E. coli The
E. coli DNA ligase is encoded by the
lig gene. DNA ligase in
E. coli, as well as most prokaryotes, uses energy gained by cleaving
nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) to create the phosphodiester bond.
T4 The DNA ligase from
bacteriophage T4 (a
bacteriophage that infects
Escherichia coli bacteria). The T4 ligase is the most-commonly used in laboratory research. It can ligate either
cohesive or blunt ends of DNA, oligonucleotides, as well as RNA and RNA-DNA hybrids, but not single-stranded nucleic acids. It can also ligate
blunt-ended DNA with much greater efficiency than
E. coli DNA ligase. Unlike
E. coli DNA ligase, T4 DNA ligase cannot utilize NAD and it has an absolute requirement for ATP as a cofactor. Some engineering has been done to improve the
in vitro activity of T4 DNA ligase; one successful approach, for example, tested T4 DNA ligase fused to several alternative DNA binding proteins and found that the constructs with either p50 or
NF-kB as fusion partners were over 160% more active in blunt-end ligations for cloning purposes than wild type T4 DNA ligase. A typical reaction for inserting a fragment into a plasmid vector would use about 0.01 (sticky ends) to 1 (blunt ends) units of ligase. The optimal incubation temperature for T4 DNA ligase is 37 °C, a temperature at which T4 enzymes are most active. However, it is not uncommon to setup ligation reactions at 16 °C, a trade-off temperature at which the ligase is active as well as one that is suitable for base-pairing of sticky ends.
Bacteriophage T4 ligase
mutants have increased sensitivity to both
UV irradiation and the alkylating agent
methyl methanesulfonate indicating that DNA ligase is employed in the
repair of the
DNA damages caused by these agents.
Mammalian In mammals, there are four specific types of ligase. •
DNA ligase 1: ligates the nascent DNA of the
lagging strand after the
Ribonuclease H has removed the RNA primer from the
Okazaki fragments. •
DNA ligase 3:
complexes with
DNA repair protein XRCC1 to aid in sealing DNA during the process of
nucleotide excision repair and recombinant fragments. Of all the known mammalian DNA ligases, only ligase 3 has been found to be present in mitochondria. •
DNA ligase 4: complexes with
XRCC4. It catalyzes the final step in the
non-homologous end joining DNA double-strand break repair pathway. It is also required for
V(D)J recombination, the process that generates diversity in
immunoglobulin and
T-cell receptor loci during
immune system development. • DNA ligase 2: A purification artifact resulting from proteolytic degradation of DNA ligase 3. Initially, it has been recognized as another DNA ligase and it is the reason for the unusual nomenclature of DNA ligases. DNA ligase from
eukaryotes and some microbes uses
adenosine triphosphate (ATP) rather than NAD.
Thermostable Derived from a thermophilic bacterium, the enzyme is stable and active at much higher temperatures than conventional DNA ligases. Its half-life is 48 hours at 65 °C and greater than 1 hour at 95 °C. Ampligase DNA Ligase has been shown to be active for at least 500 thermal cycles (94 °C/80 °C) or 16 hours of cycling.10 This exceptional thermostability permits extremely high hybridization stringency and ligation specificity. ==Measurement of activity==