A universal protein-protein interaction motif in the eubacterial DNA replication and repair systems

Brian P. Dalrymple, Kritaya Kongsuwan, Gene Wijffels, Nicholas E. Dixon, Philip A. Jennings*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    281 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The interaction between DNA polymerases and sliding clamp proteins confers processivity in DNA synthesis. This interaction is critical for most DNA replication machines from viruses and prokaryotes to higher eukaryotes. The clamp proteins also participate in a variety of dynamic and competing protein-protein interactions. However, clamp-protein binding sequences have not so far been identified in the eubacteria. Here we show from three lines of evidence, bioinformatics, yeast two-hybrid analysis, and inhibition of protein-protein interaction by modified peptides, that variants of a pentapeptide motif (consensus QL[SD]LF) are sufficient to enable interaction of a number of proteins with an archetypal eubacterial sliding clamp (the β subunit of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase III holoenzyme). Representatives of this motif are present in most sequenced members of the eubacterial DnaE, PoIC, PoIB, DinB, and UmuC families of DNA polymerases and the MutS1 mismatch repair protein family. The component tripeptide DLF inhibits the binding of the α (DnaE) subunit of E. coli DNA polymerase III to β at μM concentration, identifying key residues. Comparison of the eubacterial, eukaryotic, and archaeal sliding clamp binding motifs suggests that the basic interactions have been conserved across the evolutionary landscape.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)11627-11632
    Number of pages6
    JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
    Volume98
    Issue number20
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 25 Sept 2001

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