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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2007, p. 5652-5657, Vol. 189, No. 15
0021-9193/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.00073-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Department of Genetic Resources Technology, Faculty of Agriculture, Kyushu University,1 BIRD-Japan Science and Technology Agency, 6-10-1 Hakozaki, Fukuoka-shi, Fukuoka 812-8581, Japan,3 Department of Molecular Microbiology, Research Institute for Microbial Diseases, Osaka University, 3-1, Yamadaoka, Suita, Osaka 565-0871, Japan2
Received 15 January 2007/ Accepted 1 May 2007
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Replication factor C (RFC) and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) work as the clamp and clamp loader, respectively, and they are essential for DNA polymerase to perform processive DNA synthesis (Fig. 1). RFC loads PCNA onto the DNA strand in an ATP-dependent manner. The central hole of the PCNA homotrimer ring encircles double-stranded DNA so that DNA polymerases can catalyze DNA synthesis with PCNA without falling off the DNA strand (2, 13). P. furiosus has one homolog of eukaryotic PCNA (3) and one homolog of RFC (5). The one-to-four complex of the large subunit (RFCL) and the small subunits (RFCS) of P. furiosus RFC (PfuRFC) loads P. furiosus PCNA (PfuPCNA) onto the DNA strand. We have been investigating the structural and functional aspects of the clamp-loading mechanism (14, 18, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 32, 35) and finally detected an intermediate complex in which the PCNA ring is opened by single-particle analysis of electron microscopic images. These results contributed to our understanding of the molecular mechanism of the clamp-loading process (29).
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FIG. 1. Molecular mechanism of processive DNA synthesis. The clamp loader (RFC) opens and recruits the clamp (PCNA) ring onto the primer terminus of the DNA strand in an ATP-dependent manner. The clamp loader then changes off with DNA polymerase, which can synthesize the DNA strand processively without falling off the DNA strand.
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We previously proposed that PIP-box-like sequences exist in the C termini of PolBI and DP2 of PolD from P. furiosus (3). In this study, we created mutant PolBI and PolD, which lack their putative PIP-box motifs, and investigated whether the motifs are actually involved in the functional interaction with P. furiosus PCNA.
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Construction of an expression system for the PolBI and PolD deletion mutants.
The preparation of the
1 mutant PolBI, lacking 29 amino acids from the C terminus, was described in our previous report (21). The gene encoding PolBI
PIP, with a deletion of the C-terminal 14 amino acids, was amplified by PCR using oligonucleotides 5'-GGGCCCCATATGATTTTAGATGTGGAT-3' (the NdeI recognition sequence is underlined) and 5'-GAGGGCGCGGCCGCCTATGTCTTTTGGTA-3' (containing the NotI recognition sequence [underlined]) as primers from the P. furiosus genome. The amplified gene was cloned into the pGEM-T Easy vector (Promega), and the entire nucleotide sequence was confirmed. The cloned gene was digested by NdeI-NotI and was inserted into the corresponding sites of pET21a. The constructed plasmid was designated pPOLB
PIP. To construct an expression plasmid for DP2 using the pET system, the DP2 gene was amplified by PCR as two fragments by using a nested PCR method. The N-terminal fragment was amplified by PCR using oligonucleotides 5'-GTGGTGCTGATGGAGCTTCC-3' and 5'-GCCTTTACGAACTCTTGGATCC-3' as primers for the first PCR and then 5'-GGCATATGGAGCTTCCAAAGGAAATTGAGG-3' (the NdeI recognition sequence is underlined) and 5'-CCGGATCCACCACTCCTCTACATAG-3' (the BamHI recognition sequence is underlined) for the second PCR. The C-terminal fragment was amplified by PCR using oligonucleotides 5'-CTATGTAGAGGAGTGGTGGATCC-3' and 5'-CTTAAAAGTTGTGGTCAGCGTTTGG-3' as primers for the first PCR and then 5'-CCGGATCCAAGAGTTCGTAAAGGCCGTTAATGAGGCCTATG-3' (the BamHI recognition sequence is underlined) and 5'-CCGCGGCCGCTTAGCGTTTGGAGAAGAAGTCGTCC (the NotI recognition sequence is underlined) for the second PCR. The C-terminal deletion mutant of the DP2 gene was also amplified by PCR as two fragments using oligonucleotides 5'-CCGGATCCAAGAGTTCGTAAAGGCCGTTAATGAGGCCTATG-3' (the BamHI recognition sequence is underlined) and 5'-CCCGCGGCCGCTCACTTCTTTTTAGGC-3' (containing the NotI recognition sequence [underlined]) as primers from the P. furiosus genome. The amplified gene was cloned into the pGEM-T Easy vector, and the entire nucleotide sequence was confirmed. The two cloned gene fragments were connected at the BamHI site, and the fragment was then inserted into the NdeI-NotI sites of pET21a (Ampr). The constructed plasmids were designated pWTDP2 and pDP2
PIP. The gene encoding DP1 was amplified and inserted into the NdeI-BamHI sites of pET28a (Kmr) to construct the expression plasmid pWTDP1.
