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1.
Bacteriophage T4 rnh encodes an RNase H that removes ribopentamer primers from nascent DNA chains during synthesis by the T4 multienzyme replication system in vitro (H. C. Hollingsworth and N. G. Nossal, J. Biol. Chem. 266:1888-1897, 1991). This paper demonstrates that either T4 RNase HI or Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I (Pol I) is essential for phage replication. Wild-type T4 phage production was not diminished by the polA12 mutation, which disrupts coordination between the polymerase and the 5'-to-3' nuclease activities of E. coli DNA Pol I, or by an interruption in the gene for E. coli RNase HI. Deleting the C-terminal amino acids 118 to 305 from T4 RNase H reduced phage production to 47% of that of wild-type T4 on a wild-type E. coli host, 10% on an isogenic host defective in RNase H, and less than 0.1% on a polA12 host. The T4 rnh(delta118-305) mutant synthesized DNA at about half the rate of wild-type T4 in the polA12 host. More than 50% of pulse-labelled mutant DNA was in short chains characteristic of Okazaki fragments. Phage production was restored in the nonpermissive host by providing the T4 rnh gene on a plasmid. Thus, T4 RNase H was sufficient to sustain the high rate of T4 DNA synthesis, but E. coli RNase HI and the 5'-to-3' exonuclease of Pol I could substitute to some extent for the T4 enzyme. However, replication was less accurate in the absence of the T4 RNase H, as judged by the increased frequency of acriflavine-resistant mutations after infection of a wild-type host with the T4 rnh (delta118-305) mutant.  相似文献   

2.
An Escherichia coli mutant (polA1), defective in deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) polymerase I, (EC 2.7.7.7) is unable to maintain colicinogenic factor E1 (ColE1), whereas several sex factor plasmids are maintained normally in this strain. polA1 mutant strains containing these sex factor plasmids do not exhibit a readily detectable plasmid-induced polymerase activity. A series of E. coli mutants that are temperature sensitive for ColE1 maintenance, but able to maintain other plasmids, were isolated and shown to fall into two phenotypic groups. Mutants in one group are defective specifically in ColE1 maintenance at 43 C, but exhibit normal DNA polymerase I activity. Mutations in the second group map in the polA gene of E. coli, and bacteria carrying these mutations are sensitive to methylmethanesulfonate (MMS). Revertants that were selected either for MMS resistance or the ability to maintain ColE1 were normal for both properties. The DNA polymerase I enzyme of two of these mutants shows a pronounced temperature sensitivity when compared to the wild-type enzyme. An examination of the role of DNA polymerase I in ColE1 maintenance indicates that it is essential for normal replication of the plasmid. In addition, the presence of a functional DNA polymerase I in both the donor and recipient cell is required for the ColV-promoted conjugal transfer of ColE1 and establishment of the plasmid in the recipient cell.  相似文献   

3.
rnh mutations of Escherichia coli inactivating RNase H activity allow the initiation of rounds of DNA replication in the absence of protein synthesis (stable DNA replication). However, levels of RNase H did not change during or after the induction of stable DNA replication in rnh+ strains by incubation with nalidixic acid or UV irradiation.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Pol I is the most abundant polymerase in E. coli and plays an important role in short patch repair. In accord with this role in the cell, the purified polymerase exhibits low processivity and high fidelity in vitro. Pol I is also the polymerase responsible for leader strand synthesis during ColE1 plasmid replication. In a previous publication, we described the generation of a highly error-prone DNA polymerase I. Expression of this mutant Pol I results in errors during the replication of a ColE1 plasmid. The distribution and spectrum of mutations in the ColE1 plasmid sequence downstream the ori indicates that Pol I is capable of more processive replication in vivo than previously accepted. Here, we review evidence suggesting that Pol I may be recruited into a replisome-like holoenzyme and speculate that processive DNA replication by Pol I in the cell may play a role in recombination-dependent DNA replication.  相似文献   

