Structural investigation of the archaeal replicative machinery by electron microscopy and digital image processing
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Cannone, Giuseppe
Abstract
Previous studies suggest a degree of homology between eukaryotic replication, transcription
and translation proteins and archaeal ones. Hence, Archaea are considered
a simplified model for understanding the complex molecular machinery involved in
eukaryotic DNA metabolism. DNA replication in eukaryotic cells is widely studied.
In recent years, DNA replication studies expanded on the archaeal DNA replication
machinery.
P. abyssi was the first archaeon whose genome was fully sequenced. Genome
sequencing and comparative genomics have highlighted an MCM-like protein in P.
abyssi. In this study, I report the biochemical and structural characterisation of
PabMCM. PabMCM is explored as model for understanding more complex eukaryotic
MCM proteins and unravelling the biochemical mechanism by which MCM
proteins release their helicase activity.
The crenarchaeon Sulfolobus solfataricus possesses a simplified toolset for DNA
replication compared to Eukaryotes. In particular, S. solfataricus has a subset of
the eukaryotic Okazaki fragment maturation factors, among which there are a heterotrimeric
DNA sliding clamp, (the proliferating cell nuclear antigen, PCNA), the
DNA polymerase B1 (PolB1), the flap endonuclease (Fen1) and the ATP-dependent
DNA ligase I (LigI). PCNA functions as a scaffold with each subunit having a specific
binding affinity for each of the factors involved in Okazaki fragment maturation.
Here, the 3D reconstruction of PCNA in complex with the Okazaki fragment maturation
proteins PolB1, LigI and Fen1 is reported.
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