Overproduction and purification of the DNA polymerases, PCNA, and RFC.
To obtain recombinant PolBI, PolBI
PIP, PolD, and PolD
PIP, the host E. coli cells (Epicurian coli BL21-CodonPlus(DE3)-RIL) carrying the corresponding plasmids were grown in 1 liter of LB medium containing 50 µg/ml ampicillin and 34 µg/ml chloramphenicol (in addition, kanamycin was added to 50 µg/ml in the cultivation for PolD) at 37°C. For the preparation of PolD, recombinant E. coli producing PolD was obtained by cotransformation of the resultant plasmids pWTDP1 and pWTDP2. Both of the pET vectors have the ColE1 ori and were incompatible for cotransformation in general. However, transformants containing both pWTDP1 and pWTDP2 were obtained by selection for Ampr and Kmr colonies, although the efficiency was quite low. The cells were cultured to an A600 of 0.5, the expression of the pol genes was then induced by adding isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) to a final concentration of 1 mM, and cultivation was continued for a further 5 h at 37°C. The cells were harvested and disrupted by sonication in buffer A containing 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 0.5 mM dithiothreitol, 0.1 mM EDTA, and 10% glycerol. The soluble cell extracts, obtained by centrifugation (12,000 x g, 20 min), were heated at 80°C for 15 min. The heat-resistant fractions obtained by centrifugation were treated with 0.15% polyethylenimine to remove the nucleic acids. The soluble proteins were precipitated by 80% saturation with ammonium sulfate. The precipitate was resuspended in buffer B containing 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 1 M (NH4)2SO4, 0.5 mM dithiothreitol, 0.1 mM EDTA, and 10% glycerol and was subjected to chromatography on a HiTrap Phenyl column (GE Healthcare Bioscience). The PolBI, PolBI
PIP, PolD, and PolD
PIP proteins were eluted with ammonium sulfate with a 1.0 to 0 M concentration gradient. The eluted proteins were dialyzed against buffer A containing 0.04 M NaCl, and the dialysate was subjected to chromatography on a HiTrap Q column (GE Healthcare Bioscience). PolBI and PolBI
PIP were obtained in the unbound fraction. The purification procedure for PolD and PolD
PIP was the same as that for PolBI. However, these enzymes were bound to the HiTrap Q matrix. The fractions eluted at the 0.35 to 0.4 M NaCl concentration were dialyzed against buffer A containing 0.1 M NaCl and were fractionated further on a HiTrap Heparin HP column (GE Healthcare Bioscience). The column was developed with a linear gradient of 0 to 1 M NaCl, and PolD and PolD
PIP were eluted at about 0.4 to 0.5 M NaCl. The purified fractions were pooled and stored at 4°C. Preparation of PfuPCNA and PfuRFC was performed as described in our previous reports (3, 5).
