11 research outputs found

    DNA replication defect in Salmonella typhimurium mutants lacking the editing (epsilon) subunit of DNA polymerase III.

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    In Salmonella typhimurium, dnaQ null mutants (encoding the epsilon editing subunit of DNA polymerase III [Pol III]) exhibit a severe growth defect when the genetic background is otherwise wild type. Suppression of the growth defect requires both a mutation affecting the alpha (polymerase) subunit of DNA polymerase III and adequate levels of DNA polymerase I. In the present paper, we report on studies that clarify the nature of the physiological defect imposed by the loss of epsilon and the mechanism of its suppression. Unsuppressed dnaQ mutants exhibited chronic SOS induction, indicating exposure of single-stranded DNA in vivo, most likely as gaps in double-stranded DNA. Suppression of the growth defect was associated with suppression of SOS induction. Thus, Pol I and the mutant Pol III combined to reduce the formation of single-stranded DNA or accelerate its maturation to double-stranded DNA. Studies with mutants in major DNA repair pathways supported the view that the defect in DNA metabolism in dnaQ mutants was at the level of DNA replication rather than of repair. The requirement for Pol I was satisfied by alleles of the gene for Pol I encoding polymerase activity or by rat DNA polymerase beta (which exhibits polymerase activity only). Consequently, normal growth is restored to dnaQ mutants when sufficient polymerase activity is provided and this compensatory polymerase activity can function independently of Pol III. The high level of Pol I polymerase activity may be required to satisfy the increased demand for residual DNA synthesis at regions of single-stranded DNA generated by epsilon-minus pol III. The emphasis on adequate polymerase activity in dnaQ mutants is also observed in the purified alpha subunit containing the suppressor mutation, which exhibits a modestly elevated intrinsic polymerase activity relative to that of wild-type alpha

    Nucleotide sequences of dnaE, the gene for the polymerase subunit of DNA polymerase III in Salmonella typhimurium, and a variant that facilitates growth in the absence of another polymerase subunit.

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    The dnaE gene of Salmonella typhimurium, like that of Escherichia coli, encodes the alpha subunit containing the polymerase activity of the principal replicative enzyme, DNA polymerase III. This gene, or one nearby, has been identified as the locus of suppressor mutations that promote growth by cells deleted for dnaQ, the gene for the editing subunit of this enzyme complex. Using a combination of nucleotide sequencing and marker rescue experiments, the alteration in one such suppressor was identified as a valine-to-glycine substitution at amino acid 832 of the 1,160-amino-acid alpha polypeptide. The alpha polypeptides of E. coli and S. typhimurium are identical in size and in 97% of their amino acid residues. Their identity includes the valine residue that was changed in the suppressor allele of S. typhimurium. We also localized a temperature-sensitive dnaE mutation to the 3' half of dnaE

    Isolation and characterization of mutants with deletions in dnaQ, the gene for the editing subunit of DNA polymerase III in Salmonella typhimurium.

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    dnaQ (mutD) encodes the editing exonuclease subunit (epsilon) of DNA polymerase III. Previously described mutations in dnaQ include dominant and recessive mutator alleles as well as leaky temperature-sensitive alleles. We describe the properties of strains bearing null mutations (deletion-substitution alleles) of this gene. Null mutants exhibited a growth defect as well as elevated spontaneous mutation. As a consequence of the poor growth of dnaQ mutants and their high mutation rate, these strains were replaced within single colonies by derivatives carrying an extragenic suppressor mutation that compensated the growth defect but apparently not the mutator effect. Sixteen independently derived suppressors mapped in the vicinity of dnaE, the gene for the polymerization subunit (alpha) of DNA polymerase III, and one suppressor that was sequenced encoded an altered alpha polypeptide. Partially purified DNA polymerase III containing this altered alpha subunit was active in polymerization assays. In addition to their dependence on a suppressor mutation affecting alpha, dnaQ mutants strictly required DNA polymerase I for viability. We argue from these data that in the absence of epsilon, DNA replication falters unless secondary mechanisms, including genetically coded alteration in the intrinsic replication capacity of alpha and increased use of DNA polymerase I, come into play. Thus, epsilon plays a role in DNA replication distinct from its known role in controlling spontaneous mutation frequency

    ATP-induced formation of an associated complex between microtubules and neurofilaments.

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    Neurofilaments (also called 10-nm filaments or intermediate filaments) from bovine brain were incubated with microtubule protein at 37 degrees C in the presence or absence of 1 mM ATP and in a buffer that allowed microtubule assembly. Falling-ball viscometry revealed that the (non-Newtonian) apparent viscosity of the ATP-containing mixtures is 5-20 times greater than that of the mixtures prepared without ATP. A larger ATP-dependent increase in viscosity (approximately 100-fold) was seen when purified tubulin replaced microtubule protein. The magnitude of the increase depended on the concentrations of both neurofilaments and tubulin. The presence of both neurofilaments and assembled microtubules was necessary for the increase to occur. The viscosity was drastically reduced by stirring or by cooling of the mixtures to 0 degrees C. Sedimentation velocity experiments, conducted at 35 degrees C on mixtures previously incubated at 35 degrees C, revealed the presence of a fraction of very rapidly sedimenting material (sedimentation coefficient greater than 1000 S) in the ATP-containing solutions but not in those prepared without ATP. It is concluded that an ATP-induced complex is formed between microtubules and neurofilaments. The observed complex may reflect interactions between microtubules and neurofilaments that are significant in vivo
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