Publication:
Gene 4 DNA Primase of Bacteriophage T7 Mediates the Annealing and Extension of Ribo-oligonucleotides at Primase Recognition Sites

No Thumbnail Available

Date

1997

Published Version

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Citation

Kusakabe, Takahiro, and Charles C. Richardson. 1997. “Gene 4 DNA Primase of Bacteriophage T7 Mediates the Annealing and Extension of Ribo-Oligonucleotides at Primase Recognition Sites.” Journal of Biological Chemistry 272 (19): 12446–53. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.272.19.12446.

Research Data

Abstract

The 63-kDa gene 4 primase of bacteriophage T7 recognizes a core trinucleotide sequence, 5'-GTC-3', on single-stranded DNA at which it catalyzes the synthesis of the ribodinucleotide pppAC. The dinucleotide is extended to a tetranucleotide primer at the sites 5'-(G/T)GGTC-3' and 5'-GTGTC-3'. In the presence of T7 primase, T7 DNA polymerase extends the synthetic ribotetranucleotide pACCA (1 mu M), but not pCACA, on M13 DNA templates. The reaction is specific for T7 DNA polymerase and depends on dTTP and translocation of the gene 4 protein, T7 primase extends the dinucleotide AC and trinucleotide ACC to ACCC in the presence of CTP and an appropriate template, whereas other dinucleotides are extended less efficiently; the deoxyribodinucleotide dAC is not extended. The Cys, zinc motif of the primase is essential for extension of the dinucleotides. The 5'-cryptic cytidine of the recognition sequence is essential for extension of the dinucleotide AC to tri- and tetranucleotides. At a preformed replication fork, the dinucleotide AC provides for primer synthesis on the lagging strand. The synthesis of all Okazaki fragments is initiated by primers arising from the recognition sequence 5'-GGGTC-3'; none arise at an adjacent 5'-GGGTT-3' sequence. If ADP or AMP replaces ATP in the primase reaction, primers terminating in di- or monophosphate, respectively, are synthesized.

Description

Other Available Sources

Keywords

Terms of Use

This article is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material (LAA), as set forth at Terms of Service

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Related Stories