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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)
Expression of Thermus aquaticus (Taq)
DNA polymerase I
(pol I) in Escherichia, coli complements the growth defect caused by a temperature-sensitive mutation in the host pol I. We replaced the nucleotide sequence encoding amino acids 659-671 of the O-helix of Taq DNA pol I, corresponding to the substrate binding site, with an oligonucleotide containing random nucleotides. Functional Taq pol I mutants were selected based on colony formation at the nonpermissive temperature. By using a library with 9% random substitutions at each of 39 positions, we identified 61 active Taq pol I mutants, each of which contained from one to four amino acid substitutions. Some amino acids, such as
alanine
-661 and threonine-664, were tolerant of several or even many diverse replacements. In contrast, no replacements or only conservative replacements were identified at arginine-659, lysine-663, and tyrosine-671. By using a library with totally random nucleotides at five different codons (arginine-659, arginine-660, lysine-663, phenylalanine-667, and glycine-668), we confirmed that arginine-659 and lysine-663 were immutable, and observed that only tyrosine substituted for phenylalanine-667. The two immutable residues and the two residues that tolerate only highly conservative replacements lie on the side of O-helix facing the incoming deoxynucleoside triphosphate, as determined by x-ray analysis. Thus, we offer a new approach to assess concordance of the active conformation of an enzyme, as interpreted from the crystal structure, with the active conformation inferred from in vivo function.
...
PMID:Random mutagenesis of Thermus aquaticus DNA polymerase I: concordance of immutable sites in vivo with the crystal structure. 879 Mar 89
Three groups of T4
DNA polymerase
mutants were prepared and characterized. In the first group,
Ala
and Asn were substituted for four acidic residues in the exonuclease domain that were chosen on the basis of their sequence alignment with the
Klenow fragment
from Escherichia coli
DNA polymerase I
. Two divalent metal ions required for catalyzing the 3'-5' exonuclease reaction are ligated by carboxyl groups from these conserved Asp and Glu residues. The
Ala
and Asn replacements have a profound effect on the exonuclease activity of T4
DNA polymerase
and also have a significant, but less pronounced influence on its polymerase activity which is located in a domain distal to the exonuclease region. The kcat values for the exonuclease reaction were reduced by 3-4 orders of magnitude by these replacements, but the values of Km(app) did not differ greatly from the wild-type enzyme. The second group consists of replacements of other residues, that are conserved in the exonuclease domain of eukaryotic DNA polymerases, but do not contribute to divalent metal ion coordination. Many of these alterations resulted in decreased exonuclease and/or polymerase activity. Mutants in the third group have substitutions of conserved residues in the polymerase domain which diminished polymerase and altered exonuclease activities. Our results, combined with structural data on crystals of protein N388, a truncated form of T4
DNA polymerase
(Wang et al., 1996), show that: (i) the reduction in the relative specific exonuclease activities of mutants in the first group was significantly less than that of mutants in the
Klenow fragment
, despite the nearly identical geometric arrangement of the metal liganding groups in two proteins; (ii) altered residues, that affect exonuclease and/or polymerase activities in mutants of the second group, cluster within a small area of the exonuclease domain, suggesting that this area may be directly or indirectly involved in polymerase activity; (iii) mutations in the third group, which affect polymerase and exonuclease activities, may participate in DNA and dNTP binding. Our results point to the functional interdependence of the polymerase and exonuclease domains in T4
DNA polymerase
, a property not observed with the
Klenow fragment
.
...
PMID:Functional consequences and exonuclease kinetic parameters of point mutations in bacteriophage T4 DNA polymerase. 898 97
T7 gene 5
DNA polymerase
forms a complex with Escherichia coli thioredoxin (its processivity factor), and a 76-amino acid sequence (residues 258-334), unique to gene 5 protein, has been implicated in this interaction. We have examined the effect of amino acid substitution(s) in this region on T7 phage growth and on the interaction of the polymerase with thioredoxin. Among the mutations in gene 5, we found that a substitution of either Glu or
Ala
for Lys-302 yielded a protein that could not complement T7 phage lacking gene 5 (T7Delta5) to grow on E. coli having reduced thioredoxin levels. One triple mutant (K300E,K302E,K304E) could not support the growth of T7Delta5 even in wild type cells. This altered polymerase is stimulated 4-fold less by thioredoxin than is the wild type enzyme and the polymerase-thioredoxin complex has reduced processivity. The exonuclease activity of the altered polymerase is not stimulated to the same extent as that of the wild type enzyme by thioredoxin. The observed dissociation constant of the gene 5 protein K(300,302,304)E-thioredoxin complex is 7-fold higher than that of the wild type complex. The altered polymerase also has a lower binding affinity for double-stranded DNA.
