11 research outputs found

    An archaeal family-B DNA polymerase variant able to replicate past DNA damage: occurrence of replicative and translesion synthesis polymerases within the B family

    Get PDF
    A mutant of the high fidelity family-B DNA polymerase from the archaeon Thermococcus gorgonarius (Tgo-Pol), able to replicate past DNA lesions, is described. Gain of function requires replacement of the three amino acid loop region in the fingers domain of Tgo-Pol with a longer version, found naturally in eukaryotic Pol zeta (a family-B translesion synthesis polymerase). Inactivation of the 3'–5' proofreading exonuclease activity is also necessary. The resulting Tgo-Pol Z1 variant is proficient at initiating replication from base mismatches and can read through damaged bases, such as abasic sites and thymine photo-dimers. Tgo-Pol Z1 is also proficient at extending from primers that terminate opposite aberrant bases. The fidelity of Tgo-Pol Z1 is reduced, with amarked tendency tomake changes at G:C base pairs. Together, these results suggest that the loop region of the fingers domain may play a critical role in determining whether a family-B enzyme falls into the accurate genome-replicating category or is an errorprone translesion synthesis polymerase. Tgo-Pol Z1 may also be useful for amplification of damaged DNA

    Innovation in gene regulation: The case of chromatin computation

    Full text link

    Archaeal Intrinsic Transcription Termination In Vivo▿

    No full text
    Thermococcus kodakarensis (formerly Thermococcus kodakaraensis) strains have been constructed with synthetic and natural DNA sequences, predicted to function as archaeal transcription terminators, identically positioned between a constitutive promoter and a β-glycosidase-encoding reporter gene (TK1761). Expression of the reporter gene was almost fully inhibited by the upstream presence of 5′-TTTTTTTT (T8) and was reduced >70% by archaeal intergenic sequences that contained oligo(T) sequences. An archaeal intergenic sequence (tmcrA) that conforms to the bacterial intrinsic terminator motif reduced TK1761 expression ∼90%, but this required only the oligo(T) trail sequence and not the inverted-repeat and loop region. Template DNAs were amplified from each T. kodakarensis strain, and transcription in vitro by T. kodakarensis RNA polymerase was terminated by sequences that reduced TK1761 expression in vivo. Termination occurred at additional sites on these linear templates, including at a 5′-AAAAAAAA (A8) sequence that did not reduce TK1761 expression in vivo. When these sequences were transcribed on supercoiled plasmid templates, termination occurred almost exclusively at oligo(T) sequences. The results provide the first in vivo experimental evidence for intrinsic termination of archaeal transcription and confirm that archaeal transcription termination is stimulated by oligo(T) sequences and is different from the RNA hairpin-dependent mechanism established for intrinsic bacterial termination

    Presentation_1.pdf

    Get PDF
    Ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) within the phylum Thaumarchaeota are the only known aerobic ammonia oxidizers in geothermal environments. Although molecular data indicate the presence of phylogenetically diverse AOA from the Nitrosocaldus clade, group 1.1b and group 1.1a Thaumarchaeota in terrestrial high-temperature habitats, only one§ enrichment culture of an AOA thriving above 50°C has been reported and functionally analyzed. In this study, we physiologically and genomically characterized a newly discovered thaumarchaeon from the deep-branching Nitrosocaldaceae family of which we have obtained a high (∼85%) enrichment from biofilm of an Icelandic hot spring (73°C). This AOA, which we provisionally refer to as “Candidatus Nitrosocaldus islandicus,” is an obligately thermophilic, aerobic chemolithoautotrophic ammonia oxidizer, which stoichiometrically converts ammonia to nitrite at temperatures between 50 and 70°C. “Ca. N. islandicus” encodes the expected repertoire of enzymes proposed to be required for archaeal ammonia oxidation, but unexpectedly lacks a nirK gene and also possesses no identifiable other enzyme for nitric oxide (NO) generation§. Nevertheless, ammonia oxidation by this AOA appears to be NO-dependent as “Ca. N. islandicus” is, like all other tested AOA, inhibited by the addition of an NO scavenger. Furthermore, comparative genomics revealed that “Ca. N. islandicus” has the potential for aromatic amino acid fermentation as its genome encodes an indolepyruvate oxidoreductase (iorAB) as well as a type 3b hydrogenase, which are not present in any other sequenced AOA. A further surprising genomic feature of this thermophilic ammonia oxidizer is the absence of DNA polymerase D genes§ – one of the predominant replicative DNA polymerases in all other ammonia-oxidizing Thaumarchaeota. Collectively, our findings suggest that metabolic versatility and DNA replication might differ substantially between obligately thermophilic and other AOA
    corecore