Abstract

In most organisms, DNA replication is initiated by DNA primases, which synthesize primers that are elongated by DNA polymerases. In this study, we describe the isolation and biochemical characterization of the DNA primase complex and its subunits from the archaeon Thermococcus kodakaraensis. The T. kodakaraensis DNA primase complex is a heterodimer containing stoichiometric levels of the p41 and p46 subunits. The catalytic activity of the complex resides within the p41 subunit. We show that the complex supports both DNA and RNA synthesis, whereas the p41 subunit alone marginally produces RNA and synthesizes DNA chains that are longer than those formed by the complex. We report that the T. kodakaraensis primase complex preferentially interacts with dNTP rather than ribonucleoside triphosphates and initiates RNA as well as DNA chains de novo. The latter findings indicate that the archaeal primase complex, in contrast to the eukaryote homolog, can initiate DNA chain synthesis in the absence of ribonucleoside triphosphates. DNA primers formed by the archaeal complex can be elongated extensively by the T. kodakaraensis DNA polymerase (Pol) B, whereas DNA primers formed by the p41 catalytic subunit alone were not. Supplementation of reactions containing the p41 subunit with the p46 subunit leads to PolB-catalyzed DNA synthesis. We also established a rolling circle reaction using a primed 200-nucleotide circle as the substrate. In the presence of the T. kodakaraensis minichromosome maintenance (MCM) 3' → 5' DNA helicase, PolB, replication factor C, and proliferating cell nuclear antigen, long leading strands (>10 kb) are produced. Supplementation of such reactions with the DNA primase complex supported lagging strand formation as well.

Highlights

  • Eukaryotic primase initiates replication by forming oligoribonucleotides that are elongated by DNA polymerases

  • We have described some properties of the DNA primase complex isolated from the thermophilic archaeon, T. kodakaraensis

  • The DNA products formed by the p41 subunit were substantially longer in length than those produced by the T. kodakaraensis primase complex

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Summary

Background

Eukaryotic primase initiates replication by forming oligoribonucleotides that are elongated by DNA polymerases. In the presence of the T. kodakaraensis minichromosome maintenance (MCM) 3؅ 3 5؅ DNA helicase, PolB, replication factor C, and proliferating cell nuclear antigen, long leading strands (>10 kb) are produced Supplementation of such reactions with the DNA primase complex supported lagging strand formation as well. In the presence of single-stranded DNA templates, the primase complex synthesizes relatively short oligoribonucleotides 10 –15 nucleotides (nt) in length that are elongated by the Pol ␣ complex, generating covalently linked RNA-DNA oligonucleotide chains ϳ30 – 40 nt long [3] These short chains are recognized by the clamp loader RFC, which loads PCNA onto a primer-template junction that tethers the replicative Pol ␦ and Pol ⑀, which catalyze the synthesis of lagging and leading strands, respectively [4]. Similar to the eukaryotic primase heterodimer, the archaeal p41 subunit contains DNA primase activity, and

The abbreviations used are
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