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Polar branch migration promoted by recA protein: effect of mismatched base pairs.
Author(s) -
Chandan Dasgupta,
Charles M. Radding
Publication year - 1982
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences of the united states of america
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.011
H-Index - 771
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.79.3.762
Subject(s) - heteroduplex , branch migration , dna , biology , homologous recombination , duplex (building) , microbiology and biotechnology , base pair , homologous chromosome , genetics , recombinase , recombination , homology (biology) , escherichia coli , heterologous , holliday junction , gene
Escherichia coli recA protein makes joint molecules from single-stranded circular phage DNA (viral or plus strand) and homologous linear duplex DNA by a polar reaction that displaces the 5' end of the plus strand from the duplex molecule [Kahn, R., Cunningham, R. P., DasGupta, C. & Radding, C. M. (1981) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 78, 4786-4790]. Growth of the heteroduplex joint, which results from strand exchange or branch migration, stopped at the borders of regions of nonhomologous DNA that were variously located 145, 630, or 1202 nucleotides from the end. Accumulation of migrating branches at heterologous borders demonstrates that their migration is not the result of random diffusion but is actively driven by recA protein. Growth of the heteroduplex joint was blocked even when a heterologous insertion was located in the single-stranded DNA, a case in which the flexible single-stranded region might conceivably fold out of the way under some condition. The recA protein did not make joint molecules from phage phi X174 and G4DNAs, which are 70% homologous, but did join phage fd and M13DNAs, which are 97% homologous. In the latter case, heteroduplex joints extended through regions containing isolated mismatched base pairs but stopped in a region where the fd and M13 sequences differ by an average of 1 base pair in 10. These results suggest that in genetic recombination the discrimination of perfect or near-perfect homology from a high degree of relatedness may be attributable in part to the mechanism by which recA protein promotes strand transfer.

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