6.
Pol I is the most abundant polymerase in E. coli and plays an important role in short patch repair. In accord with this role in the cell, the purified polymerase exhibits low processivity and high fidelity in vitro. Pol I is also the polymerase responsible for leader strand synthesis during ColE1 plasmid replication. In a previous publication, we described the generation of a highly error-prone DNA polymerase I. Expression of this mutant Pol I results in errors during the replication of a ColE1 plasmid. The distribution and spectrum of mutations in the ColE1 plasmid sequence downstream the ori indicates that Pol I is capable of more processive replication in vivo than previously accepted. Here, we review evidence suggesting that Pol I may be recruited into a replisome-like holoenzyme and speculate that processive DNA replication by Pol I may play a role in recombination-dependent DNA replication in the cell.  相似文献   

7.
8.
To elucidate the replication mechanism of a ColE1-type plasmid in RNase H-deficient (rnh-) strains of Escherichia coli, we constructed plasmid derivatives that deleted the whole, or a part, of the 5'-AAAAA-3' sequence (positions -3 to +2) that acts as the origin of replication in vivo and in vitro in the presence of RNase H. The activity of plasmid replication in rnh+ cells was found to be reduced by alterations of the AAAAA sequence. The activity could be restored when the derivatives, retaining the upstream sequence down to -8, regained a sequence containing at least two A residues in the region from -3 to +2. By contrast, replication in rnh- cells was maintained at high levels even when the deletion included the AAAAA sequence and extended up to position -7. The activity in rnh- cells decreased as deletions proceeded to -8 and further up to -17, and was abolished completely by further upward deletions. We concluded that in rnh- cells the plasmid replicates by a mechanism that operates only when RNase H is inactive. This RNase H-sensitive replication in rnh- cells seems to require the RNA-DNA hybrid formation that is also required for RNase H-dependent replication in rnh+ cells. The hybrid formation probably contributes by unwinding a portion of DNA from which replication can be initiated.  相似文献   

9.
Temperature-sensitive mutants of Escherichia coli defective in the replication of the plasmid colicinogenic factor E1 (ColE(1)) were isolated following mutagenesis of E. coli K12 strain carrying the ColE(1) factor. Following the mutagenic treatment an enrichment procedure utilizing the replacement of thymine with bromouracil in the ColE(1) DNA duplicated at the restrictive temperature was used. The mutants isolated following this enrichment step were the result of a mutation event either in the host chromosome or in the ColE(1) plasmid. The host mutants fell into three phenotypic classes based on the effect each mutation had on the maintenance of a variety of other extrachromosomal DNA elements. Phenotypic class I mutations affected all E. coli plasmids, both the I and F sex factor types as well as the ColE(1) factor. Phenotypic class II mutations affected the maintenance of the ColE(1) and the F sex factor type plasmids and not the I type, while phenotypic class III mutations affected only ColE(1) replication. None of these mutations was found to have a significant effect on the replication of the E. coli chromosome. The plasmid-linked mutations fell into two phenotypic classes on the basis of the ability of the Flac episome to complement the mutation in the ColE(1) plasmid.  相似文献   

