Publication | Open Access
Human mitochondrial RNA polymerase primes lagging-strand DNA synthesis <i>in vitro</i>
177
Citations
30
References
2008
Year
DnaMitochondrial BiogenesisMitochondrial FunctionNatural SciencesGeneticsRna PrimersMolecular BiologyDna ReplicationMolecular GeneticsMitochondrial BiologyShort Rna PrimersMitochondrial Rna PolymeraseGene ExpressionMedicineRna Processing
The mitochondrial transcription machinery synthesizes the RNA primers required for initiation of leading-strand DNA synthesis in mammalian mitochondria. RNA primers are also required for initiation of lagging-strand DNA synthesis, but the responsible enzyme has so far remained elusive. Here, we present a series of observations that suggests that mitochondrial RNA polymerase (POLRMT) can act as lagging-strand primase in mammalian cells. POLRMT is highly processive on double-stranded DNA, but synthesizes RNA primers with a length of 25 to 75 nt on a single-stranded template. The short RNA primers synthesized by POLRMT are used by the mitochondrial DNA polymerase gamma to initiate DNA synthesis in vitro. Addition of mitochondrial single-stranded DNA binding protein (mtSSB) reduces overall levels of primer synthesis, but stimulates primer-dependent DNA synthesis. Furthermore, when combined, POLRMT, DNA polymerase gamma, the DNA helicase TWINKLE, and mtSSB are capable of simultaneous leading- and lagging-strand DNA synthesis in vitro. Based on our observations, we suggest that POLRMT is the lagging-strand primase in mammalian mitochondria.
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