Primer extension reactions by PolBI and PolD. An in vitro primer elongation reaction in the absence and presence of various combinations of PCNA and RFC, using M13mp18 single-stranded DNA annealed with a 32P-labeled oligonucleotide primer, was performed basically as described previously (5). Briefly, the reaction mixture, containing 20 mM Tris HCl (pH 8.8), 100 mM NaCl, 5 mM MgCl2, 10 mM KCl, 0.1% Triton X-100, 250 µM deoxynucleoside triphosphate, and 0.2 µg of template-primer DNA (30 µl), was preheated at 70°C for 1 min, and the reaction was then started by adding DNA polymerases to 1 nM. Aliquots (8 µl) were obtained after 2.5, 5, and 10 min, and a 2-µl aliquot of the solution (98% deionized formamide, 1 mM EDTA, 0.1% xylene cyanol, 0.1% bromphenol blue) was added. For the reactions with PfuPCNA and PfuRFC, these accessory factors were added to the reaction mixture at an equal molar ratio to the DNA polymerases. The reaction products were analyzed by electrophoresis on a polyacrylamide gel (10%) containing 8 M urea or an alkaline agarose gel (1%) containing 50 mM NaOH and 1 mM EDTA and were visualized by autoradiography.
Surface plasmon resonance analysis.
The Biacore system was used to study the physical interactions between DNA polymerases and PCNA. To monitor the interactions, highly purified PfuPCNA was fixed on a Sensor Chip CM5 (Biacore) according to the manufacturer's recommendations. To measure the kinetic parameters, various concentrations of purified PolBI, PolBI
PIP, PolD, and PolD
PIP were applied to the PCNA-immobilized sensor chips. All measurements were performed at a continuous flow rate of 30 µl/min in a buffer containing 10 mM HEPES (pH 7.4), 150 mM NaCl, and 0.005% Tween 20. At the end of each cycle, the bound protein was removed by washing with 2 M NaCl. The association and dissociation phase data were fit simultaneously using a data analysis program, BIAevaluation 3.2 (Biacore).
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1, lacking 29 amino acids from the C terminus, to investigate the response from PfuPCNA for primer extension abilities during a constant period (5 min), with the ratio of DNA/DNA polymerase as 10:1 in the reaction. As shown in Fig. 2, there was no difference in the product sizes by the
1 mutant with and without PCNA, while in contrast, the extension rate of wild-type PolBI was dramatically stimulated by PfuPCNA. This result indicated that the C-terminal region containing 29 amino acids of PolBI is critical for the functional interaction with PCNA.
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FIG. 2. Effects of the C-terminal deletion on PfuPCNA-dependent DNA synthesis by PolBI. The primer extension reaction mixtures, with the indicated proteins in each lane, were analyzed by electrophoresis on a 10% denaturing polyacrylamide gel (PAGE) (left) and a 1% alkaline agarose gel (AGE) (right). wt, wild type.
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PIP, PolD, and PolD
PIP were purified almost to homogeneity by sequential column chromatographies. About 0.5 mg of each purified protein was obtained from 1 liter of culture.
Analyses of physical interactions between PCNA and DNA polymerases.
