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Query: EC:2.7.7.7 (
DNA polymerase
)
17,007
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Saccharomyces cerevisiae replication factor C (RF-C) was purified 25,000-fold from a protease-deficient strain of yeast. RF-C is a complex of 6 subunits of 130, 86, 41, 40, 37, and 27 kDa. None of the subunits are related through proteolysis or differential phosphorylation. The assay for RF-C used as a substrate
single-stranded DNA binding protein
-coated singly primed single-stranded mp 18 DNA. This DNA was poorly replicated by yeast DNA polymerase delta with or without its cofactor proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA). In the presence of RF-C, however, replication of the template proceeded efficiently when both ATP and PCNA were present as well. Formation of this replication-proficient complex of DNA polymerase delta required an input of one to two molecules of PCNA per replicated DNA molecule.
DNA polymerase
epsilon also formed an ATP-dependent complex with PCNA and RF-C. RF-C has a DNA-dependent ATPase activity, equally active on single-stranded and primed single-stranded mp18 DNA. Addition of PCNA stimulated the ATPase of RF-C on primed but not on unprimed DNA, indicating that the increase in ATPase was due to PCNA-enhanced binding of RF-C to the primer terminus. Calf thymus PCNA also stimulated the ATPase activity of yeast RF-C and participated in holoenzyme formation with DNA polymerase delta. These results attest to the structural and functional homology between yeast and mammalian cells for these components of the replication machinery.
...
PMID:Saccharomyces cerevisiae replication factor C. I. Purification and characterization of its ATPase activity. 168 21
The coordinated action of many enzymatic activities is required at the DNA replication fork to ensure the error-free, efficient, and simultaneous synthesis of the leading and lagging strands of DNA. In order to define the essential protein-protein interactions and model the regulatory pathways that control Okazaki fragment synthesis, we have reconstituted the replication fork of Escherichia coli in vitro in a rolling circle-type DNA replication system. In this system, in the presence of the
single-stranded DNA binding protein
, the helicase/primase function on the lagging-strand template is provided by the primosome, and the synthesis of DNA strands is catalyzed by the
DNA polymerase III
holoenzyme. These reconstituted replication forks synthesize equivalent amounts of leading- and lagging-strand DNA, move at rates comparable to those measured in vivo (600-800 nucleotides/s at 30 degrees C), and can synthesize leading strands in the range of 150-500 kilobases in length. Using this system, we have studied the cycle of Okazaki fragment synthesis at the replication fork. This cycle is likely to have several well defined decision points, steps in the cycle where incorrect execution by the enzymatic machinery will result in an alteration in the product of the reaction, i.e. in the size of the Okazaki fragments. Since identification of these decision points should aid in the determination of which of the enzymes acting at the replication fork control the cycle, we have endeavored to identify those reaction parameters that, when varied, alter the size of the Okazaki fragments synthesized. Here we demonstrate that some enzymes, such as the DnaB helicase, remain associated continuously with the fork while others, such as the primase, must be recruited from solution each time synthesis of an Okazaki fragment is initiated. We also show that variation of the concentration of the ribonucleoside triphosphates and the deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates affects Okazaki fragment size, that the control mechanisms acting at the fork to control Okazaki fragment size are not fixed at the time the fork is assembled but can be varied during the lifetime of the fork, and that alteration in the rate of the leading-strand
DNA polymerase
cannot account for the effect of the deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates.
...
PMID:Coordinated leading- and lagging-strand synthesis at the Escherichia coli DNA replication fork. I. Multiple effectors act to modulate Okazaki fragment size. 174 Apr 51
To investigate the role of the priming apparatus at the replication fork in determining Okazaki fragment size, the products of primer synthesis generated in vitro during rolling-circle DNA replication catalyzed by the
DNA polymerase III
holoenzyme, the
single-stranded DNA binding protein
, and the primosome on a tailed form II DNA template were isolated and characterized. The abundance of oligoribonucleotide primers and the incidence of covalent DNA chain extension of the primer population was measured under different reaction conditions known to affect the size of the products of lagging-strand DNA synthesis. These analyses demonstrated that the factors affecting Okazaki fragment length could be distinguished by either their effect on the frequency of primer synthesis or by their influence on the efficiency of initiation of DNA synthesis from primer termini. Primase and the ribonucleoside triphosphates were found to stimulate primer synthesis. The observed trend toward smaller fragment size as the concentration of these effectors was raised was apparently a direct consequence of the increased frequency of primer synthesis. The beta subunit of the
DNA polymerase III
holoenzyme and the deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates did not alter the priming frequency; instead, the concentration of these factors influenced the ability of the lagging-strand
DNA polymerase
to efficiently utilize primers to initiate DNA synthesis. Maximum utilization of the available primers correlated with the lowest mean value of Okazaki fragment length. These data were used to draw general conclusions concerning the temporal order of enzymatic steps that operate during a cycle of Okazaki fragment synthesis on the lagging-strand DNA template.
...
