AI Article Synopsis

  • Archaeal family B polymerases have a strong affinity for deaminated bases like uracil and hypoxanthine in single-stranded DNA, causing replication to stall four bases ahead of the primer-template junction.
  • When uracil is present, the polymerase-DNA complex shifts to an editing conformation, inhibiting both polymerization and proofreading activity when the deaminated bases are bound at the +4 position.
  • However, if the polymerase moves closer to these deaminated bases (at +3, +2, +1, or 0), the proofreading exonuclease activity is enhanced, allowing for the removal of the problematic bases and restoring the ability of the polymerase to function properly at the +4 position

Article Abstract

Archaeal family B polymerases bind tightly to the deaminated bases uracil and hypoxanthine in single-stranded DNA, stalling replication on encountering these pro-mutagenic deoxynucleosides four steps ahead of the primer-template junction. When uracil is specifically bound, the polymerase-DNA complex exists in the editing rather than the polymerization conformation, despite the duplex region of the primer-template being perfectly base-paired. In this article, the interplay between the 3'-5' proofreading exonuclease activity and binding of uracil/hypoxanthine is addressed, using the family-B DNA polymerase from Pyrococcus furiosus. When uracil/hypoxanthine is bound four bases ahead of the primer-template junction (+4 position), both the polymerase and the exonuclease are inhibited, profoundly for the polymerase activity. However, if the polymerase approaches closer to the deaminated bases, locating it at +3, +2, +1 or even 0 (paired with the extreme 3' base in the primer), the exonuclease activity is strongly stimulated. In these situations, the exonuclease activity is actually stronger than that seen with mismatched primer-templates, even though the deaminated base-containing primer-templates are correctly base-paired. The resulting exonucleolytic degradation of the primer serves to move the uracil/hypoxanthine away from the primer-template junction, restoring the stalling position to +4. Thus the 3'-5' proofreading exonuclease contributes to the inability of the polymerase to replicate beyond deaminated bases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2794169PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkp800DOI Listing

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