Abstract

Replicative DNA polymerases (DNAPs) require divalent metal cations for phosphodiester bond formation in the polymerase site and for hydrolytic editing in the exonuclease site. Me(2+) ions are intimate architectural components of each active site, where they are coordinated by a conserved set of amino acids and functional groups of the reaction substrates. Therefore Me(2+) ions can influence the noncovalent transitions that occur during each nucleotide addition cycle. Using a nanopore, transitions in individual Φ29 DNAP complexes are resolved with single-nucleotide spatial precision and sub-millisecond temporal resolution. We studied Mg(2+) and Mn(2+), which support catalysis, and Ca(2+), which supports deoxynucleoside triphosphate (dNTP) binding but not catalysis. We examined their effects on translocation, dNTP binding, and primer strand transfer between the polymerase and exonuclease sites. All three metals cause a concentration-dependent shift in the translocation equilibrium, predominantly by decreasing the forward translocation rate. Me(2+) also promotes an increase in the backward translocation rate that is dependent upon the primer terminal 3'-OH group. Me(2+) modulates the translocation rates but not their response to force, suggesting that Me(2+) does not affect the distance to the transition state of translocation. Absent Me(2+), the primer strand transfer pathway between the polymerase and exonuclease sites displays additional kinetic states not observed at >1 mm Me(2+). Complementary dNTP binding is affected by Me(2+) identity, with Ca(2+) affording the highest affinity, followed by Mn(2+), and then Mg(2+). Both Ca(2+) and Mn(2+) substantially decrease the dNTP dissociation rate relative to Mg(2+), while Ca(2+) also increases the dNTP association rate.

Highlights

  • Bond formation, the chemical transformation during polymerization, is catalyzed in the polymerase active site, in the 5Ј to 3Ј direction

  • Is the influence of the 3Ј-OH group on the energy landscape of the translocation affected by the presence of Me2ϩ? Does the influence of the 3Ј-OH group in the translocation depend upon an interaction between the primer terminus and a Me2ϩ ion, or is it an inherent property of the interaction of the DNA substrate with the enzyme? We examined the influence of Me2ϩ on the response of the translocation rates to applied force by comparing complexes captured at 0 Me2ϩ to those captured at 10 mM Mg2ϩ, across the range of voltages from 140 to 220 mV (Fig. 9)

  • We hypothesized that because the divalent cations (Me2ϩ ions) that are essential for catalytic function in both the polymerase and exonuclease active sites of replicative DNA polymerases (DNAPs) serve as intimate components of the architecture in each of the sites, they may exert significant influence on the noncovalent transitions that occur in DNAP-DNA complexes during each nucleotide addition cycle

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Summary

Introduction

Bond formation, the chemical transformation during polymerization, is catalyzed in the polymerase active site, in the 5Ј to 3Ј direction. For replicative DNAPs, this two Me2ϩ ion mechanism applies to both phosphodiester bond formation in the polymerase site, and to hydrolysis of the primer terminal dNMP residue in the exonuclease site [12, 13] In accord with their roles in the chemical transformations, the Me2ϩ ions are intimate architectural components of each of the active sites. In addition to their essential role in the chemical reactions, Me2ϩ ions may influence the reversible noncovalent transitions that govern the fate of DNAP-DNA complexes after each covalent nucleotide addition These transitions include (i) the primer strand transfer between the polymerase and exonuclease sites, (ii) the translocation fluctuations, in which the DNA substrate moves between the pretranslocation and post-translocation states in the DNAP polymerase site, a spatial displacement of the distance of a single nucleotide, and (iii) dNTP binding in the polymerase site. In the fingers-closed dNTP-bound complex, the 3Ј-OH group of the DNA primer strand and a non-bridging oxygen of the ␣ phosphate are ligands for one of the Me2ϩ ions (metal A) and non-bridging oxygens of all three phosphate groups are ligands for the metal B ion [4, 15,16,17]

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