Characterization of a DNA polymerase from the hyperthermophile archaea Thermococcus litoralis. Vent DNA polymerase, steady state kinetics, thermal stability, processivity, strand displacement, and exonuclease activities.
The Journal of biological chemistry (1993), Volume 268, Page 1965
Abstract:
We have isolated, cloned, and characterized a DNA polymerase from the hyperthermophile archaea Thermococcus litoralis, the Tli DNA polymerase (also referred to as Vent DNA polymerase). The enzyme is extremely thermostable, having a half-life of 8 h at 95 degrees C and about 2 h at 100 degrees C. Pseudo-first-order kinetics at 70 degrees C reveal an extremely low Km for a primed M13mp18 substrate (0.1 nM), coupled with a relatively high Km for dNTPs (50 microM). Accompanying extension rates are on the order of 1000 nucleotides/min. Synthesis by the polymerase is largely distributive, adding an average of 7 nucleotides/initiation event. This distributive synthesis can generate products of at least 10,000 bases. Tli DNA polymerase contains a 3'-->5' exonuclease activity that enhances the fidelity of replication by the enzyme (Mattila, P., Korpela, J., Tenkanen, T. and Pitkanen, K. (1991) Nucleic Acids Res. 19, 4967-4973). A 2-amino acid substitution within the conserved exonuclease domain abolishes both double and single strand-dependent exonuclease activity, without altering kinetic parameters for polymerization on a primed single-stranded template. Strand displacement activity by the mutated and unmutated forms increases with increasing temperature and is enhanced in the exonuclease-deficient form of the enzyme.
Polymerases:
Topics:
Kinetic Parameters, Nucleotide Incorporation, Exonuclease Activity, Source / Purification
One line summary:
This paper characterizes native and recombinant Vent polymerases and compares the parameters to other polymerases
Status:
new | topics/pols set | partial results | complete | validated |