T4 DNA polymerase is a key enzyme used in Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) library preparation, particularly during the critical end repair step. This enzyme from the bacteriophage T4 possesses dual enzymatic activities: a 5’ to 3’ polymerase activity and a 3’ to 5’ exonuclease proofreading activity, which together facilitate the precise processing of fragmented DNA ends prior to adapter ligation.
Role in NGS Library Preparation
During library construction, genomic DNA is fragmented using physical or enzymatic methods that produce heterogeneous ends—some with 3’ or 5’ overhangs, recessed ends, or blunt termini. Effective adapter ligation requires uniform blunt ends with a 5’-phosphate and 3’-hydroxyl group. T4 DNA polymerase converts these varied ends into blunt-ended fragments by filling in 5’ overhangs via its polymerase activity and removing 3’ overhangs using its exonuclease activity. This precise polishing ensures the generation of DNA fragments compatible for ligation to sequencing adapters.
Mechanistic Properties
The 3’ to 5’ exonuclease activity of T4 DNA polymerase acts as a proofreading function, removing mismatched or overhanging nucleotides to yield flush ends. Subsequently, its 5’ to 3’ polymerase activity synthesizes complementary strands to fill in recessed 3’ ends. This coordinated activity ensures the high-fidelity conversion of overhangs to blunt ends, which is critical for subsequent adapter ligation efficiency and sequencing library complexity.
Applications and Importance
T4 DNA polymerase is widely employed in various NGS platforms, including Illumina, due to its reliability in producing uniformly blunt-ended DNA fragments. Its activity directly influences library quality, yield, and downstream sequencing accuracy. Optimization of T4 DNA polymerase performance during end repair is essential for minimizing biases and maximizing coverage uniformity across sequencing libraries.
T4 DNA polymerase is a cornerstone enzyme in NGS library preparation, facilitating the conversion of fragmented DNA ends into blunt-ended, ligation-ready substrates. Its 5’ to 3’ polymerase and 3’ to 5’ exonuclease activities ensure accurate end repair, enabling efficient adapter ligation and high-quality sequencing libraries. This enzyme’s function, often combined with other enzymatic steps, is critical for robust and reproducible sequencing data generation.

