Efficiency and Frequency of Translational Coupling between the Bacteriophage T4 Clamp Loader Genes (original) (raw)
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DNA polymerase of bacteriophage T4 is an autogenous translational repressor
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 1988
In bacteriophage T4 the protein product of gene 43 (gp43) is a multifunctional DNA polymerase that is essential for replication of the phage genome. The protein harbors DNA-binding, deoxyribonucleotide-binding, DNA-synthesizing (polymerase) and 3'-exonucleolytic (editing) activities as well as a capacity to interact with several other T4-induced replication enzymes. In addition, the T4 gp43 is a repressor of its own synthesis in vivo. We show here that this protein is an autogenous repressor of translation, and we have localized its RNA-binding sequence (translational operator) to the translation initiation domain of gene 43 mRNA. This mechanism for regulation of T4 DNA polymerase expression underscores the ubiquity of translational repression in the control of T4 DNA replication. Many T4 DNA polymerase accessory proteins and nucleotide biosynthesis enzymes are regulated by the phage-induced translational repressor regA, while the T4 single-stranded DNA-binding protein (T4 gp32)...
Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1997
A multisubunit ring-shaped protein complex is used to tether the polymerase to the DNA at the primer-template junction in most DNA replication systems. This "sliding clamp" interacts with the polymerase, completely encircles the DNA duplex, and is assembled onto the DNA by a specific clamp loading complex in an ATPdriven process. Site-specific mutagenesis has been used to introduce single cysteine residues as reactive sites for adduct formation within each of the three subunits of the bacteriophage T4-coded sliding clamp complex (gp45). Two such mutants, gp45S19C and gp45K81C, are reacted with the cysteine-specific photoactivable crosslinker TFPAM-3 and used to track the changes in the relative positioning of the gp45 subunits with one another and with the other components of the clamp loading complex (gp44/62) in the various stages of the loading process. Cross-linking interactions performed in the presence of nucleotide cofactors show that ATP binding and hydrolysis, interaction with primer-template DNA, and release of ADP all result in significant conformational changes within the clamp loading cycle. A structural model is presented to account for the observed rearrangements of intersubunit contacts within the complex during the loading process.
Virology, 1999
Proper formation of the bacteriophage T4 DNA polymerase holoenzyme requires a wide spectrum of protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions among the DNA polymerase gp43, the sliding clamp gp45, and gp44/62, the clamp loader complex (CLC). The 44 and 62 proteins associate to form a tight complex maintained in a 4:1 ratio. The 44 and 62 genes are adjacent to each other on the T4 genome, are cotranscribed, and are translationally coupled. It has been suggested that translational coupling may play a role in the formation of the clamp loader complex and may control its stoichiometry. To examine the effect of coupling on the assembly of the complex, expression in trans of genes 44 and 62 was accomplished by cotransforming Escherichia coli with compatible, inducible plasmid vectors. A gp44/62 complex could be purified from such cells. The complex assembled in trans exhibited stoichiometry and ATPase activity identical to native complex. Burst sizes were determined to gauge the efficiency of clamp loader complex formation. When gp44 was supplied by a plasmid and gp62 was supplied by the T4 genome, complex formation was as efficient as in wild-type virus. However, when gp62 was supplied by plasmid and gp44 was supplied by the T4 genome, efficiency of complex formation was decreased. This decrease in the efficiency of complex formation was temperature dependent, being more pronounced at higher temperatures. At higher temperatures, a larger proportion of gp62 expressed from the plasmid was found to be present in an insoluble form. The decrease in efficiency of complex formation correlated to a decrease in solubility of the gene 62 protein.
Virology Journal, 2010
The bacteriophage T4 encodes 10 proteins, known collectively as the replisome, that are responsible for the replication of the phage genome. The replisomal proteins can be subdivided into three activities; the replicase, responsible for duplicating DNA, the primosomal proteins, responsible for unwinding and Okazaki fragment initiation, and the Okazaki repair proteins. The replicase includes the gp43 DNA polymerase, the gp45 processivity clamp, the gp44/62 clamp loader complex, and the gp32 single-stranded DNA binding protein. The primosomal proteins include the gp41 hexameric helicase, the gp61 primase, and the gp59 helicase loading protein. The RNaseH, a 5' to 3' exonuclease and T4 DNA ligase comprise the activities necessary for Okazaki repair. The T4 provides a model system for DNA replication. As a consequence, significant effort has been put forth to solve the crystallographic structures of these replisomal proteins. In this review, we discuss the structures that are available and provide comparison to related proteins when the T4 structures are unavailable. Three of the ten full-length T4 replisomal proteins have been determined; the gp59 helicase loading protein, the RNase H, and the gp45 processivity clamp. The core of T4 gp32 and two proteins from the T4 related phage RB69, the gp43 polymerase and the gp45 clamp are also solved. The T4 gp44/62 clamp loader has not been crystallized but a comparison to the E. coli gamma complex is provided. The structures of T4 gp41 helicase, gp61 primase, and T4 DNA ligase are unknown, structures from bacteriophage T7 proteins are discussed instead. To better understand the functionality of T4 DNA replication, in depth structural analysis will require complexes between proteins and DNA substrates. A DNA primer template bound by gp43 polymerase, a fork DNA substrate bound by RNase H, gp43 polymerase bound to gp32 protein, and RNase H bound to gp32 have been crystallographically determined. The preparation and crystallization of complexes is a significant challenge. We discuss alternate approaches, such as small angle X-ray and neutron scattering to generate molecular envelopes for modeling macromolecular assemblies.
