Abstract
While Mn2+ ions are well-established for reducing the fidelity of DNA polymerases, leading to the misincorporation of nucleotides, our investigation of the effects of metal ions revealed a contrasting role of Zn2+. Here, we demonstrate that Zn2+ ions enhance the fidelity of DNA polymerases (the 3' → 5' exonuclease-deficient Klenow fragment and Taq DNA polymerase) by suppressing misincorporation during primer extension reactions. Remarkably, Zn2+ ions inhibit both intrinsic misincorporation and Mn2+-induced misincorporation of nucleotides. Furthermore, Zn2+ ions also effectively suppressed misincorporation during metal-mediated primer extension reactions, which involved forming Ag+ and Hg2+ ion-mediated base pairs. These findings suggest that Zn2+ ions inhibit both intrinsic and Mn2+-induced mismatched base pair formation. Consequently, the combined use of Mn2+ and Zn2+ ions may offer a strategy for precisely regulating the fidelity of DNA polymerases. Remarkably, Zn2+ ions even suppress misincorporation in primer extension reactions that rely on metal-mediated base pairs, and conversely, this suggests that DNA polymerases recognize metal-mediated base pairs such as T-Hg2+-T, C-Ag+-A, and C-Ag+-T as relatively stable base pairs. These results imply that Zn2+ ions may also enhance the fidelity of DNA polymerases when incorporating non-canonical nucleobases, potentially paving the way for the expansion of the genetic alphabet.
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