DNAポリメラーゼI
WordNet
- the 9th letter of the Roman alphabet (同)i
- the 4th letter of the Roman alphabet (同)d
- an enzyme that catalyzes the formation of new DNA and RNA from an existing strand of DNA or RNA
PrepTutorEJDIC
- 『私は』私が
- iodineの化学記号
- deuteriumの化学記号
- deoxyribonucleic acidディオキシリボ核酸
Wikipedia preview
出典(authority):フリー百科事典『ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』「2015/12/13 21:03:22」(JST)
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DNA polymerase I |
|
Functional domains in the Klenow Fragment (left) and DNA Polymerase I (right). |
Identifiers |
Organism |
Escherichia coli
(str. K-12 substr. MG1655) |
Symbol |
polA |
Entrez |
948356 |
PDB |
1DPI |
RefSeq (Prot) |
NP_418300.1 |
UniProt |
P00582 |
Other data |
EC number |
2.7.7.7 |
Chromosome |
genome: 4.04 - 4.05 Mb |
DNA Polymerase I (or Pol I) is an enzyme that participates in the process of DNA replication. Discovered by Arthur Kornberg in 1956,[1] it was the first known DNA polymerase (and, indeed, the first known of any kind of polymerase). It was initially characterized in E. coli and is ubiquitous in prokaryotes. In E. coli and many other bacteria, the gene that encodes Pol I is known as polA. The E. coli form of the enzyme is composed of 928 amino acids, and is an example of a processive enzyme—it can sequentially catalyze multiple polymerisations.
Pol I possesses four enzymatic activities:
- A 5'→3' (forward) DNA-Dependent DNA polymerase activity, requiring a 3' primer site and a template strand
- A 3'→5' (reverse) exonuclease activity that mediates proofreading
- A 5'→3' (forward) exonuclease activity mediating nick translation during DNA repair.
- A 5'→3' (forward) RNA-Dependent DNA polymerase activity. Pol I operates on RNA templates with considerably lower efficiency (0.1–0.4%) than it does DNA templates, and this activity is probably of only limited biological significance.[2]
In the replication process, RNase H removes the RNA primer (created by Primase) from the lagging strand and then Polymerase I fills in the necessary nucleotides between the Okazaki fragments (see DNA replication) in a 5'→3' direction, proofreading for mistakes as it goes. It is a template-dependent enzyme—it only adds nucleotides that correctly base pair with an existing DNA strand acting as a template. DNA Ligase then joins the various fragments together into a continuous strand of DNA.
Despite its early characterisation, it quickly became apparent that Polymerase I was not the enzyme responsible for most DNA synthesis—DNA replication in E. coli proceeds at approximately 1,000 nucleotides/second, while the rate of base pair synthesis by Polymerase I averages only between 10 and 20 nucleotides/second. Moreover, its cellular abundance of approximately 400 molecules per cell did not correlate with the fact that there are typically only two replication forks in E. coli. Additionally, it is insufficiently processive to copy an entire genome, as it falls off after incorporating only 25-50 nucleotides. Its role in replication was proven when, in 1969, John Cairns isolated a viable Polymerase I mutant that lacked the polymerase activity.[3] Cairns' lab assistant, Paula De Lucia, created thousands of cell free extracts from E.coli colonies and assayed them for DNA-polymerase activity. The 3,478th clone contained the polA mutant, which was named by Cairns to credit "Paula" [De Lucia].[4] It was not until the discovery of DNA polymerase III that the main replicative DNA polymerase was finally identified.
Research applications
DNA polymerase I obtained from E. coli is used extensively for molecular biology research. However, the 5'→3' exonuclease activity makes it unsuitable for many applications. Fortunately this undesirable enzymatic activity can be simply removed from the holoenzyme to leave a useful molecule called the Klenow fragment, widely used in molecular biology. Exposure of DNA polymerase I to the protease subtilisin cleaves the molecule into a smaller fragment, which retains only the DNA polymerase and proofreading activities. 2313541.20.
See also
- DNA polymerase II
- DNA polymerase III
References
- ^ Lehman IR, Bessman MJ, Simms ES, Kornberg A (July 1958). "Enzymatic synthesis of deoxyribonucleic acid. I. Preparation of substrates and partial purification of an enzyme from Escherichia coli". J. Biol. Chem. 233 (1): 163–70. PMID 13563462.
- ^ Ricchetti M, Buc H (February 1993). "E. coli DNA polymerase I as a reverse transcriptase". EMBO J. 12 (2): 387–96. PMC 413221. PMID 7679988.
