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1.
Increasing antibiotic resistance is making the identification of novel antimicrobial targets critical. Recently, we discovered an inhibitor of protein tyrosine phosphatase CpsB, fascioquinol E (FQE), which unexpectedly inhibited the growth of Gram-positive pathogens. CpsB is a member of the polymerase and histidinol phosphate phosphatase (PHP) domain family. Another member of this family found in a variety of Gram-positive pathogens is DNA polymerase PolC. We purified the PHP domain from PolC (PolCPHP), and showed that this competes away FQE inhibition of CpsB phosphatase activity. Furthermore, we showed that this domain hydrolyses the 5′-p-nitrophenyl ester of thymidine-5′-monophosphate (pNP-TMP), which has been used as a measure of exonuclease activity. Finally, we showed that FQE not only inhibits the phosphatase activity of CpsB, but also ability of PolCPHP to catalyse the hydrolysis of pNP-TMP. This suggests that PolC may be the essential target of FQE, and that the PHP domain may represent an as yet untapped target for the development of novel antibiotics.  相似文献   

2.
We have cloned and sequenced the polA gene from Chloroflexus aurantiacus, a green nonsulfur eubacterium, and expressed the recombinant protein in Escherichia coli. One open reading frame encodes a protein with 942 amino acids showing 38% identity with DNA polymerase I from E. coli. Sequence alignments with other members of DNA polymerase family A and analysis of the separate domains show that the central 3′-5′ exonuclease domain is 30% identical to the corresponding E. coli domain and that three sequence motifs associated with 3′-5′ exonuclease activity are conserved. Also, a protein fraction from E. coli expressing the Chloroflexus polymerase contains a thermostable 3′-5′ exonucleolytic activity, indicating that this activity is present in the enzyme, in agreement with the sequence analysis. The N-terminal 5′-3′ exonuclease domain and the C-terminal polymerase domain show 31 and 46% identity, respectively, with the corresponding E. coli domains and all sequence motifs associated with these two enzymatic activities also are conserved. Since several DNA polymerase I enzymes lack the proofreading activity associated with the central domain it has been suggested that the ancestral polA gene contained only the two more conserved N- and C-terminal domains and that the proofreading 3′-5′ exonuclease domain was introduced later in those eubacterial branches that have this activity. Our data indicate a different scenario where the ancestral polA gene contained both the exonucleolytic activities in addition to the polymerase activity and where several eubacterial branches lost the polymerase-associated proofreading activity during evolution.  相似文献   

3.
DNA polymerases II (ε) and III(δ) are the only nuclear DNA polymerases known to possess an intrinsic 3′ → 5′ exonuclease in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We have investigated the spontaneous mutator phenotypes of DNA polymerase δ and ε 3′ → 5′ exonuclease-deficient mutants, pol3-01 and pol2-4, respectively. pol3-01 and pol2-4 increased spontaneous mutation rates by factors of the order of 102 and 101, respectively, measured as URA3 forward mutation and his7-2 reversion. Surprisingly, a double mutant pol2-4 pol3-01 haploid was inviable. This was probably due to accumulation of unedited errors, since a pol2-4/pol2-4 pol3-01/pol3-01 diploid was viable, with the spontaneous his7-2 reversion rate increased by about 2 × 103-fold. Analysis of mutation rates of double mutants indicated that the 3′ → 5′ exonucleases of DNA polymerases δ and ε can act competitively and that, like the 3′ → 5′ exonuclease of DNA polymerase δ the 3′ → 5′ exonuclease of DNA polymerase ε acts in series with the PMS1 mismatch correction system. Mutational spectra at a URA3 gene placed in both orientations near to a defined replication origin provided evidence that the 3′ → 5′ exonucleases of DNA polymerases δ and ε act on opposite DNA strands, but were in sufficient to distinguish conclusively between different models of DNA replication.  相似文献   

