Structural relationships between two forms of DNA polymerase epsilon from calf thymus
We previously reported purification of two forms of DNA polymerase epsilon from calf thymus (Crute, J. J., Wahl, A. F., and Bambara, R. A. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 26-36). We have now used the "polymerase trap" photolabeling method to identify the polypeptides containing the polymerase acti...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 1992-02, Vol.267 (6), p.3991-3999 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | We previously reported purification of two forms of DNA polymerase epsilon from calf thymus (Crute, J. J., Wahl, A. F., and
Bambara, R. A. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 26-36). We have now used the "polymerase trap" photolabeling method to identify the
polypeptides containing the polymerase active site in each enzyme preparation. The molecular mass of these polypeptides are
210 and 145 kDa for the polymerases now designated epsilon and epsilon*, respectively. Renaturation of polymerase activity
from denaturing gel electrophoresis corroborates the polymerase trap results. Photolabeling of polymerase fractions suggests
that the smaller subunit is derived by proteolysis of the larger subunit during purification. Native sedimentation coefficient
measurements of polymerase-containing column fractions further suggest a precursor/product relationship between the two polymerases.
Response of polymerization activity to a battery of inhibitors normally used to distinguish mammalian nuclear DNA polymerases
was found to be essentially identical for polymerases epsilon, epsilon*, and the epsilon* generated in fractions initially
containing epsilon. These latter results demonstrate that the loss of the protease-sensitive domain of the active site subunit
does not affect catalytic function as measured in a standard DNA polymerase assay. The sole apparent functional difference
observed here between the epsilon and epsilon* forms is evidence that only the full-length epsilon form can be directly photocrosslinked
to dATP, independent of DNA synthesis. Photolabeling of the post-microsomal supernatant fraction from thymus glands obtained
from fetal calves reveals the presence of both the epsilon and epsilon* polypeptide. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0021-9258(19)50623-8 |