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Molecular Cell Aug 2023During eukaryotic DNA replication, Pol α-primase generates primers at replication origins to start leading-strand synthesis and every few hundred nucleotides during...
During eukaryotic DNA replication, Pol α-primase generates primers at replication origins to start leading-strand synthesis and every few hundred nucleotides during discontinuous lagging-strand replication. How Pol α-primase is targeted to replication forks to prime DNA synthesis is not fully understood. Here, by determining cryoelectron microscopy (cryo-EM) structures of budding yeast and human replisomes containing Pol α-primase, we reveal a conserved mechanism for the coordination of priming by the replisome. Pol α-primase binds directly to the leading edge of the CMG (CDC45-MCM-GINS) replicative helicase via a complex interaction network. The non-catalytic PRIM2/Pri2 subunit forms two interfaces with CMG that are critical for in vitro DNA replication and yeast cell growth. These interactions position the primase catalytic subunit PRIM1/Pri1 directly above the exit channel for lagging-strand template single-stranded DNA (ssDNA), revealing why priming occurs efficiently only on the lagging-strand template and elucidating a mechanism for Pol α-primase to overcome competition from RPA to initiate primer synthesis.
Topics: Humans; DNA Primase; Cryoelectron Microscopy; DNA Replication; DNA Helicases; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; DNA, Single-Stranded
PubMed: 37506699
DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2023.06.035 -
Nature Communications Jul 2023The T4 bacteriophage gp41 helicase and gp61 primase assemble into a primosome to couple DNA unwinding with RNA primer synthesis for DNA replication. How the primosome is...
The T4 bacteriophage gp41 helicase and gp61 primase assemble into a primosome to couple DNA unwinding with RNA primer synthesis for DNA replication. How the primosome is assembled and how the primer length is defined are unclear. Here we report a series of cryo-EM structures of T4 primosome assembly intermediates. We show that gp41 alone is an open spiral, and ssDNA binding triggers a large-scale scissor-like conformational change that drives the ring closure and activates the helicase. Helicase activation exposes a cryptic hydrophobic surface to recruit the gp61 primase. The primase binds the helicase in a bipartite mode in which the N-terminal Zn-binding domain and the C-terminal RNA polymerase domain each contain a helicase-interacting motif that bind to separate gp41 N-terminal hairpin dimers, leading to the assembly of one primase on the helicase hexamer. Our study reveals the T4 primosome assembly process and sheds light on the RNA primer synthesis mechanism.
Topics: Bacteriophage T4; DNA Primase; DNA Helicases; DNA Replication; DNA Primers; DNA, Viral
PubMed: 37474605
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-40106-2 -
Current Opinion in Structural Biology Oct 2023Members of the primase-polymerase (Prim-Pol) superfamily are found in all domains of life and play diverse roles in genome stability, including primer synthesis during... (Review)
Review
Members of the primase-polymerase (Prim-Pol) superfamily are found in all domains of life and play diverse roles in genome stability, including primer synthesis during DNA replication, lesion repair and damage tolerance. This review focuses primarily on Prim-Pol members capable of de novo primer synthesis that have experimentally derived structural models available. We discuss the mechanism of DNA primer synthesis initiation by Prim-Pol catalytic domains, based on recent structural and functional studies. We also describe a general model for primer initiation that also includes the ancillary domains/subunits, which stimulate the initiation of primer synthesis.
Topics: DNA Primase; DNA Replication; Catalytic Domain
PubMed: 37459807
DOI: 10.1016/j.sbi.2023.102652 -
Bioscience Reports Jul 2023To pass on genetic information to the next generation, cells must faithfully replicate their genomes to provide copies for each daughter cell. To synthesise these... (Review)
Review
To pass on genetic information to the next generation, cells must faithfully replicate their genomes to provide copies for each daughter cell. To synthesise these duplicates, cells employ specialised enzymes called DNA polymerases, which rapidly and accurately replicate nucleic acid polymers. However, most polymerases lack the ability to directly initiate DNA synthesis and required specialised replicases called primases to make short polynucleotide primers, from which they then extend. Replicative primases (eukaryotes and archaea) belong to a functionally diverse enzyme superfamily known as Primase-Polymerases (Prim-Pols), with orthologues present throughout all domains of life. Characterised by a conserved catalytic Prim-Pol domain, these enzymes have evolved various roles in DNA metabolism, including DNA replication, repair, and damage tolerance. Many of these biological roles are fundamentally underpinned by the ability of Prim-Pols to generate primers de novo. This review examines our current understanding of the catalytic mechanisms utilised by Prim-Pols to initiate primer synthesis.
Topics: DNA Primase; DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase; DNA Replication; Catalytic Domain; DNA
PubMed: 37358261
DOI: 10.1042/BSR20221986 -
Nucleic Acids Research Aug 2023Human PrimPol possesses DNA primase and DNA polymerase activities and restarts stalled replication forks protecting cells against DNA damage in nuclei and mitochondria....
Human PrimPol possesses DNA primase and DNA polymerase activities and restarts stalled replication forks protecting cells against DNA damage in nuclei and mitochondria. The zinc-binding motif (ZnFn) of the C-terminal domain (CTD) of PrimPol is required for DNA primase activity but the mechanism is not clear. In this work, we biochemically demonstrate that PrimPol initiates de novo DNA synthesis in cis-orientation, when the N-terminal catalytic domain (NTD) and the CTD of the same molecule cooperate for substrates binding and catalysis. The modeling studies revealed that PrimPol uses a similar mode of initiating NTP coordination as the human primase. The ZnFn motif residue Arg417 is required for binding the 5'-triphosphate group that stabilizes the PrimPol complex with a DNA template-primer. We found that the NTD alone is able to initiate DNA synthesis, and the CTD stimulates the primase activity of NTD. The regulatory role of the RPA-binding motif in the modulation of PrimPol binding to DNA is also demonstrated.