4.
DNA polymerase I (DNApolI) catalyzes DNA synthesis during Okazaki fragment maturation, base excision repair, and nucleotide excision repair. Some bacterial DNApolIs are deficient in 3′–5′ exonuclease, which is required for removing an incorrectly incorporated 3′-terminal nucleotide during DNA elongation by DNA polymerase activity. The key amino acid residues in the exonuclease center of Chlamydophila pneumoniae DNApolI (CpDNApolI) are naturally mutated, resulting in the loss of 3′–5′ exonuclease. Hence, the manner by which CpDNApolI proofreads the incorrectly incorporated nucleotide during DNA synthesis warrants clarification. C. pneumoniae encodes three 3′–5′ exonuclease activities: one endonuclease IV and two homologs of the epsilon subunit of replicative DNA polymerase III. The three proteins were biochemically characterized using single- and double-stranded DNA substrate. Among them, C. pneumoniae endonuclease IV (CpendoIV) possesses 3′–5′ exonuclease activity that prefers to remove mismatched 3′-terminal nucleotides in the nick, gap, and 3′ recess of a double-stranded DNA (dsDNA). Finally, we reconstituted the proofreading reaction of the mismatched 3′-terminal nucleotide using the dsDNA with a nick or 3′ recess as substrate. Upon proofreading of the mismatched 3′-terminal nucleotide by CpendoIV, CpDNApolI can correctly reincorporate the matched nucleotide and the nick is further sealed by DNA ligase. Based on our biochemical results, we proposed that CpendoIV was responsible for proofreading the replication errors of CpDNApolI.  相似文献   

5.
Recently a family X DNA polymerase (PolXDr) was identified in the radioresistant bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans. Knockout cells show a delay in double-strand break repair (DSBR) and an increased sensitivity to gamma-irradiation. Here we show that PolXDr possesses 3'-->5' exonuclease activity that stops cutting close to a loop. PolXDr consists of a DNA polymerase X domain (PolXc) and a Polymerase and Histidinol Phosphatase (PHP) domain. Deletion of the PHP domain abolishes only the structure-modulated but not the canonical 3'-->5' exonuclease activity. Thus, the exonuclease resides in the PolXc domain, but the structure-specificity requires additionally the PHP domain. Mutation of two conserved glycines in the PolXc domain leads to a specific loss of the structure-modulated exonuclease activity but not the exonuclease activity in general. The PHP domain itself does not show any activity. PolXDr is the first family X DNA polymerase that harbours an exonuclease activity. The wild-type protein, the glycine mutant and the two domains were expressed separately in DeltapolXDr cells. The wild-type protein could restore the radiation resistance, whereas intriguingly the mutant proteins showed a significant negative effect on survival of gamma-irradiated cells. Taken together our in vivo results suggest that both PolXDr domains play important roles in DSBR in D. radiodurans.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of substituting specific amino acids at specified loci in the bacterio-phage T4 DNA polymerase molecule have been studied. Gene 43 (DNA polymerase) amber mutants grown on suppressor strains which substitute serine, glutamine, or tyrosine at specific sites in the polymerase molecule, produce enzymes with substantially different physical, enzymatic and biological properties when compared to wild type. When amB22, a gene 43 mutant which makes a DNA polymerase fragment with only 3′-exonuclease activity, was grown in Escherichia coli B40(sup+1), -(sup+ 2) or -(sup+3), enzymes with different temperature sensitivities and nuclease to polymerase ratios were produced. Measurements of spontaneous mutation rates in these suppressed strains indicated that the two with higher than normal exonuclease activity were antimutators, and the one with a slightly lower exonuclease activity was a mutator. The substituted amino acids at the amB22 site perturbed the 3′-exonuclease activity creating either antimutator or mutator phenotypes. Thus, the B22 enzymes provide additional biochemical evidence to support the hypothesis that the exonuclease to polymerase ratio may influence the spontaneous mutation rate in phage T4.  相似文献   

