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  4. DNA replication fidelity in Mycobacterium tuberculosis is mediated by an ancestral prokaryotic proofreader
 
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DNA replication fidelity in Mycobacterium tuberculosis is mediated by an ancestral prokaryotic proofreader

Date Issued
2015-01-01
Author(s)
Rock, Jeremy M
Lang, Ulla F
Chase, Michael R
Ford, Christopher B
Gerrick, Elias R
Gawande, Richa
Coscolla, Mireia
Gagneux, Sebastien  
Fortune, Sarah M
Lamers, Meindert H
DOI
10.1038/ng.3269
Abstract
The DNA replication machinery is an important target for antibiotic development in increasingly drug-resistant bacteria, including Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Although blocking DNA replication leads to cell death, disrupting the processes used to ensure replication fidelity can accelerate mutation and the evolution of drug resistance. In Escherichia coli, the proofreading subunit of the replisome, the ɛ exonuclease, is essential for high-fidelity DNA replication; however, we find that the corresponding subunit is completely dispensable in M. tuberculosis. Rather, the mycobacterial replicative polymerase DnaE1 itself encodes an editing function that proofreads DNA replication, mediated by an intrinsic 3'-5' exonuclease activity within its PHP domain. Inactivation of the DnaE1 PHP domain increases the mutation rate by more than 3,000-fold. Moreover, phylogenetic analysis of DNA replication proofreading in the bacterial kingdom suggests that E. coli is a phylogenetic outlier and that PHP domain-mediated proofreading is widely conserved and indeed may be the ancestral prokaryotic proofreader.
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