Abstract

PolC is the C-family replicative polymerase in low G+C content Gram-positive bacteria. To date several structures of C-family polymerases have been reported, including a high resolution crystal structure of a ternary complex of PolC with DNA and incoming deoxynucleoside triphosphate (dNTP). However, kinetic information needed to understand the enzymatic mechanism of C-family polymerases is limited. For this study we have performed a detailed steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetic characterization of correct dNTP incorporation by PolC from the Gram-positive pathogen Staphylococcus aureus, using a construct lacking both the non-conserved N-terminal domain and the 3′–5′ exonuclease domain (Sau-PolC-ΔNΔExo). We find that Sau-PolC-ΔNΔExo has a very fast catalytic rate (kpol 330 s−1) but also dissociates from DNA rapidly (koff ∼150 s−1), which explains the low processivity of PolC in the absence of sliding clamp processivity factor. Although Sau-PolC-ΔNΔExo follows the overall enzymatic pathway defined for other polymerases, some significant differences exist. The most striking feature is that the nucleotidyl transfer reaction for Sau-PolC-ΔNΔExo is reversible and is in equilibrium with dNTP binding. Simulation of the reaction pathway suggests that rate of pyrophosphate release, or a conformational change required for pyrophosphate release, is much slower than rate of bond formation. The significance of these findings is discussed in the context of previous data showing that binding of the β-clamp processivity factor stimulates the intrinsic nucleotide incorporation rate of the C-family polymerases, in addition to increasing processivity.

Highlights

  • DNA replication is the complex process of genome duplication involving several different proteins that form the ‘‘replisome’’

  • A key enzyme of the replisome is the DNA polymerase, a nucleotidyl transferase that catalyzes the addition of a deoxynucleoside triphosphate to the nascent DNA chain

  • Time courses of primer extension reactions were plotted as a function of [dTTP] and the data were fit to the full burst equation (Equation 4)

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Summary

Introduction

DNA replication is the complex process of genome duplication involving several different proteins that form the ‘‘replisome’’. All organisms have several types of DNA polymerases of which the ones responsible for duplicating most of the genome are known as replicative polymerases. These are characterized by being highly efficient enzymes that can select the correct nucleotide with extraordinarily high accuracy in a template-dependent manner. The polC gene encodes the replicative polymerase of Gram-positive bacteria with low G+C content, while the dnaE gene encodes for the same in Gramnegative bacteria and in Gram-positive bacteria with high G+C content [3]. The replisomes of both Gram-positive and Gramnegative bacteria have been reconstituted and studied in vitro providing a wealth of knowledge about how replication occurs inside the bacterial cell [4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15]

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