...
PMID:Amino acid changes in a unique sequence of bacteriophage T7 DNA polymerase alter the processivity of nucleotide polymerization. 904 89
To investigate the role of Asp 26 and Lys 57, two conserved, buried residues, in the redox mechanism of Escherichia coli thioredoxin (Trx), three mutant proteins, Asp 26 -->
Ala
(D26A), Lys 57 --> Met (K57M), and the double mutant D26A/K57M, were prepared, replacing the charged amino acids with hydrophobic residues with similar sizes. Both the oxidized (Trx-S2) and reduced [Trx-(SH)2] forms of the mutant thioredoxins are fully folded and similar in overall structure to the wild-type protein (wt). The structure of the active site hydrophobic surface is unchanged by the mutation of Asp 26 and Lys 57, since
DNA polymerase
activity in the 1:1 complex of the T7 gene 5 protein and mutant Trx-(SH)2 shows similar Kd values (approximately 5 nM) for both mutants and wt. In contrast, redox reactions involving thioredoxin as a catalyst of the reduction of disulfides or oxidation of dithiols are strongly affected by the mutations. In the reaction of Trx-S2 with thioredoxin reductase at pH 8.0, the kcat/Km value for the D26A mutant is decreased by a factor of 10 from that of wt, while the value for the D26A/K57M mutant is reduced 40-fold. The activity of Trx-(SH)2 as a protein disulfide reductase was measured with insulin, using fluorescence to detect oxidation of thioredoxin. At 15 degrees C and pH 8.0, both the D26A and K57M mutants showed 5--10-fold decreases in rates of reaction compared to those of the wild type, and the pH-rate profiles for the mutants were shifted 1 (K57M) and 2 (D26A) units to higher pH compared with the wt curve. NMR measurements for the three mutant proteins indicate that the proteins have the same global fold as that of the wild type, although changes in the chemical shifts of a number of resonances indicate local structural changes in the active site region. The resonances of oxidized D26A and D26A/K57M are pH-independent between pH 6.0 and 10.0, confirming the identification of the active site group titrating with a pKa of 7.5 in wt Trx-S2 as Asp 26. A profound change in the pKa of Asp 26, from 7.5 in the wild type to 9.4 in the mutant, is observed for K57M Trx-S2. The pH-dependent behavior of the resonances is affected in all mutant Trx-(SH)2 proteins. A single pKa shifted to higher values is observed on both the Cys 32 and Cys 35 Cbeta resonances. Ultraviolet absorbance measurements (A240) as a function of pH for wt Trx-(SH)2 demonstrate that the cysteine thiols titrate with apparent pK(a)s of about 7.1 and 9.9. The mutant proteins each show a single transition in the A240 measurements, with a midpoint at pH 7.8-8.0, consistent with the NMR results. The change in absorbance at 240 nm with increasing pH indicates that the number of thiols titrating in each mutant is greater than one but less than two. It is clear that both thiol pK(a)s have been significantly shifted by the mutations. The Cys 32 pKa is moved from 7.1 in wt to 7.8-8.0 in the mutants. The value of the Cys 35 pKa either is indistinguishable from that of Cys 32, thus accounting for more than one thiol titrating in the UV absorbance measurements or else is shifted to much higher pHs (> 10) where its transition is masked in both UV and NMR measurements by the effects of ionization of the tyrosine residues and unfolding of the protein. Our results strongly suggest that the buried Asp 26 carboxyl and Lys 57 epsilon-amino groups significantly affect the pK(a)s of the active site thiols, particularly that of the exposed low-pKa thiol Cys 32, thereby enhancing the rates of thiol-disulfide reactions at physiological pH.
...
PMID:Effects of buried charged groups on cysteine thiol ionization and reactivity in Escherichia coli thioredoxin: structural and functional characterization of mutants of Asp 26 and Lys 57. 905 69
The herpes simplex virus
DNA polymerase
catalytic subunit, which has intrinsic polymerase and 3'-5' exonuclease activities, contains sequence motifs that are homologous to those important for 3'-5' exonuclease activity in other polymerases. The role of one such motif, Exo III, was examined in this study. Mutated polymerases containing either a single tyrosine-to-histidine change at residue 577 or this change plus an aspartic acid-to-
alanine
at residue 581 in the Exo III motif exhibited defective or undetectable exonuclease activity, respectively, yet retained substantial polymerase activity. Despite the defects in exonuclease activity, the mutant polymerases were able to support viral replication in transient complementation assays, albeit inefficiently. Viruses replicated via the action of these mutant polymerases exhibited substantially increased frequencies of mutants resistant to ganciclovir. Furthermore, when the Exo III mutations were incorporated into the viral genome, the resulting mutant viruses displayed only modestly defect in replication in Vero cells and exhibited substantially increased mutation frequencies. The results suggest that herpes simplex virus can replicate despite severely impaired exonuclease activity and that the 3'-5' exonuclease contributes substantially to the fidelity of viral DNA replication.
