The subunit (holE gene product) of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase (Pol) III holoenzyme is a tightly bound component of the polymerase core. Within the core (␣--), the ␣ and subunits carry the DNA polymerase and 3 proofreading functions, respectively, while the precise function of is unclear. holE homologs are present in genomes of other enterobacteriae, suggestive of a conserved function. Putative homologs have also been found in the genomes of bacteriophage P1 and of certain conjugative plasmids. The presence of these homologs is of interest, because these genomes are fully dependent on the host replication machinery and contribute few, if any, replication factors themselves. To study the role of these homologs, we have constructed an E. coli strain in which holE is replaced by the P1 homolog, hot. We show that hot is capable of substituting for holE when it is assayed for its antimutagenic action on the proofreading-impaired dnaQ49 mutator, which carries a temperature-sensitive subunit. The ability of hot to substitute for holE was also observed with other, although not all, dnaQ mutator alleles tested. The data suggest that the P1 hot gene product can substitute for the subunit and is likely incorporated in the Pol III complex. We also show that overexpression of either or Hot further suppresses the dnaQ49 mutator phenotype. This suggests that the complexing of dnaQ49-with is rate limiting for its ability to proofread DNA replication errors. The possible role of hot for bacteriophage P1 is discussed.Escherichia coli DNA polymerase III holoenzyme (HE) is the enzyme responsible for the faithful duplication of the bacterial chromosome. HE is a multisubunit, dimeric complex that replicates simultaneously the leading and lagging strands at the replication fork (for a review, see reference 31). Each half of the dimeric complex contains a polymerase (Pol) III core unit consisting of three subunits, ␣, ε, and , which are tightly bound in the linear order ␣-ε-. Of these, ␣ (135 kDa) is the DNA polymerase (dnaE gene product), ε (28 kDa) is the exonucleotidic proofreader responsible for editing polymerase insertion errors (dnaQ gene product), and (8 kDa) is a small subunit whose function is not well defined (holE gene product). The HE (17 subunits total, 10 distinct) further consists of the two -clamps (one for each core) that serve to tether the polymerase to the DNA and the DnaX complex ( 2 ␥␦␦Ј), which is responsible for connecting the two polymerases and for loading and unloading the -clamp in the discontinuously synthesized lagging strand. The precise mechanisms by which HE is capable of replicating the bacterial chromosome with high speed and high accuracy are the subject of active investigation (21, 31, 33, 52).Our laboratory has been interested in the roles and mechanisms of the ε and subunits within the Pol III core, particularly with respect to their contributions to the fidelity of the replication process (37,(48)(49)(50). ε is a critical subunit with at least dual functions. It is a fidelity subunit whose...