Conformational landscapes of DNA polymerase i and mutator derivatives establish fidelity checkpoints for nucleotide insertion

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Abstract

The fidelity of DNA polymerases depends on conformational changes that promote the rejection of incorrect nucleotides before phosphoryl transfer. Here, we combine single-molecule FRET with the use of DNA polymerase I and various fidelity mutants to highlight mechanisms by which active-site side chains influence the conformational transitions and free-energy landscape that underlie fidelity decisions in DNA synthesis. Ternary complexes of high fidelity derivatives with complementary dNTPs adopt mainly a fully closed conformation, whereas a conformation with a FRET value between those of open and closed is sparsely populated. This intermediate-FRET state, which we attribute to a partially closed conformation, is also predominant in ternary complexes with incorrect nucleotides and, strikingly, in most ternary complexes of low-fidelity derivatives for both correct and incorrect nucleotides. The mutator phenotype of the low-fidelity derivatives correlates well with reduced affinity for complementary dNTPs and highlights the partially closed conformation as a primary checkpoint for nucleotide selection. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.

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Hohlbein, J., Aigrain, L., Craggs, T. D., Bermek, O., Potapova, O., Shoolizadeh, P., … Kapanidis, A. N. (2013). Conformational landscapes of DNA polymerase i and mutator derivatives establish fidelity checkpoints for nucleotide insertion. Nature Communications, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms3131

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