Amplification of snap-back DNA synthesis reactions by the uvsX recombinase of bacteriophage T4.
The Journal of biological chemistry (1991), Volume 266, Page 14031
Abstract:
The uvsX protein of bacteriophage T4 is a recA-type recombinase. This protein has previously been shown to help initiate DNA replication on a double-stranded DNA template by catalyzing synapsis between the template and a homologous DNA single strand that serves as primer. Here, we demonstrate that this replication-initiating activity of the uvsX protein greatly amplifies the snap-back (hairpin-primed) DNA synthesis that is catalyzed by the T4 DNA polymerase holoenzyme on linear, single-stranded DNA templates. Amplification requires the presence of uvsX protein, the DNA polymerase holoenzyme, T4 gene 32 protein, and a T4 DNA helicase, in a reaction that is modulated by the T4 uvsY protein (an accessory protein to the uvsX recombinase). The reaction products consist primarily of large networks of double-stranded and single-stranded DNA. With alkali or heat treatment, these networks resolve into dimer-length single-stranded DNA chains that renature instantaneously to reform a monomer-length double helix. A simple model can explain this uvsX protein-dependent amplification of snap-back DNA synthesis; the mechanism proposed makes several predictions that are confirmed by our experiments.
Polymerases:
Topics:
Accessory Proteins/Complexes, Nucleotide Incorporation
Status:
new | topics/pols set | partial results | complete | validated |
Results:
No results available for this paper.