REPLISOME-MEDIATED DNA REPLICATION
The elaborate process of genomic replication requires a large collection of proteins properly assembled at a DNA replication fork. Several decades of research on the bacterium Escherichia coli and its bacteriophages T4 and T7 have defined the roles of many proteins central to DNA replication. These...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Annual review of biochemistry 2001-01, Vol.70 (1), p.181-208 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The elaborate process of genomic replication requires a large collection of
proteins properly assembled at a DNA replication fork. Several decades of
research on the bacterium
Escherichia coli
and its bacteriophages T4 and
T7 have defined the roles of many proteins central to DNA replication. These
three different prokaryotic replication systems use the same fundamental
components for synthesis at a moving DNA replication fork even though the
number and nature of some individual proteins are different and many lack
extensive sequence homology. The components of the replication complex can be
grouped into functional categories as follows: DNA polymerase, helix
destabilizing protein, polymerase accessory factors, and primosome (DNA
helicase and DNA primase activities). The replication of DNA derives from a
multistep enzymatic pathway that features the assembly of accessory factors and
polymerases into a functional holoenzyme; the separation of the double-stranded
template DNA by helicase activity and its coupling to the primase synthesis of
RNA primers to initiate Okazaki fragment synthesis; and the continuous and
discontinuous synthesis of the leading and lagging daughter strands by the
polymerases. This review summarizes and compares and contrasts for these three
systems the types, timing, and mechanism of reactions and of protein-protein
interactions required to initiate, control, and coordinate the synthesis of the
leading and lagging strands at a DNA replication fork and comments on their
generality. |
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ISSN: | 0066-4154 1545-4509 |
DOI: | 10.1146/annurev.biochem.70.1.181 |