Abstract

Family D DNA polymerases (polDs) have been implicated as the major replicative polymerase in archaea, excluding the Crenarchaeota branch, and bear little sequence homology to other DNA polymerase families. Here we report a detailed kinetic analysis of nucleotide incorporation and exonuclease activity for a Family D DNA polymerase from Thermococcus sp. 9°N. Pre-steady-state single-turnover nucleotide incorporation assays were performed to obtain the kinetic parameters, kpol and Kd, for correct nucleotide incorporation, incorrect nucleotide incorporation, and ribonucleotide incorporation by exonuclease-deficient polD. Correct nucleotide incorporation kinetics revealed a relatively slow maximal rate of polymerization (kpol ∼ 2.5 s(-1)) and especially tight nucleotide binding (Kd (dNTP) ∼ 1.7 μm), compared with DNA polymerases from Families A, B, C, X, and Y. Furthermore, pre-steady-state nucleotide incorporation assays revealed that polD prevents the incorporation of incorrect nucleotides and ribonucleotides primarily through reduced nucleotide binding affinity. Pre-steady-state single-turnover assays on wild-type 9°N polD were used to examine 3'-5' exonuclease hydrolysis activity in the presence of Mg(2+) and Mn(2+). Interestingly, substituting Mn(2+) for Mg(2+) accelerated hydrolysis rates > 40-fold (kexo ≥ 110 s(-1) versus ≥ 2.5 s(-1)). Preference for Mn(2+) over Mg(2+) in exonuclease hydrolysis activity is a property unique to the polD family. The kinetic assays performed in this work provide critical insight into the mechanisms that polD employs to accurately and efficiently replicate the archaeal genome. Furthermore, despite the unique properties of polD, this work suggests that a conserved polymerase kinetic pathway is present in all known DNA polymerase families.

Highlights

  • D DNA polymerase is important for replication in most archaea, excluding Crenarchaeota

  • Analysis of polDϪ Multiple-turnover Steady-state Nucleotide Incorporation Kinetics Reveals a Postchemistry Rate-limiting Step—Steady-state kinetic assays are used to infer the rate-determining step of a catalytic pathway and are performed under multiple-turnover conditions (i.e. [substrate] [enzyme])

  • Previous steady-state kinetic studies performed on a host of different DNA polymerases have revealed that nucleotide incorporation is fast and DNA release is rate-limiting [21,22,23,24,25,26,27]

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Summary

Introduction

D DNA polymerase (polD) is important for replication in most archaea, excluding Crenarchaeota. Pre-steady-state single-turnover nucleotide incorporation assays were performed to obtain the kinetic parameters, kpol and Kd, for correct nucleotide incorporation, incorrect nucleotide incorporation, and ribonucleotide incorporation by exonuclease-deficient polD. Pre-steady-state nucleotide incorporation assays revealed that polD prevents the incorporation of incorrect nucleotides and ribonucleotides primarily through reduced nucleotide binding affinity. Pre-steady-state singleturnover assays on wild-type 9°N polD were used to examine 3؅-5؅ exonuclease hydrolysis activity in the presence of Mg2؉ and Mn2؉. Preference for Mn2؉ over Mg2؉ in exonuclease hydrolysis activity is a property unique to the polD family. Despite the unique properties of polD, this work suggests that a conserved polymerase kinetic pathway is present in all known DNA polymerase families

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