| Literature DB >> 1762160 |
C Gutiérrez1, J M Sogo, M Salas.
Abstract
Replication of bacteriophage phi 29 DNA initiates at either end of its linear double-stranded DNA molecule and proceeds by a strand-displacement mechanism. In the present paper we have used an in vitro phi 29 DNA replication system to analyse by electron microscopy the replicative intermediates produced at different reaction times. Two types of replicative intermediates were observed: type I (full-length double-stranded phi 29 DNA molecules with one or more single-stranded DNA branches) and type II (full-length phi 29 DNA molecules formed by a double-stranded DNA portion of variable length from one end plus a single-stranded DNA portion spanning to the other end). Thus, the types of replicative intermediates produced in vivo were also formed in the in vitro phi 29 DNA replication system. Analysis of type I intermediates indicated that initiation of DNA replication occurs preferentially at both ends of the same DNA template, in a non-simultaneous manner. Type II intermediates appeared as early as two minutes after the reaction started, well before unit-length single-stranded phi 29 DNA molecules were synthesized. In addition, replication of recombinant phi 29 DNA templates lacking terminal protein at one end did not produce type II intermediates and led to an accumulation of full-length single-stranded phi 29 DNA molecules. These two observations strongly suggest that type II intermediates appear when two growing DNA chains, running from opposite ends, merge.Entities:
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Year: 1991 PMID: 1762160 DOI: 10.1016/0022-2836(91)90589-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Biol ISSN: 0022-2836 Impact factor: 5.469