Summary: The replisome catalyses DNA synthesis at a DNA replication fork. The molecular behaviour of the individual replisomes, and therefore the dynamics of replication fork movements, in growing Escherichia coli cells remains unknown. DNA combing enables a single-molecule approach to measuring the speed of replication fork progression in cells pulse-labelled with thymidine analogues. We constructed a new thymidine-requiring strain, eCOMB (E.coli for combing), that rapidly and sufficiently incorporates the analogues into newly synthesized DNA chains for the DNA-combing method. In combing experiments with eCOMB, we found the speed of most replication forks in the cells to be within the narrow range of 550-750nts-1 and the average speed to be 653±9nts-1 (±SEM). We also found the average speed of the replication fork to be only 264±9nts-1 in a dnaE173-eCOMB strain producing a mutant-type of the replicative DNA polymerase III (Pol III) with a chain elongation rate (300nts-1) much lower than that of the wild-type Pol III (900nts-1). This indicates that the speed of chain elongation by Pol III is a major determinant of replication fork speed in E.coli cells. © 2013 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Pham, T. M., Tan, K. W., Sakumura, Y., Okumura, K., Maki, H., & Akiyama, M. T. (2013). A single-molecule approach to DNA replication in Escherichia coli cells demonstrated that DNA polymerase III is a major determinant of fork speed. Molecular Microbiology, 90(3), 584–596. https://doi.org/10.1111/mmi.12386
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