32 research outputs found
Biochemical Characterization of a Structure-Specific Resolving Enzyme from Sulfolobus islandicus Rod-Shaped Virus 2
Sulfolobus islandicus rod shaped virus 2 (SIRV2) infects the archaeon Sulfolobus islandicus at extreme temperature (70°C–80°C) and acidity (pH 3). SIRV2 encodes a Holliday junction resolving enzyme (SIRV2 Hjr) that has been proposed as a key enzyme in SIRV2 genome replication. The molecular mechanism for SIRV2 Hjr four-way junction cleavage bias, minimal requirements for four-way junction cleavage, and substrate specificity were determined. SIRV2 Hjr cleaves four-way DNA junctions with a preference for cleavage of exchange strand pairs, in contrast to host-derived resolving enzymes, suggesting fundamental differences in substrate recognition and cleavage among closely related Sulfolobus resolving enzymes. Unlike other viral resolving enzymes, such as T4 endonuclease VII or T7 endonuclease I, that cleave branched DNA replication intermediates, SIRV2 Hjr cleavage is specific to four-way DNA junctions and inactive on other branched DNA molecules. In addition, a specific interaction was detected between SIRV2 Hjr and the SIRV2 virion body coat protein (SIRV2gp26). Based on this observation, a model is proposed linking SIRV2 Hjr genome resolution to viral particle assembly
A short adaptive path from DNA to RNA polymerases
DNA polymerase substrate specificity is fundamental to genome integrity and to polymerase applications in biotechnology. In the current paradigm, active site geometry is the main site of specificity control. Here, we describe the discovery of a distinct specificity checkpoint located over 25 Å from the active site in the polymerase thumb subdomain. In Tgo, the replicative DNA polymerase from Thermococcus gorgonarius, we identify a single mutation (E664K) within this region that enables translesion synthesis across a template abasic site or a cyclobutane thymidine dimer. In conjunction with a classic “steric-gate” mutation (Y409G) in the active site, E664K transforms Tgo DNA polymerase into an RNA polymerase capable of synthesizing RNAs up to 1.7 kb long as well as fully pseudouridine-, 5-methyl-C–, 2′-fluoro–, or 2′-azido–modified RNAs primed from a wide range of primer chemistries comprising DNA, RNA, locked nucleic acid (LNA), or 2′O-methyl–DNA. We find that E664K enables RNA synthesis by selectively increasing polymerase affinity for the noncognate RNA/DNA duplex as well as lowering the Km for ribonucleotide triphosphate incorporation. This gatekeeper mutation therefore identifies a key missing step in the adaptive path from DNA to RNA polymerases and defines a previously unknown postsynthetic determinant of polymerase substrate specificity with implications for the synthesis and replication of noncognate nucleic acid polymers