- ^ De Lucia P, Cairns J (December 1969). "Isolation of an E. coli strain with a mutation affecting DNA polymerase". Nature 224 (5225): 1164–6. doi:10.1038/2241164a0. PMID 4902142.
- ^ Friedberg EC (February 2006). "The eureka enzyme: the discovery of DNA polymerase". Nat. Rev. Mol. Cell Biol. 7 (2): 143–7. doi:10.1038/nrm1787. PMID 16493419.
Transferases: phosphorus-containing groups (EC 2.7)
|
|
2.7.1-2.7.4:
phosphotransferase/kinase
(PO4) |
2.7.1: OH acceptor |
- Hexo-
- Gluco-
- Fructo-
- Galacto-
- Phosphofructo-
- 1
- Liver
- Muscle
- Platelet
- 2
- Riboflavin
- Shikimate
- Thymidine
- NAD+
- Glycerol
- Pantothenate
- Mevalonate
- Pyruvate
- Deoxycytidine
- PFP
- Diacylglycerol
- Phosphoinositide 3
- Class I PI 3
- Class II PI 3
- Sphingosine
- Glucose-1,6-bisphosphate synthase
|
|
2.7.2: COOH acceptor |
- Phosphoglycerate
- Aspartate kinase
|
|
2.7.3: N acceptor |
|
|
2.7.4: PO4 acceptor |
- Phosphomevalonate
- Adenylate
- Nucleoside-diphosphate
- Uridylate
- Guanylate
- Thiamine-diphosphate
|
|
|
2.7.6: diphosphotransferase
(P2O7) |
- Ribose-phosphate diphosphokinase
- Thiamine diphosphokinase
|
|
2.7.7: nucleotidyltransferase
(PO4-nucleoside) |
Polymerase |
DNA polymerase |
- DNA-directed DNA polymerase
- I
- II
- III
- IV
- V
- RNA-directed DNA polymerase
- Reverse transcriptase
- Telomerase
- DNA nucleotidylexotransferase/Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase
|
|
RNA nucleotidyltransferase |
- RNA polymerase/DNA-directed RNA polymerase
- RNA polymerase I
- RNA polymerase II
- RNA polymerase III
- RNA polymerase IV
- Primase
- RNA-dependent RNA polymerase
- PNPase
|
|
|
Phosphorolytic
3' to 5' exoribonuclease |
|
|
Nucleotidyltransferase |
- UTP—glucose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase
- Galactose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase
|
|
Guanylyltransferase |
|
|
Other |
- Recombinase (Integrase)
- Transposase
|
|
|
2.7.8: miscellaneous |
Phosphatidyltransferases |
- CDP-diacylglycerol—glycerol-3-phosphate 3-phosphatidyltransferase
- CDP-diacylglycerol—serine O-phosphatidyltransferase
- CDP-diacylglycerol—inositol 3-phosphatidyltransferase
- CDP-diacylglycerol—choline O-phosphatidyltransferase
|
|
Glycosyl-1-phosphotransferase |
- N-acetylglucosamine-1-phosphate transferase
|
|
|
2.7.10-2.7.13: protein kinase
(PO4; protein acceptor) |
2.7.10: protein-tyrosine |
|
|
2.7.11: protein-serine/threonine |
- see serine/threonine-specific protein kinases
|
|
2.7.12: protein-dual-specificity |
- see serine/threonine-specific protein kinases
|
|
2.7.13: protein-histidine |
- Protein-histidine pros-kinase
- Protein-histidine tele-kinase
- Histidine kinase
|
|
|
- Biochemistry overview
- Enzymes overview
- By EC number: 1.1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 10
- 11
- 13
- 14
- 15-18
- 2.1
- 3.1
- 4.1
- 5.1
- 6.1-3
|
|
|
|
DNA replication (comparing Prokaryotic to Eukaryotic)
|
|
Initiation |
Prokaryotic
(initiation) |
|
|
Eukaryotic
(preparation in
G1 phase) |
- Origin recognition complex
- ORC1
- ORC2
- ORC3
- ORC4
- ORC5
- ORC6
- Minichromosome maintenance
- MCM2
- MCM3
- MCM4
- MCM5
- MCM6
- MCM7
- Autonomously replicating sequence
- Single-strand binding protein
|
|
Both |
- Origin of replication/Ori/Replicon
- Replication fork
- Lagging and leading strands
- Okazaki fragments
- Primer
|
|
|
Replication |
Prokaryotic
(elongation) |
- DNA polymerase III holoenzyme
- dnaC
- dnaE
- dnaH
- dnaN
- dnaQ
- dnaT
- dnaX
- holA
- holB
- holC
- holD
- holE
- Replisome
- DNA ligase
- DNA clamp
- Topoisomerase
- Prokaryotic DNA polymerase: DNA polymerase I
|
|
Eukaryotic
(synthesis in
S phase) |
- Replication factor C
- Flap endonuclease
- Topoisomerase
- Replication protein A
- Eukaryotic DNA polymerase:
- alpha
- delta
- epsilon
- Control of chromosome duplication
|
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Both |
- Movement: Processivity
- DNA ligase
|
|
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Termination |
|
|
Index of genetics
|
|
Description |
- Gene expression
- DNA
- replication
- cycle
- recombination
- repair
- binding proteins
- Transcription
- factors
- regulators
- nucleic acids
- RNA
- RNA binding proteins
- ribonucleoproteins
- repeated sequence
- modification
- Translation
- ribosome
- modification
- nexins
- Proteins
- domains
- Structure
- primary
- secondary
- tertiary
- quaternary
|
|
Disease |
- Replication and repair
- Transcription factor
- Transcription
- Translation
|
|
|
UpToDate Contents
全文を閲覧するには購読必要です。 To read the full text you will need to subscribe.
