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Bacterial replisomes

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posted on 2024-11-16, 03:47 authored by Zhi-Qiang XuZhi-Qiang Xu, Nicholas DixonNicholas Dixon
Bacterial replisomes are dynamic multiprotein DNA replication machines that are inherently difficult for structural studies. However, breakthroughs continue to come. The structures of Escherichia coli DNA polymerase III (core)-clamp-DNA subcomplexes solved by single-particle cryo-electron microscopy in both polymerization and proofreading modes and the discovery of the stochastic nature of the bacterial replisomes represent notable progress. The structures reveal an intricate interaction network in the polymerase-clamp subassembly, providing insights on how replisomes may work. Meantime, ensemble and single-molecule functional assays and fluorescence microscopy show that the bacterial replisomes can work in a decoupled and uncoordinated way, with polymerases quickly exchanging and both leading-strand and lagging-strand polymerases and the helicase working independently, contradictory to the elegant textbook view of a highly coordinated machine.

Funding

Functional Dissection of the Bacterial Replisome

Australian Research Council

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A functional dissection of the bacterial replisome

Australian Research Council

Find out more...

History

Citation

Xu, Z. & Dixon, N. E. (2018). Bacterial replisomes. Current Opinion in Structural Biology, 53 159-168.

Journal title

Current Opinion in Structural Biology

Volume

53

Pagination

159-168

Language

English

RIS ID

130689

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