A 'Gram-negative-type' DNA polymerase III is essential for replication of the linear chromosome of Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2)

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Abstract

The Streptomyces coelicolor dnaE gene, encoding the catalytic α-subunit of DNA polymerase III (pol III) was isolated by genetic complementation of a temperature-sensitive DNA replication mutant, S. coelicolor ts-38. The deduced protein sequence (1179 residues) is highly similar to the Escherichia coli-type pol III α-subunit, rather than to the PolC-type α-subunit that is known to be essential for replication in the 'low G + C' Gram-positive bacteria such as Bacillus subtilis. The dnaE gene is able to restore replication to a 'slow stop' mutant (ts-38) and a 'fast stop' mutant (ts-114); the dnaE gene of ts-38 carries a single amino acid substitution (Glu-802 to Lys), and the mutation in ts-114 has been mapped between codons 697 and 1062 of dnaE. Mutant ts-38 is considered to be defective in assembly of the multisubunit pol III holoenzyme and, hence, in initiation of replication, whereas ts-114 is defective in chain elongation. This study provides the first evidence that a DnaE-type pol III is essential for replication in a Gram-positive bacterium. In addition, the complementation studies suggest that the C-terminal 117 residues are not essential for DnaE function in S. coelicolor. When integrated at a distant site on the chromosome, a fragment containing the 3' half of dnaE (codons 697-1179) is capable of rescuing ts-38 (but not ts-114) at the restrictive temperature; it was demonstrated that homogenotization was responsible for this phenomenon.

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Flett, F., De Mello Jungmann-Campello, D., Mersinias, V., Koh, S. L. M., Godden, R., & Smith, C. P. (1999). A “Gram-negative-type” DNA polymerase III is essential for replication of the linear chromosome of Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2). Molecular Microbiology, 31(3), 949–958. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2958.1999.01237.x

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