7.
We have investigated the possible role of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase (Pol) I in chromosomal replication fidelity. This was done by substituting the chromosomal polA gene by the polAexo variant containing an inactivated 3′→5′ exonuclease, which serves as a proofreader for this enzyme's misinsertion errors. Using this strain, activities of Pol I during DNA replication might be detectable as increases in the bacterial mutation rate. Using a series of defined lacZ reversion alleles in two orientations on the chromosome as markers for mutagenesis, 1.5‐ to 4‐fold increases in mutant frequencies were observed. In general, these increases were largest for lac orientations favouring events during lagging strand DNA replication. Further analysis of these effects in strains affected in other E. coli DNA replication functions indicated that this polAexo mutator effect is best explained by an effect that is additive compared with other error‐producing events at the replication fork. No evidence was found that Pol I participates in the polymerase switching between Pol II, III and IV at the fork. Instead, our data suggest that the additional errors produced by polAexo are created during the maturation of Okazaki fragments in the lagging strand.  相似文献   

8.
A complex of the three (αεθ) core subunits and the β2 sliding clamp is responsible for DNA synthesis by Pol III, the Escherichia coli chromosomal DNA replicase. The 1.7 Å crystal structure of a complex between the PHP domain of α (polymerase) and the C-terminal segment of ε (proofreading exonuclease) subunits shows that ε is attached to α at a site far from the polymerase active site. Both α and ε contain clamp-binding motifs (CBMs) that interact simultaneously with β2 in the polymerization mode of DNA replication by Pol III. Strengthening of both CBMs enables isolation of stable αεθ:β2 complexes. Nuclear magnetic resonance experiments with reconstituted αεθ:β2 demonstrate retention of high mobility of a segment of 22 residues in the linker that connects the exonuclease domain of ε with its α-binding segment. In spite of this, small-angle X-ray scattering data show that the isolated complex with strengthened CBMs has a compact, but still flexible, structure. Photo-crosslinking with p-benzoyl-L-phenylalanine incorporated at different sites in the α-PHP domain confirm the conformational variability of the tether. Structural models of the αεθ:β2 replicase complex with primer-template DNA combine all available structural data.  相似文献   

9.
Numerous genetic studies have provided compelling evidence to establish DNA polymerase ɛ (Polɛ) as the primary DNA polymerase responsible for leading strand synthesis during eukaryotic nuclear genome replication. Polɛ is a heterotetramer consisting of a large catalytic subunit that contains the conserved polymerase core domain as well as a 3′  5′ exonuclease domain common to many replicative polymerases. In addition, Polɛ possesses three small subunits that lack a known catalytic activity but associate with components involved in a variety of DNA replication and maintenance processes. Previous enzymatic characterization of the Polɛ heterotetramer from budding yeast suggested that the small subunits slightly enhance DNA synthesis by Polɛ in vitro. However, similar studies of the human Polɛ heterotetramer (hPolɛ) have been limited by the difficulty of obtaining hPolɛ in quantities suitable for thorough investigation of its catalytic activity. Utilization of a baculovirus expression system for overexpression and purification of hPolɛ from insect host cells has allowed for isolation of greater amounts of active hPolɛ, thus enabling a more detailed kinetic comparison between hPolɛ and an active N-terminal fragment of the hPolɛ catalytic subunit (p261N), which is readily overexpressed in Escherichia coli. Here, we report the first pre-steady-state studies of fully-assembled hPolɛ. We observe that the small subunits increase DNA binding by hPolɛ relative to p261N, but do not increase processivity during DNA synthesis on a single-stranded M13 template. Interestingly, the 3′  5′ exonuclease activity of hPolɛ is reduced relative to p261N on matched and mismatched DNA substrates, indicating that the presence of the small subunits may regulate the proofreading activity of hPolɛ and sway hPolɛ toward DNA synthesis rather than proofreading.  相似文献   

10.
The 3′ → 5′ exonuclease activity of bacteriophage T4 DNA polymerase is found to be blocked in the vicinity of the N-2-acetylaminofluorene (-AAF) adducts to DNA. This observation allowed us to determine the binding spectrum of the -AAF adducts along a given DNA sequence. The mutation spectrum in a forward mutation assay within this same sequence has been established. Comparison between the -AAF binding spectrum and the mutation spectrum shows that there is no direct correlation.  相似文献   

