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Sequence-dependent effect of interruptions on microsatellite mutation rate in mismatch repair-deficient human cells
Authors:Boyer Jayne C  Hawk Joshua D  Stefanovic Lela  Farber Rosann A
Institution:

aDepartment of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, CB #7525, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, United States

bDepartment of Genetics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, United States

cLineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, United States

Abstract:Although microsatellite mutation rates generally increase with increasing length of the repeat tract, interruptions in a microsatellite may stabilize it. We have performed a direct analysis of the effect of microsatellite interruptions on mutation rate and spectrum in cultured mammalian cells. Two mononucleotide sequences (G17 and A17) and a dinucleotide (CA)17] were compared with interrupted repeats of the same size and with sequences of 8 repeat units. MMR-deficient (MMR?) cells were used for these studies to eliminate effects of this repair process. Mutation rates were determined by fluctuation analysis on cells containing a microsatellite sequence at the 5′ end of an antibiotic-resistance gene; the vector carrying this sequence was integrated in the genome of the cells. In general, interrupted sequences had lower mutation rates than perfect ones of the same size, but the magnitude of the difference was dependent upon the sequence of the interrupting base(s). Some interrupted repeats had mutation rates that were lower than those of perfect sequences of the same length but similar to those of half the length. This suggests that interrupting bases effectively divide microsatellites into smaller repeat runs with mutational characteristics different from those of the corresponding full-length microsatellite. We conclude that interruptions decrease microsatellite mutation rate and influence the spectrum of frameshift mutations. The sequence of the interrupting base(s) determines the magnitude of the effect on mutation rate.
Keywords:Mutation rate  Microsatellite instability  Mononucleotide repeats  Dinucleotide repeats  Interruption
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