...
PMID:Effects of mutations in the Exo III motif of the herpes simplex virus DNA polymerase gene on enzyme activities, viral replication, and replication fidelity. 931 64
Taq DNA polymerase
from Thermus aquaticus has been shown to be very useful in the polymerase chain reaction method.
Taq DNA polymerase
has a domain at the amino terminus (residue 1 to 290) that has a 5' exonuclease activity and a domain at the C-terminus that catalyzes polymerase reaction.
Taq DNA polymerase
is classified into the pol I family which is represented by E. coli
DNA polymerase I
. The alignment of amino acid sequences for the 5' exonuclease domains of the pol I family DNA polymerases shows six highly conserved sequences called motifs A to F. Motif C contains three positively charged residues such as 74Arg, 82Lys and 85Arg which might be involved in catalysis. In order to understand the function of those residues, they are mutagenized to
alanine
. The 5' exonucleolytic activities of those mutated 5' exonucleases decreased by 80 to 90%, thereby implying that three positively charged residues play certain roles in the 5' exonuclease catalysis.
...
PMID:Mutagenesis of the positively charged conserved residues in the 5' exonuclease domain of Taq DNA polymerase. 933 88
Site-directed mutagenesis and time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy were used to evaluate the contributions of individual amino acid side chains to the binding of DNA primer-templates to the 3'-5' exonuclease site of the large proteolytic fragment (
Klenow fragment
) of
DNA polymerase I
. Mutations were introduced into side chains that have been shown crystallographically to be in close proximity to a DNA 3' terminus bound at the 3'-5' exonuclease site. The wild-type residues were replaced by
alanine
in each case. To assess the effects of the mutations on DNA binding, time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy measurements were performed on dansyl-labeled primer-templates bound to the mutant enzymes. In contrast to techniques that simply monitor the overall binding of proteins to DNA, the time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy technique was used to determine the fractional occupancies of the polymerase and 3'-5' exonuclease active sites of
Klenow fragment
. Equilibrium constants describing the partitioning of DNA between the two active sites were obtained for nine different mutant enzymes bound to both matched and mismatched DNA sequences. Mutations of Leu361 and Phe473 caused the largest effects, significantly destabilizing the binding of mismatched DNA substrates to the 3'-5' exonuclease site relative to DNA bound at the polymerase site, consistent with structural data showing that the side chains of these residues are involved in intimate hydrophobic interactions with the 3' terminal and penultimate bases of the primer strand [Beese, L., and Steitz, T. A. (1991) EMBO J. 10, 25-33]. Mutations of the His660 and Glu357 side chains also resulted in significant effects on the binding of mismatched DNA to the 3'-5' exonuclease site. Surprisingly, mutation of Tyr497 increased the partitioning of mismatched DNA into the 3'-5' exonuclease site, suggesting that the tyrosine side chain in the wildtype enzyme destabilizes substrate binding, despite crystallographic data showing that Tyr497 is H-bonded to the DNA substrate. The effects of mutating the amino acid side chains that serve as ligands to two divalent metal ions bound at the 3'-5' exonuclease site, designated A and B, indicated that metal A also helps to bind DNA to the 3'-5' exonuclease site. These results demonstrate that the time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy technique can be used to quantify the energetic contributions associated with each of the crystallographically defined DNA-protein contacts at the 3'-5' exonuclease site.
...
PMID:Effects of mutations on the partitioning of DNA substrates between the polymerase and 3'-5' exonuclease sites of DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment). 948 21
The
DNA polymerase
accessory factor proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) has been caught in interaction with an ever increasing number of proteins. To characterize the sites and functions of some of these interactions, we constructed four mutants of human PCNA and analysed them in a variety of assays. By targeting loops on the surface of the PCNA trimer and changing three or four residues at a time to
alanine
, we found that a region including part of the domain-connecting loop of PCNA and loops on one face of the trimer, close to the C-termini, is involved in binding to all of the following proteins: DNA polymerase delta, replication factor C, the flap endonuclease Fen1, the cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor p21 and DNA ligase I. An inhibition of DNA ligation caused by the interaction of PCNA with DNA ligase I was found, and we show that DNA ligase I and Fen1 can inhibit DNA synthesis by DNA polymerase delta/PCNA. We demonstrate that PCNA must be located below a 5' flap on a forked template to stimulate Fen1 activity, and considering the interacting region on PCNA for Fen1, this suggests an orientation for PCNA during DNA replication with the C-termini facing forwards, in the direction of DNA synthesis.
