Polynucleotide kinase (PNK) is a pivotal enzyme involved in the DNA end-repair step during Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS) library preparation, where DNA fragmentation generates reactive ends that require enzymatic modification for efficient adapter ligation.
Role in NGS Library Preparation
Fragmentation methods such as enzymatic digestion, sonication, or mechanical shearing produce DNA fragments with heterogeneous termini, including 3'-phosphate and 5'-hydroxyl ends. These ends are incompatible with direct ligation to sequencing platform-specific adapters, which require 5'-phosphate and 3'-hydroxyl groups. PNK catalyzes the transfer of the gamma-phosphate from ATP to the 5'-hydroxyl termini of DNA fragments, generating 5'-phosphorylated ends suitable for downstream ligation.
Enzymatic Mechanism
T4 Polynucleotide Kinase (T4 PNK), the most commonly used PNK in molecular biology, exhibits dual functionality: phosphorylating 5'-OH termini and removing 3'-phosphates to yield 3'-OH termini. This conversion "repairs" fragmented ends, standardizing DNA termini to blunt, 5'-phosphorylated, and 3'-hydroxylated ends critical for efficient adapter ligation, a necessary step for creating sequencing libraries.
Importance for Fragmentation and End Repair
Because DNA fragmentation is largely random and produces diverse fragment ends, PNK's activity ensures the chemical uniformity required for high fidelity adapter ligation. This enzymatic step directly impacts the efficiency of library construction, influencing sequencing yield and data quality. Without effective phosphorylation by PNK, ligation efficiency drops significantly, leading to low complexity libraries and poor sequencing coverage.
Polynucleotide kinase plays an indispensable role in NGS library preparation by converting heterogeneous DNA fragment ends produced during fragmentation into 5'-phosphorylated termini, compatible with adapter ligation. Its dual activity on both 5' and 3' ends ensures the generation of ligation-ready DNA fragments, thereby maximizing library quality and sequencing success. Understanding and optimizing PNK activity is fundamental for efficient and reliable NGS workflows.