10.
We isolated three Escherichia coli suppressor strains that reduce the copy number of a mutant ColE1 high-copy-number plasmid. These mutations lower the copy number of the mutant plasmid in vivo up to 15-fold; the wild-type plasmid copy number is reduced by two- to threefold. The suppressor strains do not affect the copy numbers of non-ColE1-type plasmids tested, suggesting that their effects are specific for ColE1-type plasmids. Two of the suppressor strains show ColE1 allele-specific suppression; i.e., certain plasmid copy number mutations are suppressed more efficiently than others, suggesting specificity in the interaction between the suppressor gene product and plasmid replication component(s). All of the mutations were genetically mapped to the chromosomal polA gene, which encodes DNA polymerase I. The suppressor mutational changes were identified by DNA sequencing and found to alter single nucleotides in the region encoding the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I. Two mutations map in the DNA-binding cleft of the polymerase region and are suggested to affect specific interactions of the enzyme with the replication primer RNA encoded by the plasmid. The third suppressor alters a residue in the 3'-5' exonuclease domain of the enzyme. Implications for the interaction of DNA polymerase I with the ColE1 primer RNA are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
A mutant of Escherichia coli with altered levels of ribonuclease (RNase) H was isolated after mutagenesis with ethyl methane sulfonate. A procedure for assaying RNase H in partially purified extracts was used to screen approximately 1,500 colonies for variations in RNase H activity. Confirmation of a lower level of RNase H in the mutant was accomplished by analysis of RNase H in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. By Hfr, F', and P1 transduction mapping, the genetic locus responsible for the lower levels of RNase H was located at 5.1 min on the E. coli chromosome. This mutation (rnh) represents a new locus on the E. coli chromosome. The only phenotypic characteristic of this mutation which has been observed to date is the lower level of RNase H (30% of parental values).  相似文献   

12.
Escherichia coli rnh mutants lacking RNase H activity are capable of recA+-dependent DNA replication in the absence of concomitant protein synthesis (stable DNA replication). In rnh dnaA::Tn10 and rnh delta oriC double mutants in which the dnaA+-dependent initiation of DNA replication at oriC is completely blocked, the recA200 mutation encoding a thermolabile RecA protein renders both colony formation and DNA synthesis of these mutants temperature sensitive. To determine which stage of DNA replication (initiation, elongation, or termination) was blocked, we analyzed populations of these mutant cells incubated at 30 or 42 degrees C in the presence or absence of chloramphenicol (CM) by dual-parameter (DNA-light scatter) flow cytometry. Incubation at 30 degrees C in the presence of CM resulted in cells with a continuum of DNA content up to seven or more chromosome equivalents per cell. The cultures which had been incubated at 42 degrees C in the absence or presence of CM consisted of cells with integral numbers of chromosomes per cell. It is concluded that active RecA protein is required specifically for the initiation of stable DNA replication.  相似文献   

13.
rnh mutants harboring pBR322 were found to contain several slowly migrating DNA species when examined by agarose gel electrophoresis. The plasmid DNA from rnh mutants included large molecules, i.e. plasmids two, three or four times the size of a single plasmid unit. That this DNA contained concatemeric plasmid joined in a head-to-tail fashion was determined by digestion with restriction endonucleases that cleaved the monomeric plasmid DNA at a unique site. This treatment resulted in migration of the plasmid DNA at a mobility identical to that of linearized monomeric plasmid by agarose gel electrophoresis. This was confirmed by electron microscopy. Plasmid concatemer formation was detected with several high-copy-number (relaxed type) plasmids but not with low-copy-number (stringent) plasmids. Concatemer formation was dependent on RecA+ and RecF+ functions since several recA and recF mutations abolished concatemer formation. ColE1-type plasmids were previously shown to replicate in rnh mutants in the absence of DNA polymerase I (PolI) activity. This DNA PolI-independent plasmid replication was also examined for its dependence on the recF and recA gene products. rnh- polA(Ts) recF- strains were efficiently transformed with these plasmids at 30 degrees C and 42 degrees C, indicating the presence of DNA PolI-independent replication under recF- conditions. The presence or absence of plasmid replication in rnh- polA- recA(Ts) strains was also examined by measuring the increase in total amounts of plasmid. The results indicated that DNA PolI-independent replication occurred in these triple mutants at 42 degrees C as well as at 30 degrees C. It was concluded that the recombination event giving rise to concatemer formation was not essential for DNA PolI-independent replication in rnh mutants.  相似文献   