PMID:Coordinated leading- and lagging-strand synthesis at the Escherichia coli DNA replication fork. II. Frequency of primer synthesis and efficiency of primer utilization control Okazaki fragment size. 174 Apr 52
Replication forks formed during rolling-circle DNA synthesis supported by a tailed form II DNA substrate in the presence of the primosome, the
single-stranded DNA binding protein
, and the
DNA polymerase III
holoenzyme (Pol III HE) that had been reconstituted from the purified subunits, beta, tau, and the gamma.delta complex, at limiting (with respect to nucleotide incorporation) concentrations of the Pol III core (alpha, epsilon, and theta) produced aberrantly small Okazaki fragments, while the synthesis of the leading strand was unperturbed. These small Okazaki fragments were not arrayed in tandem along the lagging-strand DNA template, but were separated by large gaps. Similarly structured synthetic products were not manufactured by replication forks reconstituted with higher, saturating concentrations of the Pol III core. Replication forks producing these small fragments could respond, by modulating the size of the Okazaki fragments produced, to variations in the concentration of NTPs or the primase, conditions that affect the frequency of priming on the lagging strand, but not to variation in the concentration of dNTPs, conditions that affect the frequency of utilization of the primers. Significantly longer Okazaki fragments (greater than 7 kilobases) could be produced in the presence of a limiting amount of Pol III core at low concentrations of the primase. These observations indicated that the production of small Okazaki fragments was not a result of a debilitated lagging-strand Pol III core, but rather a function of the time available for nascent strand synthesis during the cycle of events that are required for the manufacture of an Okazaki fragment and that it was the association of primase with the replication fork that keyed this cycle.
...
PMID:Coordinated leading- and lagging-strand synthesis at the Escherichia coli DNA replication fork. V. Primase action regulates the cycle of Okazaki fragment synthesis. 174 Apr 53
Studies of simian virus 40 (SV40) DNA replication in a reconstituted cell-free system have established that T antigen and two cellular replication proteins, replication protein A (RP-A) and
DNA polymerase alpha
-primase complex, are necessary and sufficient for initiation of DNA synthesis on duplex templates containing the SV40 origin of DNA replication. To better understand the mechanism of initiation of DNA synthesis, we analyzed the functional interactions of T antigen, RP-A, and
DNA polymerase alpha
-primase on model single-stranded DNA templates. Purified
DNA polymerase alpha
-primase was capable of initiating DNA synthesis de novo on unprimed single-stranded DNA templates. This reaction involved the synthesis of a short oligoribonucleotide primer which was then extended into a DNA chain. We observed that the synthesis of ribonucleotide primers by
DNA polymerase alpha
-primase is dramatically stimulated by SV40 T antigen. The presence of T antigen also increased the average length of the DNA product synthesized on primed and unprimed single-stranded DNA templates. These stimulatory effects of T antigen required direct contact with
DNA polymerase alpha
-primase complex and were most marked at low template and polymerase concentrations. We also observed that the
single-stranded DNA binding protein
, RP-A, strongly inhibits the primase activity of
DNA polymerase alpha
-primase, probably by blocking access of the enzyme to the template. T antigen partially reversed the inhibition caused by RP-A. Our data support a model in which DNA priming is mediated by a complex between T antigen and
DNA polymerase alpha
-primase with the template, while RP-A acts to suppress nonspecific priming events.
...
PMID:Effects of T antigen and replication protein A on the initiation of DNA synthesis by DNA polymerase alpha-primase. 184 71
DNA polymerase III
of Escherichia coli requires multiple auxiliary factors to enable it to serve as a replicative complex. We demonstrate that auxiliary components of the
DNA polymerase III
holoenzyme, the gamma delta complex and beta subunit, markedly stimulate
DNA polymerase II
on long single-stranded templates.
DNA polymerase II
activity is enhanced by
single-stranded DNA binding protein
, but the stimulation by gamma delta and beta can be observed either in the absence or presence of
single-stranded DNA binding protein
. In contrast with
DNA polymerase III
, the requirement of
DNA polymerase II
for gamma delta cannot be bypassed by large excesses of the beta subunit at low ionic strength in the absence of the
single-stranded DNA binding protein
. The product of the
DNA polymerase II
-gamma delta-beta reaction on a uniquely primed single-stranded circle is of full template length; the reconstituted enzyme apparently is incapable of strand displacement synthesis. The possible biological implications of these observations are discussed.
...
PMID:Escherichia coli DNA polymerase II is stimulated by DNA polymerase III holoenzyme auxiliary subunits. 199 35
A comparison of the 3'----5' proofreading properties between Escherichia coli
DNA polymerase III
holoenzyme and
DNA polymerase III
' was conducted. This study indicated that the influence of the holoenzyme auxiliary subunits on the proofreading exonuclease parallels their effect on the elongation reaction. At physiological ionic strengths the auxiliary subunits markedly stimulated the exonuclease rate in an ATP-dependent reaction, while the exonuclease rate of
DNA polymerase III
' was not affected by ATP. E. coli
single-stranded DNA binding protein
stimulated the 3'----5' exonuclease activity of holoenzyme and inhibited
DNA polymerase III
'. Similarly, the auxiliary subunits and ATP converted the proofreading activity to a highly processive exonuclease. Our observation, that the exonuclease activity of the
DNA polymerase III
holoenzyme responded to ATP, salt, and E. coli single-stranded DNA-binding protein like the elongation activity, is consistent with the polymerase and exonuclease subunits acting within the same complex in a coordinated reaction.