11.
The polymerase activity of DNA polymerase I is important for the establishment of the pLS1 replicon by reconstitutive assembly in Streptococcus pneumoniae after uptake of exogenous pLS1 plasmid DNA. In polA mutants lacking the polymerase domain, such establishment was reduced at least 10-fold in frequency. Chromosomally facilitated establishment of pLS1-based plasmids carrying DNA homologous to the host chromosome was not so affected. However, both types of plasmid transfer gave mostly small colonies on initial selection, which was indicative of a defect in replication and filling of the plasmid pool. Once established, the pLS1-based plasmids replicated in polA mutants, but they showed segregational instability. This defect was not observed in strains with the wild-type enzyme or in an S. pneumoniae strain that encodes the polymerase and exonuclease domains of the enzyme on separate fragments. The role of DNA polymerase I in stably maintaining the plasmids depends on its polymerizing function in three separate steps of rolling-circle replication, as indicated by the accumulation of different replication intermediate forms in polA mutants. Furthermore, examination of the segregational stability of the pLS1 replicon in an Escherichia coli mutant system indicated that both the polymerase and the 5′-to-3′ exonuclease activities of DNA polymerase I function in plasmid replication.  相似文献   

12.
Deinococcus radiodurans is an extraordinarily radioresistant bacterium that is able to repair hundreds of radiation-induced double-stranded DNA breaks. One of the players in this pathway is an X family DNA polymerase (PolXDr). Deletion of PolXDr has been shown to decrease the rate of repair of double-stranded DNA breaks and increase cell sensitivity to gamma-rays. A 3′→5′ exonuclease activity that stops cutting close to DNA loops has also been demonstrated. The present crystal structure of PolXDr solved at 2.46-Å resolution reveals that PolXDr has a novel extended conformation in stark contrast to the closed “right hand” conformation commonly observed for DNA polymerases. This extended conformation is stabilized by the C-terminal PHP domain, whose putative nuclease active site is obstructed by its interaction with the polymerase domain. The overall conformation and the presence of non standard residues in the active site of the polymerase X domain makes PolXDr the founding member of a novel class of polymerases involved in DNA repair but whose detailed mode of action still remains enigmatic.DNA replication and repair are functions that are of vital importance for the maintenance of cellular life. These functions are carried out by various DNA replicating engines, most of them acting as multiprotein complexes. Deinococcus radiodurans, a Gram-positive bacterium, is characterized by an extraordinary resistance to ionizing radiation and desiccation. After radiation induced cutting of its 3.28-megabase genome into hundreds of small fragments, it is capable of reassembling it completely (1). Different hypotheses have been suggested to explain this radioresistance. A recently proposed mechanism involves the creation of long linear DNA intermediates by an extended synthesis-dependent strand annealing process, where overlapping chromosomal fragments are used both as primers and as templates for synthesis of complementary single strands (2). Recircularization of chromosomes would be assured by homologous recombination. Although