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DNA Dynamics and Chromosome Structure

Polymerization Activity of an α-Like DNA Polymerase Requires a Conserved 3′-5′ Exonuclease Active Site

, , , , &
Pages 4786-4795 | Received 09 Apr 1991, Accepted 13 Jun 1991, Published online: 31 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Most DNA polymerases are multifunctional proteins that possess both polymerizing and exonucleolytic activities. For Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I and its relatives, polymerase and exonuclease activities reside on distinct, separable domains of the same polypeptide. The catalytic subunits of the α-like DNA polymerase family share regions of sequence homology with the 3′-5 exonuclease active site of DNA polymerase I; in certain α-like DNA polymerases, these regions of homology have been shown to be important for exonuclease activity. This finding has led to the hypothesis that α-like DNA polymerases also contain a distinct 3-5 exonuclease domain. We have introduced conservative substitutions into a 3-5 exonuclease active site homology in the gene encoding herpes simplex virus DNA polymerase, an α-like polymerase. Two mutants were severely impaired for viral DNA replication and polymerase activity. The mutants were not detectably affected in the ability of the polymerase to interact with its accessory protein, UL42, or to colocalize in infected cell nuclei with the major viral DNA-binding protein, ICP8, suggesting that the mutation did not exert global effects on protein folding. The results raise the possibility that there is a fundamental difference between a-like DNA polymerases and E. coli DNA polymerase I, with less distinction between 3-5 exonuclease and polymerase functions in α-like DNA polymerases.

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