English Journal
- Metal-mediated diradical tuning for DNA replication arrest via template strand scission.
- Porter MR1, Lindahl SE1, Lietzke A2, Metzger EM1, Wang Q2, Henck E1,2, Chen CH3, Niu H4, Zaleski JM5.
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A.2017 Sep 5;114(36):E7405-E7414. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1621349114. Epub 2017 Jul 31.
- PMID 28760964
- Comparison of different methods for repairing damaged DNA from buffered and unbuffered formalin-fixed tissues.
- Liu Y1,2, He H3, Yi S1, Hu Q1, Zhang W1, Huang D4.
- International journal of legal medicine.Int J Legal Med.2017 Aug 30. doi: 10.1007/s00414-017-1666-7. [Epub ahead of print]
- PMID 28856424
- Structural and Molecular Biology of a Protein-Polymerizing Nanomachine for Pilus Biogenesis.
- Waksman G1.
- Journal of molecular biology.J Mol Biol.2017 Aug 18;429(17):2654-2666. doi: 10.1016/j.jmb.2017.05.016. Epub 2017 May 25.
- PMID 28551336
Japanese Journal
- Trend of Human Papillomavirus Genotypes in Cervical Neoplasia Observed in a Newly Developing Township in Yangon, Myanmar
- Mu Mu Shwe,Kyi Kyi Nyunt,Okada Shigeru,Harano Teruo,Hlaing Myat Thu,Hla Myat Mo Mo,Mo Mo Win,Khin Khin Oo,KhinThet Wai,Khin Saw Aye,Myo Khin
- Acta Medica Okayama 69(1), 51-58, 2015-02
- … HPV DNA testing and genotyping were performed by polymerase chain reaction and restriction fragment length polymorphism. …
- NAID 120005549928
- Run-Length Encoding Graphic Rules Applied to DNA-Coded Images and Animation Editable by Polymerase Chain Reactions
- Hara Yuki,Kawano Tomonori
- Journal of advanced computational intelligence and intelligent informatics 19(1), 5-10, 2015-01
- NAID 40020347574
- The variable 5' end of the 16S rRNA gene as a novel barcoding tool for scallops (Bivalvia, Pectinidae)
- Marin Alan,Fujimoto Takafumi,Arai Katsutoshi
- Fisheries science 81(1), 73-81, 2015-01
- … DNA barcoding has proven to be a useful tool in species identification. … A partial region at the 5' end of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) gene, known as the "Folmer region," was proposed as the most suitable DNA barcoding marker. … However, Folmer primers have failed to amplify polymerase chain reaction (PCR) products in different organisms, including scallops. …
- NAID 120005553673
Related Links
- DNA ポリメラーゼ (DNA polymerase; -ポリメレース) は1本鎖の核酸を鋳型として、 それに相補的な塩基配列を持つ DNA 鎖を合成する酵素の総称。一部のウイルスを除く すべての生物に幅広く存在する。DNA を鋳型としてDNA を合成する DNA 依存性 DNA ...
Related Pictures
★リンクテーブル★
[★]
- 英
- DNA polymerase I
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- 関
- クレノウ断片 DNAポリメラーゼ
機能
- DNAの3'のヌクレオチドを除去。
- ポリメラーゼの校正機能に寄与。
[★]
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クレノウ断片、クレノー断片、Klenow断片
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DNAポリメラーゼα
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DNAポリメラーゼIIIホロ酵素
[★]
[★]
[★]
- 英
- deoxyribonucleic acid
- 同
- デオキシリボ核酸
- 関
- リボ核酸 RNA
[★]