An archaeal family-B DNA polymerase variant able to replicate past DNA damage: Occurrence of replicative and translesion synthesis polymerases within the B family

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Abstract

A mutant of the high fidelity family-B DNA polymerase from the archaeon Thermococcus gorgonarius (Tgo-Pol), able to replicate past DNA lesions, is described. Gain of function requires replacement of the three amino acid loop region in the fingers domain of Tgo-Pol with a longer version, found naturally in eukaryotic Pol ζ (a family-B translesion synthesis polymerase). Inactivation of the 3-5 proofreading exonuclease activity is also necessary. The resulting Tgo-Pol Z1 variant is proficient at initiating replication from base mismatches and can read through damaged bases, such as abasic sites and thymine photo-dimers. Tgo-Pol Z1 is also proficient at extending from primers that terminate opposite aberrant bases. The fidelity of Tgo-Pol Z1 is reduced, with a marked tendency to make changes at G: C base pairs. Together, these results suggest that the loop region of the fingers domain may play a critical role in determining whether a family-B enzyme falls into the accurate genome-replicating category or is an errorprone translesion synthesis polymerase. Tgo-Pol Z1 may also be useful for amplification of damaged DNA.

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Jozwiakowski, S. K., Keith, B. J., Gilroy, L., Doherty, A. J., & Connolly, B. A. (2014). An archaeal family-B DNA polymerase variant able to replicate past DNA damage: Occurrence of replicative and translesion synthesis polymerases within the B family. Nucleic Acids Research, 42(15), 9949–9963. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gku683

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