Abstract
A new method for the detection and assay of RNA-linked nascent DNA pieces has been developed. The method relies on selective degradation by spleen exonuclease of radioactive 5′-OH terminated DNA produced from the pulse-labelled nascent pieces upon alkaline hydrolysis. Analysis with this method in wild type Escherichia coli has shown relatively high proportions of the RNA-linked molecules after shorter pulses and in the smaller pieces, supporting the transient nature of the RNA attachment to the nascent pieces. The RNA-linked nascent DNA pieces are accumulated by both E. coli polAex1 (defective in 5′ → 3′ exonuclease of DNA polymerase I) and E. coli polA12 and polA1 (defective in polymerase of DNA polymerase I), suggesting the requirement of the concerted action of both 5′ → 3′ exonuclease and polymerase of DNA polymerase I for the removal of the RNA attached to the nascent pieces. Most of the nascent DNA pieces accumulated by E. coli ligts7 (defective in DNA ligase) are not linked to RNA, as expected from the direct role of DNA ligase in joining of the pieces. The analysis also has shown that a large portion of the nascent DNA pieces present in the cell under the normal steady-state conditions are not linked to RNA and that the level of the RNA-free DNA pieces is also increased in polA mutants. These findings suggest that the removal of RNA from the nascent pieces is a relatively rapid process and the joining reaction is a rate-limiting step that requires the concurrent action of DNA polymerase and DNA ligase.
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