...
PMID:Proofreading activity of DNA polymerase III responds like elongation activity to auxiliary subunits. 200 34
The DNA and protein sequences of single-stranded DNA binding proteins (SSBs) encoded by the plP71a, plP231a, and R64 conjugative plasmids have been determined and compared to Escherichia coli
SSB
and the
SSB
encoded by F-plasmid. Although the amino acid sequences of all of these proteins are highly conserved within the NH2-terminal two-thirds of the protein, they diverge in the COOH-terminal third region. A number of amino acid residues which have previously been implicated as being either directly or indirectly involved in DNA binding are conserved in all of these SSBs. These residues include Trp-40, Trp-54, Trp-88, His-55, and Phe-60. On the basis of these sequence comparisons and DNA binding studies, a role for Tyr-70 in DNA binding is suggested for the first time. Although the COOH-terminal third of these proteins diverges more than their NH2-terminal regions, the COOH-terminal five amino acid residues of all five of these proteins are identical. In addition, all of these proteins share the characteristic property of having a protease resistant, NH2-terminal core and an acidic COOH-terminal region. Despite the high degree of sequence homology among the plasmid
SSB
proteins, the F-plasmid
SSB
appears unique in that it was the only
SSB
tested that neither bound well to poly(dA) nor was able to stimulate
DNA polymerase III
holoenzyme elongation rates. Poly [d(A-T)] melting studies suggest that at least three of the plasmid encoded SSBs are better helix-destabilizing proteins than is the E. coli
SSB
protein.
...
PMID:Single-stranded DNA binding proteins (SSBs) from prokaryotic transmissible plasmids. 200 32
In vitro biochemical assays are typically performed using very dilute solutions of macromolecular components. On the other hand, total intracellular concentrations of macromolecular solutes are very high, resulting in an in vivo environment that is significantly "volume-occupied." In vitro studies with the DNA replication proteins of bacteriophage T4 have revealed anomalously weak binding of T4 gene 45 protein to the rest of the replication complex. We have used inert macromolecular solutes to mimic typical intracellular solution conditions of high volume occupancy to investigate the effects of "macromolecular crowding" on the binding equilibria involved in the assembly of the T4 polymerase accessory proteins complex. The same approach was also used to study the assembly of this complex with T4
DNA polymerase
(gene 43 protein) and T4
single-stranded DNA binding protein
(gene 32 protein) to form the five protein "holoenzyme". We find that the apparent association constant (Ka) of gene 45 for gene 44/62 proteins in forming both the accessory protein complex and the holoenzyme increases markedly (from approximately 7 x 10(6) to approximately 3.5 x 10(8) M-1) as a consequence of adding polymers such as polyethylene glycol and dextran. Although the processivity of the polymerase alone is not directly effected by the addition of such polymers to the solution, macromolecular crowding does significantly stabilize the holoenzyme and thus indirectly increases the observed processivity of the holoenzyme complex. The use of macromolecular crowding to increase the stability of multienzyme complexes in general is discussed, as is the relevance of these results to DNA replication in vivo.
...
PMID:"Macromolecular crowding": thermodynamic consequences for protein-protein interactions within the T4 DNA replication complex. 216 2
To determine the contribution that
DNA polymerase alpha
makes to the overall DNA replication fidelity in mammalian systems, we measured the fidelity of replication of the SV40-based shuttle vector, pZ189, in a reconstituted in vitro DNA replication system which contained purified HeLa
DNA polymerase alpha
(in addition to
single-stranded DNA binding protein
, topoisomerase II, DNA ligase, 5'----3' exonuclease, ribonuclease H, and SV40 T-antigen). We found that
DNA polymerase alpha
is highly accurate when carrying out bidirectional replication in this system. This high fidelity of replication by
DNA polymerase alpha
in the reconstituted replication system contrasts with a relatively low fidelity of gap-filling DNA synthesis on the same target gene by purified HeLa cell
DNA polymerase alpha
in the absence of other replication factors. The fidelity of DNA replication by
DNA polymerase alpha
, although relatively high in the reconstituted system, is about 4-fold lower than DNA replication in a crude HeLa cell extract which contains additional replication factors including DNA polymerase delta. These results demonstrate that
DNA polymerase alpha
has the capacity to replicate DNA with high fidelity when carrying out semiconservative DNA replication in a minimal reconstituted replication system, but additional cellular factors not present in the reconstituted system may contribute to the higher replication fidelity of the crude system.
...
PMID:DNA polymerase alpha from HeLa cells synthesizes DNA with high fidelity in a reconstituted replication system. 221 24
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