To determine the physical interactions between PCNA and DNA polymerases, we previously reported the binding of PfuPCNA to PolBI and PolD (DP2 but not DP1) by immunoprecipitations and pull-down assays (3). To analyze these interactions more quantitatively, surface plasmon resonance (SPR) experiments were performed. PfuPCNA was immobilized on a Biacore CM5 sensor chip, and subsequently, wild-type PolBI and PolD were injected at different concentrations. The physical interactions between the two proteins were identified by SPR sensorgrams (Fig. 3). When the DP1 and DP2 proteins were injected separately onto the chip, DP2, but not DP1, bound to PfuPCNA on the chip, supporting the interactions observed in our previous immunoprecipitation and pull-down assays described above (data not shown). To measure the binding affinities between the PCNA and DNA polymerases quantitatively, the KD values were obtained from the association and dissociation curves of the sensorgrams (Fig. 3). The association (ka) and dissociation (kd) rate constants were evaluated to be 9.50 x 104 M1 s1 and 9.38 x 103 s1, respectively, for PolBI, and 9.61 x 104 M1 s1 and 7.34 x 103 s1, respectively, for PolD from the nonlinear curve fitting of the sensorgrams. The binding affinities of PolB and PolD molecules to the PfuPCNA anchored on the sensor chip were calculated from the equilibrium dissociation constant values (KD = kd/ka) to be 98.7 nM and 76.4 nM, respectively. To determine whether our predicted PIP boxes in PolBI and DP2 of PolD are involved in PfuPCNA binding, the PIP-box deletion mutants PolBI
PIP and PolD
PIP were subjected to SPR analysis under the same conditions as those used for wild-type DNA polymerases. As shown in Fig. 4, neither PolBI
PIP nor PolD
PIP bound to PfuPCNA, in contrast to the cases of wild-type DNA polymerases. These results clearly showed that the C-terminal PIP-box-like sequences are critically important at least for forming stable complexes for both PolBI-PCNA and PolD-PCNA, although other regions of the DNA polymerases may also contribute to the PCNA interactions.
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FIG. 3. Physical interactions between DNA polymerases and PCNA. SPR analyses were performed using a Biacore system to detect the physical interactions between PolBI and PfuPCNA and between PolD and PfuPCNA. Purified PfuPCNA was immobilized on a Biacore sensor chip, and purified PolBI or PolD was analyzed at five different concentrations, as indicated on the right side of each sensorgram. We checked separately that proteins not related to PfuPCNA do not change their sensorgrams from the baseline when this PfuPCNA-immobilized sensor chip is used. The equilibrium constant (KD) was calculated from the obtained sensorgrams.
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FIG. 4. The PIP-box-like motifs of PolBI and PolD are essential for PfuPCNA binding. Physical interactions with PfuPCNA were compared among the wild type (WT) and the PIP-box-truncated mutant ( PIP) for both PolBI and PolD by using the Biacore system. Purified PfuPCNA was immobilized on a Biacore sensor chip, and purified DNA polymerases were analyzed.
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PIP or PolD
PIP.
We investigated the effect of PfuPCNA on the activities of PolBI
PIP and PolD
PIP by a primer extension reaction assay. Consistent with the data described above, an increase in the rate of extension was enhanced by the addition of PfuPCNA, and this enhancement was more clearly observed with the addition of PfuRFC (Fig. 5b). However, no increase in the rate of extension was observed with PfuPCNA and also by the further addition of PfuRFC in the case of PolBI
PIP (Fig. 5c). The same result was obtained in the case of PolD
PIP reactions, in which no effect was observed with PfuPCNA and PfuPCNA/PfuRFC. One pausing site was observed in both the PolBI and PolD reactions at around 700 bases from the primer, when this template-primer combination was used for the primer extension assay. The priming site corresponds to the M13mp18 sequence from positions 6234 to 6205 (GenBank accession no X02513), and therefore, the primer extension reaction from this primer pauses at one of the stable stem-loop structures based on the many palindromic sequences in the intergenic region (39). This pausing was more obvious in the PolD reactions. In the PolBI reaction, pausing was observed only in the presence of PfuPCNA. This pausing was alleviated by the addition of PfuRFC, probably because PfuRFC can unload the PCNA stacked at the pause site. It is interesting that this pausing was also observed in the reaction with PolBI
PIP and was relieved by the addition of PfuRFC. The amount of the extended products was increased, but the lengths of the products were the same as those from the reaction without PfuPCNA. This observation can be explained by the idea that PfuPCNA by itself loads onto DNA and prohibits the independent PolBI from proceeding along the template DNA. When PfuRFC unloads the stacked PfuPCNA from the DNA, PolBI can move ahead without pausing.
