Sequence of the dnaB gene of Salmonella typhimurium.

AUTOR(ES)
RESUMO

The dnaB gene of Escherichia coli encodes a helicase that operates at replication forks of the bacterium and certain of its bacteriophages to produce separated strands suitable for subsequent use by primase and DNA polymerase III. Here, we present the sequence of the dnaB gene of Salmonella typhimurium, a functionally interchangeable analog of the E. coli dnaB gene. The DnaB proteins of these two organisms, inferred from the DNA sequences, are identical in length and in 93% of amino acid residues. Extended portions of the DnaB proteins are also similar to two phage-encoded DNA replication proteins: the gene 4 helicase-primase of coliphage T7 and, as reported previously (H. Backhaus and J. B. Petri, Gene 32: 289-303, 1984), the gene 12 protein of Salmonella phage P22. In contrast, little similarity was found between DnaB and either the UvrD repair helicase or transcription termination factor Rho (an RNA-DNA helicase). These results identify S. typhimurium DnaB as a member of the DnaB family of proteins by structural, as well as functional, criteria and provide the basis for the eventual identification, by mutational studies, of residues in DnaB critical for its function.

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