Topics: Humans; DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase; DNA Primase; DNA Replication; DNA; DNA Primers; Catalysis; Multifunctional Enzymes
PubMed: 37326028
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkad507 -
Nucleic Acids Research Aug 2023The discovery of reverse transcriptases (RTs) challenged the central dogma by establishing that genetic information can also flow from RNA to DNA. Although they act as...
The discovery of reverse transcriptases (RTs) challenged the central dogma by establishing that genetic information can also flow from RNA to DNA. Although they act as DNA polymerases, RTs are distantly related to replicases that also possess de novo primase activity. Here we identify that CRISPR associated RTs (CARTs) directly prime DNA synthesis on both RNA and DNA. We demonstrate that RT-dependent priming is utilized by some CRISPR-Cas complexes to synthesise new spacers and integrate these into CRISPR arrays. Expanding our analyses, we show that primer synthesis activity is conserved in representatives of other major RT classes, including group II intron RT, telomerase and retroviruses. Together, these findings establish a conserved innate ability of RTs to catalyse de novo DNA primer synthesis, independently of accessory domains or alternative priming mechanisms, which likely plays important roles in a wide variety of biological pathways.
Topics: DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase; HIV Reverse Transcriptase; Introns; Retroviridae; RNA; RNA-Directed DNA Polymerase; DNA Replication
PubMed: 37279911
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkad478 -
Essays in Biochemistry Aug 2023Viruses have developed sophisticated biochemical and genetic mechanisms to manipulate and exploit their hosts. Enzymes derived from viruses have been essential research... (Review)
Review
Viruses have developed sophisticated biochemical and genetic mechanisms to manipulate and exploit their hosts. Enzymes derived from viruses have been essential research tools since the first days of molecular biology. However, most viral enzymes that have been commercialized are derived from a small number of cultivated viruses, which is remarkable considering the extraordinary diversity and abundance of viruses revealed by metagenomic analysis. Given the explosion of new enzymatic reagents derived from thermophilic prokaryotes over the past 40 years, those obtained from thermophilic viruses should be equally potent tools. This review discusses the still-limited state of the art regarding the functional biology and biotechnology of thermophilic viruses with a focus on DNA polymerases, ligases, endolysins, and coat proteins. Functional analysis of DNA polymerases and primase-polymerases from phages infecting Thermus, Aquificaceae, and Nitratiruptor has revealed new clades of enzymes with strong proofreading and reverse transcriptase capabilities. Thermophilic RNA ligase 1 homologs have been characterized from Rhodothermus and Thermus phages, with both commercialized for circularization of single-stranded templates. Endolysins from phages infecting Thermus, Meiothermus, and Geobacillus have shown high stability and unusually broad lytic activity against Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria, making them targets for commercialization as antimicrobials. Coat proteins from thermophilic viruses infecting Sulfolobales and Thermus strains have been characterized, with diverse potential applications as molecular shuttles. To gauge the scale of untapped resources for these proteins, we also document over 20,000 genes encoded by uncultivated viral genomes from high-temperature environments that encode DNA polymerase, ligase, endolysin, or coat protein domains.
Topics: Viruses; Bacteriophages; Bacteria; DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase; Biotechnology; Ligases; Biology
PubMed: 37222046
DOI: 10.1042/EBC20220209 -
BioRxiv : the Preprint Server For... Oct 2023Telomere maintenance requires extension of the G-rich telomeric repeat strand by telomerase and fill-in synthesis of the C-rich strand by Polα/Primase. Telomeric...
Telomere maintenance requires extension of the G-rich telomeric repeat strand by telomerase and fill-in synthesis of the C-rich strand by Polα/Primase. Telomeric Polα/Primase is bound to Ctc1-Stn1-Ten1 (CST), a single-stranded DNA-binding complex. Like mutations in telomerase, mutations affecting CST-Polα/Primase result in pathological telomere shortening and cause a telomere biology disorder, Coats plus (CP). We determined cryogenic electron microscopy structures of human CST bound to the shelterin heterodimer POT1/TPP1 that reveal how CST is recruited to telomeres by POT1. Phosphorylation of POT1 is required for CST recruitment, and the complex is formed through conserved interactions involving several residues mutated in CP. Our structural and biochemical data suggest that phosphorylated POT1 holds CST-Polα/Primase in an inactive auto-inhibited state until telomerase has extended the telomere ends. We propose that dephosphorylation of POT1 releases CST-Polα/Primase into an active state that completes telomere replication through fill-in synthesis.
PubMed: 37215005
DOI: 10.1101/2023.05.08.539880 -
BioRxiv : the Preprint Server For... Sep 2023The mechanism by which polymerase α-primase (polα-primase) synthesizes chimeric RNA-DNA primers of defined length and composition, necessary for replication fidelity...
The mechanism by which polymerase α-primase (polα-primase) synthesizes chimeric RNA-DNA primers of defined length and composition, necessary for replication fidelity and genome stability, is unknown. Here, we report cryo-EM structures of polα-primase in complex with primed templates representing various stages of DNA synthesis. Our data show how interaction of the primase regulatory subunit with the primer 5'-end facilitates handoff of the primer to polα and increases polα processivity, thereby regulating both RNA and DNA composition. The structures detail how flexibility within the heterotetramer enables synthesis across two active sites and provide evidence that termination of DNA synthesis is facilitated by reduction of polα and primase affinities for the varied conformations along the chimeric primer/template duplex. Together, these findings elucidate a critical catalytic step in replication initiation and provide a comprehensive model for primer synthesis by polα-primase.
PubMed: 36993335
DOI: 10.1101/2023.03.16.533013