Abstract

DNA polymerase and gene 4 protein of bacteriophage T7 catalyze DNA synthesis on duplex DNA templates. Synthesis is initiated at nicks in the DNA template, and this leading strand synthesis results in displacement of one of the parental strands. In the presence of ribonucleoside 5'-triphosphates the gene 4 protein catalyzes the synthesis of oligoribonucleotide primers on the displaced single strand, and their extension by T7 dna polymerase accounts for lagging strand synthesis. Since all the oligoribonucleotide primers bear adenosine 5'-triphosphate residues at their 5' termini, [gamma 32P]ATP is incorporated specifically into the product molecule, thus providing a rapid and sensitive assay for the synthesis of the RNA primers. Both primer synthesis and DNA synthesis are stimulated 3- to 5-fold by the presence of either Escherichia coli or T7 helix-destabilizing protein (DNA binding protein). ATP and CTP together fully satisfy the requirement for rNTPs and provide maximum synthesis of primers and DNA. Provided that T7 DNA polymerase is present, RNA-primed DNA synthesis occurs on either duplex or single-stranded DNA templates and to equal extents on either strand of T7 DNA. No primer-directed DNA synthesis occurs on poly(dT) or poly(dG) templates, indicating that synthesis of primers is template-directed.

Highlights

  • Synthesis is initiated at nicks in the DNA template, and this leading strand synthesis results in displacement of one of the parental strands

  • Purified T7 DNA polymerase and gene 4 protein catalyze the synthesis of DNA on duplex T7 DNA templates [11]

  • When the four rNTPs are added to the reaction mixture, the rate of DNA synthesis is stimulated approximately

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Synthesis is initiated at nicks in the DNA template, and this leading strand synthesis results in displacement of one of the parental strands. [y3’P]ATP is incorporated into the product molecule, providing a rapid and sensitive assay for the synthesis of the RNA primers. An important step towards this goal was the development of a cell-free system [1, 2] that could replicate exogenously added T7 DNA templates to yield product molecules with full biological activity [3,4]. In this in vitro system DNA synthesis is absolutely dependent on the presence of the phage-specified gene 4 protein and on the T7 DNA polymerase [1, 2].

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call