Recombinational bypass of pyrimidine dimers promoted by the recA protein of Escherichia coli.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (1982), Volume 79, Page 3171
Abstract:
recA protein, in the presence of single-stranded DNA binding protein and ATP, promotes the complete exchange of strands between circular single-stranded DNA containing pyrimidine dimers and a homologous linear duplex, converting the pyrimidine dimer-containing single-stranded DNA to a circular duplex. Bypass of a pyrimidine dimer during the branch-migration phase of the reaction requires approximately 20 seconds, a rate 1/50th of that in the absence of the dimer. The circular duplex product is specifically incised by the pyrimidine dimer-specific T4 endonuclease V, and the resulting 3' hydroxyl termini can serve as primers for deoxynucleotide polymerization by DNA polymerase I. These findings indicate that recA protein serves a direct role in recombinational repair and demonstrate that the pyrimidine dimers that have been bypassed can be processed by enzymes of the excision-repair pathway.
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Status:
new | topics/pols set | partial results | complete | validated |
Results:
No results available for this paper.