Nucleotide sequence of the Escherichia coli polA gene and primary structure of DNA polymerase I.

Abstract:

We report the nucleotide sequence of 3.2 kilobase pair region of the ...
We report the nucleotide sequence of 3.2 kilobase pair region of the Escherichia coli polA gene, comprising the coding region for DNA polymerase I with about 400 base pairs of flanking sequence. The amino acid sequence for DNA polymerase I derived from our DNA sequence is largely consistent with previous protein chemical data. In the following paper, Brown et al. (Brown, W. E., Stump, K. H., and Kelley, W. S. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 1965-1972) present additional protein chemistry experiments that further confirm our sequence. Mild proteolysis of DNA polymerase I is known to produce two enzymatically active fragments (Brutlag, D., Atkinson, M. R., Setlow, P., and Kornberg, A. (1969) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 37, 982-989; Klenow, H., and Henningsen, I. (1970) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 74, 5632-5636). We have located the site of this cleavage between residues 323 and 324 of the 928 amino acid polymerase molecule. By sequence comparison of the polA1 and wild type alleles, we have identified the polA1 mutation as a change from Trp (TGG) to amber (TAG) at residue 342.

Polymerases:

Topics:

Fidelity, Nucleotide Incorporation, Source / Purification

Status:

new topics/pols set partial results complete validated

Results:

Polymerase Reference Property Result Context
Taq pol I Nucleotide sequence of the Escherichia coli polA gene and primary structure of DNA polymerase I. Cloned or native Cloned in yeast
Taq pol I Nucleotide sequence of the Escherichia coli polA gene and primary structure of DNA polymerase I. Tagged Yes
Taq pol I Nucleotide sequence of the Escherichia coli polA gene and primary structure of DNA polymerase I. Tag Name intein
Taq pol I Nucleotide sequence of the Escherichia coli polA gene and primary structure of DNA polymerase I. Full length or truncated Full length

Entry validated by:

Using Polbase tables:

Sorting:

Tables may be sorted by clicking on any of the column titles. A second click reverses the sort order. <Ctrl> + click on the column titles to sort by more than one column (e.g. family then name).

Filtering:

It is also possible to filter the table by typing into the search box above the table. This will instantly hide lines from the table that do not contain your search text.