2003
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.m304318200
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The Carboxyl-terminal Domain of Bacteriophage T7 Single-stranded DNA-binding Protein Modulates DNA Binding and Interaction with T7 DNA Polymerase

Abstract: Gene 2.5 of bacteriophage T7 is an essential gene that encodes a single-stranded DNA-binding protein (gp2.5). Previous studies have demonstrated that the acidic carboxyl terminus of the protein is essential and that it mediates multiple protein-protein interactions. A screen for lethal mutations in gene 2.5 uncovered a variety of essential amino acids, among which was a single amino acid substitution, F232L, at the carboxyl-terminal residue. gp2.5-F232L exhibits a 3-fold increase in binding affinity for single… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(72 citation statements)
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References 47 publications
(69 reference statements)
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“…10a, lanes 4, 7, 10, and 13). gp2.5⌬26 binds to ssDNA with 40-fold higher affinity than wild-type gp2.5 (9,53), yet the mutant protein interfered weakly with primer utilization by T7 DNA polymerase alone, and gp2.5⌬26 did not inhibit DNA synthesis in the presence of T7 primase. These results indicate the interaction of T7 DNA polymerase with gp2.5 specifically interferes with DNA synthesis that is initiated from an oligoribonucleotide primer.…”
Section: Figmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…10a, lanes 4, 7, 10, and 13). gp2.5⌬26 binds to ssDNA with 40-fold higher affinity than wild-type gp2.5 (9,53), yet the mutant protein interfered weakly with primer utilization by T7 DNA polymerase alone, and gp2.5⌬26 did not inhibit DNA synthesis in the presence of T7 primase. These results indicate the interaction of T7 DNA polymerase with gp2.5 specifically interferes with DNA synthesis that is initiated from an oligoribonucleotide primer.…”
Section: Figmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, gp2.5 strongly inhibited primer utilization in the presence of a vast excess of ssDNA template and tetraribonucleotide primer. Second, a mutant gp2.5 protein (gp2.5⌬26) with decreased binding affinity for T7 DNA polymerase was a less potent inhibitor of primer utilization even though gp2.5⌬26 binds to ssDNA 40-fold more tightly than wild-type gp2.5 (53). Although gp2.5 binds to T7 primase-helicase (9), it is unlikely this interaction involves the region comprising the primase.…”
Section: Fig 8 Primer Synthesis and Extension Activities Of Mutantmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The sequences of the major product are shown on the right of the autoradiograph, and the letters r and d represent ribo-and deoxyribonucleotide, respectively. exonuclease activity catalyzes strand displacement synthesis for several hundred nucleotides (23), and the presence of E. coli SSB proteins enables this reaction to occur (26,27). "Breathing" of the 5Ј-terminus of the strand to be displaced most likely precedes the initiation of strand displacement synthesis.…”
Section: Stimulation Of Gp6 Activity By T7 Gene 25 Ssdna-bindingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whether or not exonuclease-deficient DNA polymerase exists in T7 phage-infected cells is not known. E. coli ssDNA binding protein (SSB protein), which exists abundantly in phage-infected cells, enables gp5 to catalyze strand displacement synthesis (26,27). Finally, T7 gene 2.5 ssDNAbinding protein enables T7 DNA polymerase to catalyze strand displacement synthesis at a nick in duplex DNA sufficient for the loading of T7 DNA helicase (27,28).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This fragment also is the site of binding of the processivity factor, E. coli trx, and the C terminus of gene 4 helicase-primase. Thus, the C-terminal tail of gp2.5 could potentially interfere with all interaction pairs at the T7 replication fork: directly by being part of the contact interface itself or indirectly by competing with another partner for the same contact surface (11,23,26,27). The multiple interactions of the C terminus of gp2.5 could thus function as one mechanism to coordinate the multiple reactions occurring at the replication fork.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%