Abstract

recA protein promotes the homologous pairing of single strands with duplex DNA by polymerizing on the single strands to make presynaptic nucleoprotein filaments which are polyvalent with respect to duplex DNA and which consequently form large networks or coaggregates when duplex DNA is added. Previous work has shown that efficient homologous pairing occurs within these networks. In the experiments described here, we observed that the length of the duplex DNA determined the stability of coaggregates, their steady state level, and the yield of joint molecules. Correspondingly, heterologous duplex DNA when preincubated with presynaptic filaments excluded subsequently added homologous duplex DNA from coaggregates and inhibited homologous pairing; the extents of exclusion and inhibition were determined by the length of the heterologous duplex DNA. On the other hand, long heterologous duplex DNA when added together with short homologous duplex DNA was capable of stimulating the absorption of the homologous molecules into coaggregates and increasing the rate of homologous pairing. In reactions involving short duplex molecules, polyamines exerted comparable effects on coaggregation and homologous pairing. We conclude that coaggregates are instrumental in homologous pairing, that they constitute distinct domains that are responsible for the processive or first order character of the pairing reaction, and that they act by concentrating DNA and facilitating diffusion.

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