Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5371407 Biophysical Chemistry 2011 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Different DNA polymerases partition differently between replication and repair pathways. In this study we examine if two Pol I family polymerases from evolutionarily distant organisms also differ in their preferences for replication versus repair substrates. The DNA binding preferences of Klenow and Klentaq DNA polymerases, from Escherichia coli and Thermus aquaticus respectively, have been studied using a fluorescence competition binding assay. Klenow polymerase binds primed-template DNA (the replication substrate) with up to 50× higher affinity than it binds to nicked DNA, DNA with a 2 base single-stranded gap, blunt-ended DNA, or to a DNA end with a 3′ overhang. In contrast, Klentaq binds all of these DNAs almost identically, indicating that Klenow has a stronger ability to discriminate between replication and repair substrates than Klentaq. In contrast, both polymerases bind mismatched primed-template and blunt-ended DNA tighter than they bind matched primed-template DNA, suggesting that these two proteins may share a similar mechanism to identify mismatched DNA, despite the fact that Klentaq has no proofreading ability. In addition, the presence or absence of 5′- or 3′-phosphates has slightly different effects on DNA binding by the two polymerases, but again reinforce Klenow's more effective substrate discrimination capability.

Graphical abstractDownload full-size imageHighlights► E. coli polymerase can discriminate between replication and repair substrates, but Taq polymerase does not. ► Both polymerases bind mismatched DNA with higher affinity than matched DNA, despite the absence of proofreading in Taq. ► DNA phosphorylation within gapped-DNA has different effects on the binding of E. coli versus Taq polymerases.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
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