The bacteriophage phi 29 DNA polymerase, a proofreading enzyme.
The Journal of biological chemistry (1992), Volume 267, Page 2594
Abstract:
The bacteriophage phi 29 DNA polymerase, involved both in the protein-primed initiation and elongation steps of the viral DNA replication, displays a very processive 3',5'-exonuclease activity acting preferentially on single-stranded DNA. This exonucleolytic activity showed a marked preference for excision of a mismatched versus a correctly paired 3' terminus. These characteristics enable the phi 29 DNA polymerase to act as a proofreading enzyme. A comparative analysis of the wild-type phi 29 DNA polymerase and a mutant lacking 3',5'-exonuclease activity indicated that a productive coupling between the exonuclease and polymerase activities is necessary to prevent fixation of polymerization errors. Based on these data, the phi 29 DNA polymerase, a model enzyme for protein-primed DNA replication, appears to share the same mechanism for the editing function as that first proposed for T4 DNA polymerase and Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I on the basis of functional and structural studies.
Polymerases:
Topics:
Historical Protein Properties (MW, pI, ...), Exonuclease Activity, Source / Purification
Status:
new | topics/pols set | partial results | complete | validated |
Results:
Polymerase | Reference | Property | Result | Context |
---|---|---|---|---|
Phi29 | The bacteriophage phi 29 DNA polymerase, a proofreading enzyme. | Molecular Weight | 6.652E+04 Dalton | |
Phi29 | The bacteriophage phi 29 DNA polymerase, a proofreading enzyme. | 3-5' Exonuclease (proofreading) | Yes | |
Phi29 | The bacteriophage phi 29 DNA polymerase, a proofreading enzyme. | Full length or truncated | Full length |