Molecular Cell
Volume 37, Issue 1, 15 January 2010, Pages 67-78
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Article
Mitochondrial RNA Polymerase Is Needed for Activation of the Origin of Light-Strand DNA Replication

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Summary

Mitochondrial DNA is replicated by a unique enzymatic machinery, which is distinct from the replication apparatus used for copying the nuclear genome. We examine here the mechanisms of origin-specific initiation of lagging-strand DNA synthesis in human mitochondria. We demonstrate that the mitochondrial RNA polymerase (POLRMT) is the primase required for initiation of DNA synthesis from the light-strand origin of DNA replication (OriL). Using only purified POLRMT and DNA replication factors, we can faithfully reconstitute OriL-dependent initiation in vitro. Leading-strand DNA synthesis is initiated from the heavy-strand origin of DNA replication and passes OriL. The single-stranded OriL is exposed and adopts a stem-loop structure. At this stage, POLRMT initiates primer synthesis from a poly-dT stretch in the single-stranded loop region. After about 25 nt, POLRMT is replaced by DNA polymerase γ, and DNA synthesis commences. Our findings demonstrate that POLRMT can function as an origin-specific primase in mammalian mitochondria.

DNA
PROTEINS

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These authors contributed equally to this work