Protein Determinants of RNA Binding by DNA Polymerase of the T4-related Bacteriophage RB69
Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2002
DNA polymerase (gp43) of phage T4 plays two biological roles, one as an essential DNA binding replication enzyme and the other as an mRNA-specific autogenous translational repressor. Binding of T4 gp43 to its mRNA target (translational operator RNA) interferes with gp43-DNA interactions, but it is unclear how the protein determinants for binding DNA are affected by the dynamics of gp43-mRNA interactions. We have used RB69 gp43, a natural variant of the T4 enzyme whose crystal structure has been determined to identify protein sites that respond to the interaction with specific RNA. We used protein phosphorylation markers, photocross-linking studies, protease sensitivity assays, and mutational analyses to examine the effects of operator RNA on the enzyme's five structural domains (N, exo, palm, fingers, and thumb). Our studies suggest that this RNA affects gp43-DNA interactions through global effects on protein structure that occlude DNA-binding sites but leave the enzyme accessible to interactions with the sliding clamp (RB69 gp45) and possibly other polymerase accessory proteins. We discuss the possible biological significance of putative RNA-binding motifs in the N and palm domains of RB69 gp43.
Translational regulation of expression of the bacteriophage T4 lysozyme gene. Nucleic Acids Res
1986
The bacteriophage T4 lysozyme gene is transcribed at early and late times after infection of E. coli, but the early mRNA is not translated. DNA sequence analysis and mapping of the 5 ' ends of the lysozyme transcripts produced at different times after T4 infection show that the early mRNA is Initiated some distance upstream from the gene. The early mRNA is not translated because of a stable secondary structure which blocks the translational initiation site. The stable RNA structure has been demonstrated by nudease protection in vivo. After DNA replication begins, two late promoters are activated; the late transcripts are initiated at sites such that the secondary structure can not form, and translation of the late messages occurs.
Binding specificity of T4 DNA polymerase to RNA
The Journal of biological chemistry, 1994
Bacteriophage T4 DNA polymerase, product of phage gene 43 (gp43), is a multifunctional DNA-binding protein and a key component of the phage DNA replicase. It is also an RNA-binding protein that selectively recognizes a site on its mRNA (the translational operator) and represses its own translation. We examined the ability of the protein to discriminate between DNA and RNA by using a gel mobility shift assay with defined RNA and DNA substrates. A higher affinity to RNA as compared with DNA (about 100-fold) was observed in assays that utilized synthetic DNA and in vitro transcribed RNA substrates bearing the T4 gene 43 translational operator sequence. The replacement of thymine with uracil in the synthetic DNA did not improve binding. The results suggest that the protein's selectivity for RNA is based in structure (intramolecular interactions) specific to the ribonucleotide sequence of the operator. Competition studies suggest that the protein determinants for RNA and DNA recognit...
Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2005
In the bacteriophage T4 DNA replication system, T4 RNase H removes the RNA primers and some adjacent DNA before the lagging strand fragments are ligated. This 5-nuclease has strong structural and functional similarity to the FEN1 nuclease family. We have shown previously that T4 32 protein binds DNA behind the nuclease and increases its processivity. Here we show that T4 RNase H with a C-terminal deletion (residues 278-305) retains its exonuclease activity but is no longer affected by 32 protein. T4 gene 45 replication clamp stimulates T4 RNase H on nicked or gapped substrates, where it can be loaded behind the nuclease, but does not increase its processivity. An N-terminal deletion (residues 2-10) of a conserved clamp interaction motif eliminates stimulation by the clamp. In the crystal structure of T4 RNase H, the binding sites for the clamp at the N terminus and for 32 protein at the C terminus are located close together, away from the catalytic site of the enzyme. By using mutant T4 RNase H with deletions in the binding site for either the clamp or 32 protein, we show that it is the interaction of T4 RNase H with 32 protein, rather than the clamp, that most affects the maturation of lagging strand fragments in the T4 replication system in vitro and T4 phage production in vivo.
Nucleotide-sequence-specific and non-specific interactions of T4 DNA polymerase with its own mRNA
Nucleic Acids Research, 2000
The DNA-binding DNA polymerase (gp43) of phage T4 is also an RNA-binding protein that represses translation of its own mRNA. Previous studies implicated two segments of the untranslated 5′-leader of the mRNA in repressor binding, an RNA hairpin structure and the adjacent RNA to the 3′ side, which contains the Shine-Dalgarno sequence. Here, we show by in vitro gp43-RNA binding assays that both translated and untranslated segments of the mRNA contribute to the high affinity of gp43 to its mRNA target (translational operator), but that a Shine-Dalgarno sequence is not required for specificity. Nucleotide sequence specificity appears to reside solely in the operator's hairpin structure, which lies outside the putative ribosome-binding site of the mRNA. In the operator region external to the hairpin, RNA length rather than sequence is the important determinant of the high binding affinity to the protein. Two aspects of the RNA hairpin determine specificity, restricted arrangement of purine relative to pyrimidine residues and an invariant 5′-AC-3′ in the unpaired (loop) segment of the RNA structure. We propose a generalized structure for the hairpin that encompasses these features and discuss possible relationships between RNA binding determinants of gp43 and DNA binding by this replication enzyme.
Translationsl regulation of expression of the bacteriophage T4 lysozyme gene
Nucleic Acids Research, 1986
The bacteriophage T4 lysozyme aene is transcribed at early and late times after infection of E. coli, but the early mRNA is not translated. DNA sequence analysis and mapping of the 5' ends of the lysozyme transcripts produced at different times after T4 infection show that the early mRNA is initiated some distance upstream from the aene. The early mRNA is not translated because of a stable secondary structure which blocks the translational initiation site. The stable RNA structure has been demonstrated by nuclease protection in vivo. After DNA replication begins, two late promoters are activated; thTe late transcripts are initiated at sites such that the secondary structure can not form, and translation of the late messages occurs.