Abstract

In eukaryotic DNA replication, DNA polymerase ε (Polε) is responsible for leading strand synthesis, whereas DNA polymerases α and δ synthesize the lagging strand. The human Polε (hPolε) holoenzyme is comprised of the catalytic p261 subunit and the noncatalytic p59, p17, and p12 small subunits. So far, the contribution of the noncatalytic subunits to hPolε function is not well understood. Using pre-steady-state kinetic methods, we established a minimal kinetic mechanism for DNA polymerization and editing catalyzed by the hPolε holoenzyme. Compared with the 140-kDa N-terminal catalytic fragment of p261 (p261N), which we kinetically characterized in our earlier studies, the presence of the p261 C-terminal domain (p261C) and the three small subunits increased the DNA binding affinity and the base substitution fidelity. Although the small subunits enhanced correct nucleotide incorporation efficiency, there was a wide range of rate constants when incorporating a correct nucleotide over a single-base mismatch. Surprisingly, the 3'→5' exonuclease activity of the hPolε holoenzyme was significantly slower than that of p261N when editing both matched and mismatched DNA substrates. This suggests that the presence of p261C and the three small subunits regulates the 3'→5' exonuclease activity of the hPolε holoenzyme. Together, the 3'→5' exonuclease activity and the variable mismatch extension activity modulate the overall fidelity of the hPolε holoenzyme by up to 3 orders of magnitude. Thus, the presence of p261C and the three noncatalytic subunits optimizes the dual enzymatic activities of the catalytic p261 subunit and makes the hPolε holoenzyme an efficient and faithful replicative DNA polymerase.

Highlights

  • Three B-family DNA polymerases are responsible for replicating the majority of the eukaryotic nuclear genome: DNA polymerases a (Pola), d (Pold), and e (Pole) [1]

  • In a study that followed, we examined WT human polymerase e (Pole) (hPole) holoenzyme prepared from baculovirus-infected insect cells and performed burst assays with both hPole and the N-terminal fragment of p261 (p261N) under identical conditions

  • Using pre-steady-state kinetic methods, we previously determined that p261N, the N-terminal 140-kDa fragment of the p261 catalytic subunit, catalyzes correct nucleotide incorporation via an induced-fit mechanism [19] that is generally followed by all DNA polymerases (Scheme 1) and is characterized by a rate-limiting pre-chemistry conformational change following nucleotide binding [37, 38]

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Summary

Introduction

Three B-family DNA polymerases are responsible for replicating the majority of the eukaryotic nuclear genome: DNA polymerases a (Pola), d (Pold), and e (Pole) [1]. HPole (Fig. 3A) likely bound to DNA in a productive (EPDNA) and a nonproductive state (ENDNA) at the polymerase active site, leading to the observed fast and slow nucleotide incorporation phases, respectively [29,30,31,32,33,34].

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