natural variant of one specialized DNA polymerase can be associated to generic instability at the cromosomal level, probably due a defective NHEJ. These results establish that chromosomal aberrations can result from mutations in specialized DNA repair polymerases.
Molecular Cell | 2005
Stephanie A. Nick McElhinny; Jody M. Havener; Miguel Garcia-Diaz; Raquel Juárez; Katarzyna Bebenek; Barbara L. Kee; Luis Blanco; Thomas A. Kunkel; Dale A. Ramsden
DNA Repair | 2007
Andrea F. Moon; Miguel Garcia-Diaz; Vinod K. Batra; William A. Beard; Katarzyna Bebenek; Thomas A. Kunkel; Samuel H. Wilson; Lars C. Pedersen