DNA polymerase I is one of the main enzymes involved in this process, it was shown that other proteins affect double strand break repair efficiency in D. radiodurans. One of these is an X family DNA polymerase (PolXDr)5 (3). Cells devoid of PolXDr protein show increased sensitivity to γ-irradiation and a longer delay in the restoration of an intact genome after irradiation. It was therefore proposed that PolXDr has an important role in double strand break repair in D. radiodurans. The contribution of PolXDr may become essential for instance when damage gets too important or, alternatively, it may act in different repair pathways from polymerase I. Indeed, some of the X DNA polymerases, such as Saccharomyces cerevisiae Pol4 and human polymerase λ (4) have been proposed to play important roles in different DNA repair processes, including non-homologous end-joining (5). It was shown that PolXDr also has strong 3′→5′ exonuclease activity that is stimulated by Mn2+ (6). This activity is associated with proofreading mechanisms in other polymerase families and encoded by protein domains or subunits distinct from the polymerase catalytic domain (7). Curiously the exonuclease activity of PolXDr is modulated upon encounter of a stem-loop structure. The combination of both activities leads to the hypothesis that PolXDr might be involved in DNA repair, potentially non-homologous end-joining, by processing damaged DNA or repair intermediates, thus generating substrates for other repair proteins (6). Very recently an orthologue of PolX from Bacillus subtilis was characterized. It was shown that PolXBs is a template-directed DNA polymerase acting on DNA gaps with a downstream 5′ phosphate group, suggesting it may play a role in base excision repair (8).DNA polymerases all combine a catalytic palm domain, a thumb domain, binding double-stranded DNA, and a finger domain that fixes the incoming nucleotide. The polymerase domain of the X family belongs to the Polβ-like nucleotidyltransferase superfamily, sharing ∼25% amino acid identity with the DNA polymerase domains of Polλ, Pol4, and Polβ. PolXDr has a second domain at the C terminus called PHP, with strong sequence identity with the histidinol phosphatase involved in histidine transport in bacteria. Due to its similarity to histidinol phosphatase and the presence of a trinuclear zinc site, the PolXDr PHP domain is thought to function as phosphoesterase (9). In the context of DNA polymerases, this activity might be responsible for the degradation of pyrophosphate, thus driving the polymerization reaction, or contributes to a nuclease reaction that would be involved in proofreading the newly synthesized strand. The deletion of the PHP domain also had a negative effect on survival of γ-irradiated cells suggesting that this domain possesses a function in DNA repair. Unexpectedly, deletion of the PHP domain destroys structure modulated but not the general 3′→5′ exonuclease activity (6). No activity could be demonstrated for the PHP domain alone.In this report we present the crystal structure of PolXDr at 2.46-Å resolution. Surprisingly, PolXDr adopts a stretched out conformation instead of the commonly observed closed right hand conformation. In the active site of the polymerase catalytic domain, the two universally conserved aspartates are replaced by two glutamates, whereas the active site of the PHP domain is obstructed by its interaction with the polymerase domain.  相似文献   

