Title New insights into the structures and interactions of bacterial Y-family DNA polymerases /
Authors Timinskas, Kęstutis ; Venclovas, Česlovas
DOI 10.1093/nar/gkz198
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Is Part of Nucleic acids research.. Oxford : Oxford University Press. 2019, vol. 47, no. 9, p. 4383-4405.. ISSN 0305-1048. eISSN 1362-4962
Keywords [eng] Y-family DNA polymerases ; computational analysis ; RecA
Abstract [eng] Bacterial Y-family DNA polymerases are usually classified into DinB (Pol IV), UmuC (the catalytic subunit of Pol V) and ImuB, a catalytically dead essential component of the ImuA-ImuB-DnaE2 mutasome. However, the true diversity of Y-family polymerases is unknown. Furthermore, for most of them the structures are unavailable and interactions are poorly characterized. To gain a better understanding of bacterial Y-family DNA polymerases, we performed a detailed computational study. It revealed substantial diversity, far exceeding traditional classification. We found that a large number of subfamilies feature a C-terminal extension next to the common Y-family region. Unexpectedly, in most C-terminal extensions we identified a region homologous to the N-terminal oligomerization motif of RecA. This finding implies a universal mode of interaction between Y-family members and RecA (or ImuA), in the case of Pol V strongly supported by experimental data. In gram-positive bacteria, we identified a putative Pol V counterpart composed of a Y-family polymerase, a YolD homolog and RecA. We also found ImuA-ImuB-DnaE2 variants lacking ImuA, but retaining active or inactive Y-family polymerase, a standalone ImuB C-terminal domain and/or DnaE2. In summary, our analyses revealed that, despite considerable diversity, bacterial Y-family polymerases share previously unanticipated similarities in their structural domains/motifs and interactions.
Published Oxford : Oxford University Press
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2019
CC license CC license description