...
PMID:Regulation of DNA replication and repair proteins through interaction with the front side of proliferating cell nuclear antigen. 954 52
The amino-terminal 8-kDa domain of
DNA polymerase beta
functions in binding single-stranded DNA (ssDNA), recognition of a 5'-phosphate in gapped DNA structures, and as a 5'-deoxyribose phosphate (dRP) lyase. NMR and x-ray crystal structures of this domain have suggested several residues that may interact with ssDNA or play a role in the dRP lyase reaction. Nine of these residues were altered by site-directed mutagenesis. Each mutant was expressed in Escherichia coli, and the recombinant protein was purified to near homogeneity. CD spectra of these mutant proteins indicated that the alteration did not adversely affect the global protein structure. Single-stranded DNA binding was probed by photochemical cross-linking to oligo(dT)16. Several mutants (F25W, K35A, K60A, and K68A) were impaired in ssDNA binding activity, whereas other mutants (H34G, E71Q, K72A, E75A, and K84A) retained near wild-type binding activity. The 5'-phosphate recognition activity of these mutants was examined by UV cross-linking to a 5-nucleotide gap DNA where the 5' terminus in the gap was either phosphorylated or unphosphorylated. The results indicate that Lys35 is involved in 5'-phosphate recognition of
DNA polymerase beta
. Finally, the dRP lyase activity of these mutants was evaluated using a preincised apurinic/apyrimidinic DNA.
Alanine
mutants of Lys35 and Lys60 are significantly reduced in dRP lyase activity, consistent with the lower ssDNA binding activity. More importantly,
alanine
substitution for Lys72 resulted in a greater than 90% loss of dRP lyase activity, without affecting DNA binding.
Alanine
mutants of Lys68 and Lys84 had wild-type dRP lyase activity. The triple
alanine
mutant, K35A/K68A/K72A, was devoid of dRP lyase activity, suggesting that the effects of the
alanine
substitution at Lys72 and Lys35 were additive. The results suggest that Lys72 is directly involved in formation of a covalent imino intermediate and are consistent with Lys72 as the predominant Schiff base nucleophile in the dRP lyase beta-elimination catalytic reaction.
...
PMID:Functional analysis of the amino-terminal 8-kDa domain of DNA polymerase beta as revealed by site-directed mutagenesis. DNA binding and 5'-deoxyribose phosphate lyase activities. 955 98
Deoxy- and dideoxynucleotides differ only in whether they have a hydroxyl substituent at C-3' of the ribose moiety, and yet the
Klenow fragment
DNA polymerase
prefers the natural (dNTP) substrate by several thousandfold. We have used this preference in order to investigate how
Klenow fragment
interacts with the sugar portion of an incoming dNTP. We screened mutant derivatives of
Klenow fragment
so as to identify those amino acid residues that play important roles in distinguishing between dNTPs and ddNTPs. Substitution of Phe762 with
Ala
or Tyr caused a dramatic decrease in the discrimination against ddNTPs, while mutations in Tyr766 and Glu710 had a smaller effect, suggesting that these two side-chains play secondary roles in the selection of dNTPs over ddNTPs. In order to understand the interactions in the enzyme-DNA-dNTP ternary complex, pre-steady-state kinetic parameters for the incorporation of dNTPs and ddNTPs were determined for wild-type
Klenow fragment
and for mutant derivatives that showed changes in dNTP/ddNTP discrimination. From elemental effect measurements we infer that selection against dideoxynucleotides takes place in the transition state for the conformational change that precedes phosphoryl transfer. The crucial role of the Phe762 side-chain appears to be to constrain the dNTP molecule so that the 3'-OH can make an interaction with another group within the ternary complex. When Tyr is substituted at position 762, the same interactions can take place to position the dNTP, but specificity against the ddNTP is lost because the phenolic OH can compensate for the missing 3'-OH of the nucleotide. Substitution of the smaller
Ala
side-chain results in a loss in specificity because the dNTP is no longer appropriately constrained. Measurement of reaction rates as a function of magnesium ion concentration suggests that the interaction made with the dNTP 3'-OH may involve a metal ion and the Glu710 side-chain, the simplest scenario being that both the 3'-OH and the carboxylate of Glu710 are ligands to the same metal ion.
...
PMID:How E. coli DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment) distinguishes between deoxy- and dideoxynucleotides. 957 Oct 40
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