A single N-2-acetylaminofluorene adduct alters the footprint of T7 (exo-) DNA polymerase bound to a model primer-template junction.
Abstract:
Bovine pancreatic deoxyribonuclease I (DNaseI) has been used to footprint T7 (exo-) DNA polymerase bound to a model primer-template junction. The polymerase was blocked at a specific position either by the omission of dCTP from the reaction mix or by the presence of a N-(deoxyguanosin-8-yl)-2-acetylaminofluorene (dGuo-AAF) adduct. This lesion has been shown to be a severe block for several DNA polymerases, both in in vitro primer elongation experiments, and during the in vivo replication of AAF-monomodified single-stranded vectors. The footprints obtained with unmodified primer-template DNA define two protected domains separated by an inter-region that remains sensitive to DNaseI, and several hypersensitive sites located on both strands. Binding of the polymerase to AAF monomodified duplexes results in the same protection pattern as that obtained with the unmodified duplexes. However, the hypersensitive sites either disappear or are dramatically reduced. The results suggest that the AAF lesion alters the correct positioning of the duplex DNA within the polymerase cleft.
Polymerases:
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Status:
new | topics/pols set | partial results | complete | validated |
Results:
No results available for this paper.