4.8 Article

Telomere associated primase Tap repairs truncated telomeres of Streptomyces

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 45, Issue 10, Pages 5838-5849

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkx189

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Funding

  1. Chung Yuan Christian University
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan, Republic of China [MOST 103-2311-B-033-001]

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Replication of the linear chromosomes of soil bacteria Streptomyces proceeds from an internal origin towards the telomeres, followed by patching of the resulting terminal single-strand overhangs by DNA synthesis using terminal proteins as the primer, which remains covalently bound to the 5' ends of the DNA. In most Streptomyces chromosomes, the end patching requires the single-strand overhangs, terminal protein Tpg, and terminal associated protein Tap. The telomere overhangs contain several palindromic sequences capable of forming stable hairpins. Previous in vitro deoxynucleotidylation studies indicated that Tap adds the Palindrome I sequence to Tpg, which is extended by a polymerase to fill the gap. In this study, the stringency of Palindrome I sequencewas examined by anin vitro deoxynucleotidylation system and in vivo replication. Several nt in Palindrome I were identified to be critical for priming. While the first 3 G on the template were required for deoxynucleotidylation in vitro, deletions of them could be suppressed by the presence of dGTP. In vivo, deletions of these G were also tolerated, and the telomere sequencewas restored in the linear plasmid DNA. Our results indicated that the truncated telomeres were repaired by extension synthesis by Tap on the foldback Palindrome I sequence.

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