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Multiple C-terminal tails within a single E. coli SSB homotetramer coordinate DNA replication and repair.


ABSTRACT: Escherichia coli single-stranded DNA binding protein (SSB) plays essential roles in DNA replication, recombination and repair. SSB functions as a homotetramer with each subunit possessing a DNA binding domain (OB-fold) and an intrinsically disordered C-terminus, of which the last nine amino acids provide the site for interaction with at least a dozen other proteins that function in DNA metabolism. To examine how many C-termini are needed for SSB function, we engineered covalently linked forms of SSB that possess only one or two C-termini within a four-OB-fold "tetramer". Whereas E. coli expressing SSB with only two tails can survive, expression of a single-tailed SSB is dominant lethal. E. coli expressing only the two-tailed SSB recovers faster from exposure to DNA damaging agents but accumulates more mutations. A single-tailed SSB shows defects in coupled leading and lagging strand DNA replication and does not support replication restart in vitro. These deficiencies in vitro provide a plausible explanation for the lethality observed in vivo. These results indicate that a single SSB tetramer must interact simultaneously with multiple protein partners during some essential roles in genome maintenance.

SUBMITTER: Antony E 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3832242 | biostudies-literature | 2013 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Multiple C-terminal tails within a single E. coli SSB homotetramer coordinate DNA replication and repair.

Antony Edwin E   Weiland Elizabeth E   Yuan Quan Q   Manhart Carol M CM   Nguyen Binh B   Kozlov Alexander G AG   McHenry Charles S CS   Lohman Timothy M TM  

Journal of molecular biology 20130907 23


Escherichia coli single-stranded DNA binding protein (SSB) plays essential roles in DNA replication, recombination and repair. SSB functions as a homotetramer with each subunit possessing a DNA binding domain (OB-fold) and an intrinsically disordered C-terminus, of which the last nine amino acids provide the site for interaction with at least a dozen other proteins that function in DNA metabolism. To examine how many C-termini are needed for SSB function, we engineered covalently linked forms of  ...[more]

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