14.
15.
16.
Host mutations in Escherichia coli K12 selected for the temperature-sensitive replication of the bacterial plasmid colicinogenic factor E(1) (ColE(1)) exhibit a pleiotropic effect with respect to the effect of the mutation on other extra-chromosomal elements. The mutations also vary with respect to the time of incubation of the cells at 43 degrees C required for complete cessation of ColE(1) DNA synthesis. While the synthesis of the bacterial chromosome appears unaffected, supercoiled ColE(1) DNA replication stops immediately in some mutants and gradually decreases during several generations of cell growth before stopping in others. Mutations isolated in the ColE(1) plasmid resulted in only a gradual cessation of ColE(1) DNA synthesis over several generations of cell growth at 43 degrees C. Conjugal transfer of the ColE(1) and ColV factors occurs normally in the host mutants when the transfer is carried out at the permissive temperature; however, the presence of a group I mutation in the donor cell prohibited conjugal transfer of either plasmid DNA at 43 degrees C to a normal recipient cell. Similarly, the presence of this mutation in the recipient prevented the establishment of ColE(1) or ColV in the mutant recipient cell upon conjugation with a normal donor at 43 degrees C. Various host ColE(1) replication mutants carrying either ColE(1) or ColE(2) were also defective in the mitomycin C-induced production of colicin E(1) or colicin E(2) at 43 degrees C. The majority of the host mutations examined exhibited a temperature sensitivity to growth in deoxycholate in addition to the inhibition of plasmid DNA replication, suggesting a membrane alteration in these mutants when grown at the restrictive temperature.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Two modes of ColE1 DNA replication are known, one dependent on RNase H, and the other RNase H independent. The cer114 mutant of the ColE1 replicon is defective in both modes and carries a single base pair alteration 95 by upstream of the replication origin. An Escherichia coli mutant which restored maintenance of the cer114 replicon was isolated. This host suppressor mutant is defective in RNase H and carries a herC, mutation located at 62 min of the E. coli chromosome. The herC, mutation is recessive to its wild-type allele and supports maintenance of the mutant replicon in the absence of RNase H. The herC, mutation alone conferred cold-sensitive growth, suggesting that the herC, gene product is essential for cell growth. The 1832 by E. coli DNA fragment, containing the wild-type allele of the herC, mutation, was cloned and an open reading frame for the HerC protein was determined.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The requirements for the recovery of DNA synthesis in UV-irradiated Escherichia coli were analysed in strains having varied levels of RNase H and RecA protein. We have previously shown (Khidhir et al. 1985) that the recovery of DNA synthesis in E. coli following UV treatment is an inducible SOS function requiring protein synthesis. We proposed that this reflected the need for the synthesis of specific induced replisome reactivation factor(s) for recovery. In this study we now show that recovery of DNA synthesis can in fact take place in the absence of protein synthesis in a mutant lacking RNase H and having high (constitutive) levels of RecA protein. We also show that expression of rnh is inhibited during the SOS response in recA+ but not in a recA- strain. The results are discussed in relation to the mechanism of recovery of DNA synthesis following UV irradiation in E. coli.  相似文献   

20.
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, genome stability depends on RNases H1 and H2, which remove ribonucleotides from DNA and eliminate RNA–DNA hybrids (R‐loops). In Schizosaccharomyces pombe, RNase H enzymes were reported to process RNA–DNA hybrids produced at a double‐strand break (DSB) generated by I‐PpoI meganuclease. However, it is unclear if RNase H is generally required for efficient DSB repair in fission yeast, or whether it has other genome protection roles. Here, we show that S. pombe rnh1? rnh201? cells, which lack the RNase H enzymes, accumulate R‐loops and activate DNA damage checkpoints. Their viability requires critical DSB repair proteins and Mus81, which resolves DNA junctions formed during repair of broken replication forks. “Dirty” DSBs generated by ionizing radiation, as well as a “clean” DSB at a broken replication fork, are efficiently repaired in the absence of RNase H. RNA–DNA hybrids are not detected at a reparable DSB formed by fork collapse. We conclude that unprocessed R‐loops collapse replication forks in rnh1? rnh201? cells, but RNase H is not generally required for efficient DSB repair.  相似文献   

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