13.
A new class of mutants in DNA polymerase I that affects gene transposition   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
A mutant of Escherichia coli strain K12 is defective in transposition of both the transposons Tn5 and Tn10 and the insertion sequences IS1 and IS5. In addition to the defect in transposition, the mutant is also sensitive to methylmethane sulfonate and ultraviolet light, does not grow phage lambda red and is missing the polymerizing activity and the 5′?3′ exonuclease activity of DNA polymerase I, indicating that the mutation is in the structural gene for this enzyme. We have designated the mutant allele as polA34. All of the properties associated with this mutant cotransduce with a marker known to be linked to polA. Furthermore, revertants of the mutant to methylmethane sulfonate resistance also regain the normal transposition frequencies of Tn5, IS1 and IS5. Complementation tests using the diploid polA34/polA show that the sensitivity to methylmethane sulfonate, and the defect in transposition is recessive to the wild-type. Some revertants of polA34 (called polA34 spa) restore resistance to methylmethane sulfonate and u.v. and partially restore the polymerase and 5′?3′ exonuclease activity but do not restore transposition. Thus we conclude that neither the polymerase activity nor the 5′?3′ exonuclease activity are required in transposition, but rather some other property of DNA polymerase I is needed.  相似文献   

14.
8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2′-deoxyguanosine (8oxodG) is a major lesion resulting from oxidative stress and found in both DNA and dNTP pools. Such a lesion is usually removed from DNA by the Base Excision Repair (BER), a universally conserved DNA repair pathway. 8oxodG usually adopts the favored and promutagenic syn-conformation at the active site of DNA polymerases, allowing the base to hydrogen bonding with adenine during DNA synthesis. Here, we study the structural determinants that affect the glycosidic torsion-angle of 8oxodGTP at the catalytic active site of the family X DNA polymerase from Bacillus subtilis (PolXBs). We show that, unlike most DNA polymerases, PolXBs exhibits a similar efficiency to stabilize the anti and syn conformation of 8oxodGTP at the catalytic site. Kinetic analyses indicate that at least two conserved residues of the nucleotide binding pocket play opposite roles in the anti/syn conformation selectivity, Asn263 and His255 that favor incorporation of 8oxodGMP opposite dA and dC, respectively. In addition, the presence in PolXBs of Mn2+-dependent 3′-phosphatase and 3′-phosphodiesterase activities is also shown. Those activities rely on the catalytic center of the C-terminal Polymerase and Histidinol Phosphatase (PHP) domain of PolXBs and, together with its 3′-5′ exonuclease activity allows the enzyme to resume gap-filling after processing of damaged 3′ termini.  相似文献   

15.
Accurate DNA replication is essential for maintenance of every genome. All archaeal genomes except Crenarchaea, encode for a member of Family B (polB) and Family D (polD) DNA polymerases. Gene deletion studies in Thermococcus kodakaraensis and Methanococcus maripaludis show that polD is the only essential DNA polymerase in these organisms. Thus, polD may be the primary replicative DNA polymerase for both leading and lagging strand synthesis. To understand this unique archaeal enzyme, we report the biochemical characterization of a heterodimeric polD from Thermococcus. PolD contains both DNA polymerase and proofreading 3′–5′ exonuclease activities to ensure efficient and accurate genome duplication. The polD incorporation fidelity was determined for the first time. Despite containing 3′–5′ exonuclease proofreading activity, polD has a relatively high error rate (95 × 10?5) compared to polB (19 × 10?5) and at least 10-fold higher than the polB DNA polymerases from yeast (polε and polδ) or Escherichia coli DNA polIII holoenzyme. The implications of polD fidelity and biochemical properties in leading and lagging strand synthesis are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Phage RB69 B-family DNA polymerase is responsible for the overall high fidelity of RB69 DNA synthesis. Fidelity is compromised when conserved Tyr567, one of the residues that form the nascent polymerase base-pair binding pocket, is replaced by alanine. The Y567A mutator mutant has an enlarged binding pocket and can incorporate and extend mispairs efficiently. Ser565 is a nearby conserved residue that also contributes to the binding pocket, but a S565G replacement has only a small impact on DNA replication fidelity. When Y567A and S565G replacements were combined, mutator activity was strongly decreased compared to that with Y567A replacement alone. Analyses conducted both in vivo and in vitro revealed that, compared to Y567A replacement alone, the double mutant mainly reduced base substitution mutations and, to a lesser extent, frameshift mutations. The decrease in mutation rates was not due to increased exonuclease activity. Based on measurements of DNA binding affinity, mismatch insertion, and mismatch extension, we propose that the recovered fidelity of the double mutant may result, in part, from an increased dissociation of the enzyme from DNA, followed by the binding of the same or another polymerase molecule in either exonuclease mode or polymerase mode. An additional antimutagenic factor may be a structural alteration in the polymerase binding pocket described in this article.  相似文献   

17.
Mechanisms that allow replicative DNA polymerases to attain high processivity are often specific to a given polymerase and cannot be generalised to others. Amplification efficiency is lower in family B-type DNA polymerases than in family A-type (Taq) polymerases because of their strong 3′–5′ exonuclease-activity. Here, we have red the exonuclease domain of the Thermococcus onnurineus NA1 (TNA1) DNA polymerase, especially Asn210 to Asp215 residues in Exo II motif (NXXXFD), to improve the processivity. N213D mutant protein had higher processivity and extension rate than the wild-type TNA1 DNA polymerase, retaining a lower mutation frequency than recombinant Taq DNA polymerase. Consequently, the N213D mutant could amplify target DNA up to 13.5 kb in length from human genomic DNA and 16.2 kb in length from human mitochondrial DNA while wild-type TNA1 amplified target DNA of 2.7 kb in length from human genomic DNA.  相似文献   

