posted on 2019-08-20, 14:34authored byV Paschalis, E Le Chatelier, M Green, H Nouri, F Képès, P Soultanas, L Janniere
During Bacillus subtilis replication two replicative polymerases function at the replisome to collectively carry out genome replication. In a reconstituted in vitro replication assay, PolC is the main polymerase while the lagging strand DnaE polymerase briefly extends RNA primers synthesized by the primase DnaG prior to handing-off DNA synthesis to PolC. Here, we show in vivo that (i) the polymerase activity of DnaE is essential for both the initiation and elongation stages of DNA replication, (ii) its error rate varies inversely with PolC concentration, and (iii) its misincorporations are corrected by the mismatch repair system post-replication. We also found that the error rates in cells encoding mutator forms of both PolC and DnaE are significantly higher (up to 15-fold) than in PolC mutants. In vitro, we showed that (i) the polymerase activity of DnaE is considerably stimulated by DnaN, SSB and PolC, (ii) its error-prone activity is strongly inhibited by DnaN, and (iii) its errors are proofread by the 3' > 5' exonuclease activity of PolC in a stable template-DnaE-PolC complex. Collectively our data show that protein-protein interactions within the replisome modulate the activity and fidelity of DnaE, and confirm the prominent role of DnaE during B. subtilis replication.
Funding
This work was supported by a BBSRC grant no. BB/K021540/1 to P.S.
We thank Prof. Bob Lloyd for his critical comments on the manuscript, James Berger, Richard Losick and François Lecointe for the kind gift of plasmids p2BT, pDR111 and pFL6, respectively, and Philippe Noirot, Jeff Errington and Etienne Dervyn for the kind gift of strains (JJS9, PS1175, EDV97, EDJ148 and HVS567).
History
Citation
Open Biology, 2017, 7 (9)
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/Biological Sciences/Molecular & Cell Biology