Single-molecule techniques are developed to examine mechanistic features of individual E. coli replisomes during synthesis of long DNA molecules. We find that single replisomes exhibit constant rates of fork movement, but the rates of different replisomes vary over a surprisingly wide range. Interestingly, lagging strand synthesis decreases the rate of the leading strand, suggesting that lagging strand operations exert a drag on replication fork progression. The opposite is true for processivity. The lagging strand significantly increases the processivity of the replisome, possibly reflecting the increased grip to DNA provided by 2 DNA polymerases anchored to sliding clamps on both the leading and lagging strands.
CITATION STYLE
Yao, N. Y., Georgescu, R. E., Finkelstein, J., & O’Donnell, M. E. (2009). Single-molecule analysis reveals that the lagging strand increases replisome processivity but slows replication fork progression. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 106(32), 13236–13241. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0906157106
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