Modular organization of T4 DNA polymerase. Evidence from phylogenetics.
The Journal of biological chemistry (1995), Volume 270, Page 26558
Abstract:
We describe the use of a phylogenetic approach to analyze the modular organization of the single-chained (898 amino acids) and multifunctional DNA polymerase of phage T4. We have identified, cloned in expression vectors, and sequenced the DNA polymerase gene (gene 43) of phage RB69, a distant relative of T4. The deduced primary structure of the RB69 protein (RB69 gp43) differs from that of T4 gp43 in discrete clusters of short sequence that are interspersed with clusters of high similarity between the two proteins. Despite these differences, the two enzymes can substitute for each other in phage DNA replication, although T4 gp43 does exhibit preference to its own genome. A 55-amino acid internal gp43 segment of high sequence divergence between T4 and RB69 could be replaced in RB69 gp43 with the corresponding segment from T4 without loss of replication function. The reciprocal chimera and a deletion mutant of the T4 gp43 segment were both inactive for replication and specifically inhibitory ("dominant lethal") to the T4 wild-type allele. The results show that phylogenetic markers can be used to construct chimeric and truncated froms of gp43 that, although inactive for replication, can still exhibit biological specificity.
Polymerases:
Topics:
Biotech Applications, Methods, Alignments
One line summary:
Phylogenetic markers can be used to construct chimeric and truncated forms of T4 pol that exhibit biological specificity.
Status:
new | topics/pols set | partial results | complete | validated |
Results:
No results available for this paper.