18.
DNA replication fidelity in Streptomyces bacteria, prolific producers of many medically important secondary metabolites, is understudied, while in Escherichia coli it is controlled by DnaQ, the ϵ subunit of DNA polymerase III (DNA PolIII). Manipulation of dnaQ paralogues in Streptomyces lividans TK24, did not lead to increased spontaneous mutagenesis in this bacterium suggesting that S. lividans DNA PolIII uses an alternative exonuclease activity for proofreading. In Mycobacterium tuberculosis, such activity is attributed to the DnaE protein representing α subunit of DNA PolIII. Eight DnaE mutants designed based on the literature data were overexpressed in S. lividans, and recombinant strains overexpressing two of these mutants displayed markedly increased frequency of spontaneous mutagenesis (up to 1000-fold higher compared to the control). One of these ‘mutators’ was combined in S. lividans with a biosensor specific for antibiotic coelimycin, which biosynthetic gene cluster is present but not expressed in this strain. Colonies giving a positive biosensor signal appeared at a frequency of ca 10–5, and all of them were found to produce coelimycin congeners. This result confirmed that our approach can be applied for chemical- and radiation-free mutagenesis in Streptomyces leading to activation of orphan biosynthetic gene clusters and discovery of novel bioactive secondary metabolites.  相似文献   

19.
We report the properties of two mutations in the exonuclease domain of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae DNA polymerase ϵ. One, pol2-Y473F, increases the mutation rate by about 20-fold, similar to the catalytically dead pol2-D290A/E290A mutant. The other, pol2-N378K, is a stronger mutator. Both retain the ability to excise a nucleotide from double-stranded DNA, but with impaired activity. pol2-Y473F degrades DNA poorly, while pol2-N378K degrades single-stranded DNA at an elevated rate relative to double-stranded DNA. These data suggest that pol2-Y473F reduces the capacity of the enzyme to perform catalysis in the exonuclease active site, while pol2-N378K impairs partitioning to the exonuclease active site. Relative to wild-type Pol ϵ, both variants decrease the dNTP concentration required to elicit a switch between proofreading and polymerization by more than an order of magnitude. While neither mutation appears to alter the sequence specificity of polymerization, the N378K mutation stimulates polymerase activity, increasing the probability of incorporation and extension of a mismatch. Considered together, these data indicate that impairing the primer strand transfer pathway required for proofreading increases the probability of common mutations by Pol ϵ, elucidating the association of homologous mutations in human DNA polymerase ϵ with cancer.  相似文献   

20.
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae EXO1 gene encodes a 5′ exonuclease that participates in mismatch repair (MMR) of DNA replication errors. Deleting EXO1 was previously shown to increase mutation rates to a greater extent when combined with a mutator variant (pol3-L612M) of the lagging strand replicase, DNA polymerase δ (Pol δ), than when combined with a mutator variant (pol2-M644G) of the leading strand replicase, DNA polymerase ? (Pol ?). Here we confirm that result, and extend the approach to examine the effect of deleting EXO1 in a mutator variant (pol1-L868M) of Pol α, the proofreading-deficient and least accurate of the three nuclear replicases that is responsible for initiating Okazaki fragment synthesis. We find that deleting EXO1 increases the mutation rate in the Pol α mutator strain to a significantly greater extent than in the Pol δ or Pol ? mutator strains, thereby preferentially reducing the efficiency of MMR of replication errors generated by Pol α. Because these mismatches are closer to the 5′ ends of Okazaki fragments than are mismatches made by Pol δ or Pol ?, the results not only support the previous suggestion that Exo1 preferentially excises lagging strand replication errors during mismatch repair, they further imply that the 5′ ends serve as entry points for 5′ excision of replication errors made by Pol α, and possibly as strand discrimination signals for MMR. Nonetheless, mutation rates in the Pol α mutator strain are 5- to 25-fold lower in an exo1Δ strain as compared to an msh2Δ strain completely lacking MMR, indicating that in the absence of Exo1, most replication errors made by Pol α can still be removed in an Msh2-dependent manner by other nucleases and/or by strand displacement.  相似文献   

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