REV1 inhibition enhances trinucleotide repeat mutagenesis
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Trinucleotide repeat (TNR) instability has been implicated in the pathogenesis of numerous neurodegenerative disorders. Because TNR instability causes mutagenesis of the underlying gene, we refer to the repeat instability phenomenon as TNR mutagenesis in this study. While germline expansions destabilize TNR to cause disease anticipation, somatic cell TNR instability drives earlier onset of symptoms and further disease progression. However, the drivers behind these repeat length changes remain unclear. Current models suggest that DNA replication slippage events and the action of genome instability pathways, such as DNA repair, cause TNR mutagenesis. Whether mutagenic polymerases from the translesion synthesis (TLS) pathway result in TNR instability is unclear. TLS polymerases are best at bypassing difficult-to-replicate DNA regions due to bulky lesions or gaps in DNA. While some effects of TLS polymerases on TNR instability have been explored in lower organisms, evidence in human cells is lacking. Using a quantitative GFP reporter with expanded CAG repeats, we show that inhibition of the TLS polymerase REV1 by its inhibitor, JH-RE-06, or siRNA knockdown increases TNR instability and the underlying mutability. These results suggest that REV1 protects Trinucleotide repeat length mutagenesis through potential continuous DNA synthesis when replicative polymerases stall ahead of repeat secondary structures. Collectively, we present evidence of the role of the TLS pathway in TNR instability, with potential implications for understanding mutability mechanisms, disease biology, and therapeutic targeting.