DNA polymerase ε and δ proofreading suppress discrete mutator and cancer phenotypes in mice

Organisms require faithful DNA replication to avoid deleterious mutations. In yeast, replicative leading- and lagging-strand DNA polymerases (Pols ε and δ, respectively) have intrinsic proofreading exonucleases that cooperate with each other and mismatch repair to limit spontaneous mutation to less than 1 per genome per cell division. The relationship of these pathways in mammals and their functions in vivo are unknown. Here we show that mouse Pol ε and δ proofreading suppress discrete mutator and cancer phenotypes. We found that inactivation of Pol ε proofreading elevates base-substitution mutations and accelerates a unique spectrum of spontaneous cancers; the types of tumors are entirely different from those triggered by loss of Pol δ proofreading. Intercrosses of Pol ε-, Pol δ-, and mismatch repair-mutant mice show that Pol ε and δ proofreading act in parallel pathways to prevent spontaneous mutation and cancer. These findings distinguish Pol ε and δ functions in vivo and reveal tissue-specific requirements for DNA replication fidelity.

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