Abstract
Sliding clamps are ring-shaped proteins that encircle DNA and confer high processivity on DNA polymerases. Here we report the
crystal structure of the five-protein clamp loader complex (replication factor-C, RFC) of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae,
bound to the sliding clamp (proliferating cell nuclear antigen, PCNA). Tight interfacial coordination of the ATP analogue
ATP-γ-S by RFC results in a spiral arrangement of the ATPase domains of the clamp loader above the PCNA ring. Placement of a model for
primed DNA within the central hole of PCNA reveals a striking correspondence between the RFC spiral and the grooves of the DNA
double helix. This model, in which the clamp loader complex locks onto primed DNA in a screw-cap-like arrangement, provides a
simple explanation for the process by which the engagement of primer-template junctions by the RFC:PCNA complex results in ATP
hydrolysis and release of the sliding clamp on DNA.
