Nucleic Acids Res. 1992 Sep 11;20(17):4567-73. Unique Identifier :
Thermus aquaticus (Taq) DNA polymerase was used to measure the extension
efficiency for all configurations of matched and mismatched base pairs
at template-primer 3'-termini. The transition mispairs, A(primer).C,
C.A, G.T, and T.G were extended 10(-3) to 10(-4)-fold less efficiently
than their correctly paired counterparts. Relative efficiencies for
extending transversion mispairs were 10(-4) to 10(-5) for T.C and T.T,
about 10(-6) for A.A, and less than 10(-6) for G.A, A.G, G.G and C.C.
The transversion mispair C(primer).T was extended with high efficiency,
about 10(-2) compared to a correct A.T basepair. The unexpected ease of
extending the C.T mismatch was not likely to have been caused by
primer-template misalignment. Taq polymerase was observed to bind with
similar affinities to each of the correctly paired and mispaired
primer-template 3'-ends. Thus, the failure of Taq polymerase to extend
mismatches efficiently appears to be an intrinsic property of the enzyme
and not due to an inability to bind to 3'-terminal mispairs. For almost
all of the mispairs, C.T being the exception, Taq polymerase exhibits
about 100 to 1000-fold greater discrimination against mismatch extension
compared to avian myeloblastosis reverse transcriptase and HIV-1 reverse
transcriptase which extend most mismatched basepairs permissively.
Relative mismatch extension efficiencies for Taq polymerase were
measured at 45 degrees C, 55 degrees C and 70 degrees C and found to be
independent of temperature. The mispair extension data should be
important in designing experiments using PCR to distinguish between
sequences that vary by a single nucleotide.
Base Composition/*GENETICS Base Sequence DNA Polymerases/*METABOLISM
Molecular Sequence Data Nucleotides/*GENETICS
Oligodeoxyribonucleotides/METABOLISM *Polymerase Chain Reaction
Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S. Temperature JOURNAL ARTICLE