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FIG. 5. Requirement of PCNA and RFC for the primer elongation activities of PolBI and PolD. M13mp18 single-stranded circular DNA, annealed with a 32P-labeled oligonucleotide, was used as the template-primer (a), and primer elongation reactions by PolBI (b), PolBI PIP (c), PolD (d), and PolD PIP (e) were performed in the presence and absence of PfuPCNA and PfuRFC. The reaction products were analyzed by 1% alkaline agarose gel electrophoresis, and the products were visualized by autoradiography. The sizes indicated on the left were from BstI-digested phage DNA, labeled with 32P at each 5' end.
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The binding affinities of PolBI and PolD for PfuPCNA are almost the same, as judged by their equilibrium constant (KD) values, suggesting that both DNA polymerases can access the replication fork equally after clamp loading. It is also interesting that the two DNA polymerases showed equal KD values for the PCNA, even though the PIP-box sequences differ somewhat between the proteins (QVGLTSWL for PolBI and VISLDDFF for DP2). Crystal structure analyses will reveal the distinct interaction modes and specificities of the two PIP boxes with regard to PCNA. We are currently analyzing the cocrystal of PolBI and PfuPCNA (33). The cocrystal structures of PolBI-PfuPCNA and DP2-PfuPCNA have yet to be solved.
The KD values for the DNA polymerases are slightly smaller than those for other PCNA binding proteins from P. furiosus, 110 nM for DNA ligase (20), 220 nM for Hjm helicase (9), and 500 nM for Hjc endonuclease (S. Matsumiya et al., unpublished data), determined by previous studies. We also determined the binding affinities of PfuPCNA and PfuRFC by SPR analyses (32). In the case of PfuRFC, even the PIP-box deletion mutant can bind tightly to PfuPCNA, with an equilibrium constant (about 8 nM) that is much lower than those of the two DNA polymerases and other binding proteins. In addition, no difference was observed between wild-type and mutant PfuRFCs, at least in the PCNA-dependent primer extension reactions in vitro (32). This result indicates that PfuRFC has a binding site other than the C-terminal PIP-box sequence, as supported by the three-dimensional structural model based on electron microscopic observations of the clamp-loading complex (30). However, we confirmed that the C-terminal PIP-box-like sequence, QATLFDF, in RFCL can specifically bind to the PfuPCNA and determined the cocrystal structure of a peptide containing this sequence with PfuPCNA (25). Therefore, the C-terminal PIP box of RFCL also contributes to PfuPCNA binding, and the equilibrium constant between PfuPCNA and wild-type PfuRFC should be lower than that of mutant PfuRFC, although the binding constant of wild-type RFC-PCNA could not be obtained, because wild-type PfuRFC binds to the sensor chip nonspecifically. According to the current model of the clamp-loading process, RFC first catches PCNA and opens the clamp ring in an ATP-dependent manner, and the DNA strand then enters the PCNA ring from the opened site. This event should occur before the binding of DNA polymerase to PCNA, and therefore, the stronger affinity between PCNA and RFC may be important to regulate the clamp-loading process. RFC is also required for clamp unloading. It would be interesting to determine how the change from RFC to DNA polymerase and also from DNA polymerase to RFC occurs on the PCNA ring to maintain the appropriate order of the clamp-loading and -unloading processes.
There are conflicting reports describing the interactions of PolD and PCNA from Pyrococcus horikoshii and Pyrococcus abyssi. In the case of P. horikoshii PolD, DP1, but not DP2, can bind to P. horikoshii PCNA, as determined by two-hybrid and SPR analyses (36). On the other hand, P. abyssi PolBI and PolD bind to P. abyssi PCNA in a DNA-dependent manner. Their SPR analyses showed that both of the DNA polymerases bind to the immobilized PCNA only in the presence of DNA and not in the absence of DNA (12). It is not clear at this stage why different SPR analysis results were obtained with DNA polymerases from three different Pyrococcus species. Further investigations are required to understand this issue.
Y.I. was supported by a research grant from the Human Frontier Science Program. This work was also supported in part by grants-in-aid from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology, Japan, to Y.I. We thank the Hou-ansha Foundation for their support of our work.
Published ahead of print on 11 May 2007. ![]()
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. Genes Cells 6:699-706.[Abstract]
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