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1.
Amplification of Hot DNA segments in Escherichia coli   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In Escherichia coli, a replication fork blocking event at a DNA replication terminus (Ter) enhances homologous recombination at the nearby sister chromosomal region, converting the region into a recombination hotspot, Hot, site. Using a RNaseH negative (rnhA-) mutant, we identified eight kinds of Hot DNAs (HotA-H). Among these, enhanced recombination of three kinds of Hot DNAs (HotA-C) was dependent on fork blocking events at Ter sites. In the present study, we examined whether HotA DNAs are amplified when circular DNA (HotA plus a drug-resistance DNA) is inserted into the homologous region on the chromosome of a rnhA- mutant. The resulting HotA DNA transformants were analysed using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, fluorescence in situ hybridization and DNA microarray technique. The following results were obtained: (i) HotA DNA is amplified by about 40-fold on average; (ii) whereas 90% of the cells contain about 6-10 copies of HotA DNA, the remaining 10% of cells have as many as several hundred HotA copies; and (iii) amplification is detected in all other Hot DNAs, among which HotB and HotG DNAs are amplified to the same level as HotA. Furthermore, HotL DNA, which is activated by blocking the clockwise oriC-starting replication fork at the artificially inserted TerL site in the fork-blocked strain with a rnhA+ background, is also amplified, but is not amplified in the non-blocked strain. From these data, we propose a model that can explain production of three distinct forms of Hot DNA molecules by the following three recombination pathways: (i) unequal intersister recombination; (ii) intrasister recombination, followed by rolling-circle replication; and (iii) intrasister recombination, producing circular DNA molecules.  相似文献   

2.
Arrest of DNA replication in the terminus region of the Escherichia coli chromosome is mediated by protein-DNA complexes composed of the Tus protein and 23 base pair sequences generically called Ter sites. We have characterized the in vitro binding of purified Tus protein to a 37-base pair oligodeoxyribonucleotide containing the TerB sequence. The measured equilibrium binding constant (KD) for the chromosomal TerB site in KG buffer (50 mM Tris-Cl, 150 mM potassium glutamate, 25 degrees C, pH 7.5, 0.1 mM dithiothreitol, 0.1 mM EDTA, and 100 micrograms/ml bovine serum albumin) was 3.4 x 10(-13) M. Kinetic measurements in the same buffer revealed that the Tus-TerB complex was very stable, with a half-life of 550 min, a dissociation rate constant of 2.1 x 10(-5) s-1, and an association rate constant of 1.4 x 10(8) M-1 s-1. Similar measurements of Tus protein binding to the TerR2 site of the plasmid R6K showed an affinity 30-fold lower than the Tus-TerB interaction. This difference was due primarily to a more rapid dissociation of the Tus-TerR2 complex. Using standard chemical modification techniques, we also examined the DNA-protein contacts of the Tus-TerB interaction. Extensive contacts between the Tus protein and the TerB sequence were observed in the highly conserved 11 base-pair "core" sequence common to all identified Ter sites. In addition, protein-DNA contact sites were observed in the region of the Ter site where DNA replication is arrested. Projection of the footprinting data onto B-form DNA indicated that the majority of the alkylation interference and hydroxyl radical-protected sites were arranged on one face of the DNA helix. We also observed dimethyl sulfate protection of 2 guanine residues on the opposite side of the helix, suggesting that part of the Tus protein extends around the double helix. The distribution of contacts along the TerB sequence was consistent with the functional polarity of the Tus-Ter complex and suggested possible mechanisms for the impediment of protein translocation along DNA.  相似文献   

3.
In Escherichia coli cells, there is a protein that specifically binds to DNA replication terminus (ter) sites on the host and plasmid genome and then blocks progress of the DNA replication fork. We reported that extract of the cells carrying the plasmid with the tau gene, which was identified to be an essential gene for the termination reaction at the ter site, contained about an 8-fold increase in ter-binding activity of the plasmid-free cells. With improvement of the promoter region of the tau gene on the plasmid by site-directed mutagenesis, the host cells produced the ter-binding protein (Ter protein) over 2,000-fold. Using these over-producing cells as the enzyme source, the Ter protein was purified to apparent homogeneity. Molecular mass 36,000, amino-terminal amino acid sequence (45 residues) and composition of the protein were in good agreement with those deduced from DNA sequence of the tau gene. Footprinting using the purified Ter protein revealed a specific binding to the ter sequences.  相似文献   

4.
In E. coli, DNA replication termination occurs at Ter sites and is mediated by Tus. Two clusters of five Ter sites are located on each side of the terminus region and constrain replication forks in a polar manner. The polarity is due to the formation of the Tus-Ter-lock intermediate. Recently, it has been shown that DnaB helicase which unwinds DNA at the replication fork is preferentially stopped at the non-permissive face of a Tus-Ter complex without formation of the Tus-Ter-lock and that fork pausing efficiency is sequence dependent, raising two essential questions: Does the affinity of Tus for the different Ter sites correlate with fork pausing efficiency? Is formation of the Tus-Ter-lock the key factor in fork pausing? The combined use of surface plasmon resonance and GFP-Basta showed that Tus binds strongly to TerA-E and G, moderately to TerH-J and weakly to TerF. Out of these ten Ter sites only two, TerF and H, were not able to form significant Tus-Ter-locks. Finally, Tus's resistance to dissociation from Ter sites and the strength of the Tus-Ter-locks correlate with the differences in fork pausing efficiency observed for the different Ter sites by Duggin and Bell (2009).  相似文献   

5.
To clone new replication origin(s) activated under RNase H-defective (rnh ?) conditions in Escherichia coli cells, whole chromosomal DNA digested with EcoRI was to with a Kmr DNA fragment and transformed into an rnh? derivative host. From the Kmr transformants, we obtained eight kinds of plasmid-like DNA, each of which contained a specific DNA fragment, termed “Hot”, derived from the E. coli genome. Seven of the Hot DNAs (HotA-G) mapped to various sites within a narrow DNA replication termination region (about 280 kb), without any particular selection. Because Hot DNA could not be transformed into a mutant strain in which the corresponding Hot region had been deleted from the chromosome, the Hot DNA, though obtained as covalently closed circular (ccc) DNA, must have arisen by excision from the host chromosome into which it had initially integrated, rather than by autonomous replication of the transformed species. While Hot DNA does not have a weak replication origin it does have a strong recombinational hotspot active in the absence of RNase H. This notion is supported by the finding that Chi activity was present on all Hot DNAs tested and no Hot-positive clone without Chi activity was obtained, with the exception of a DNA clone carrying the dif site.  相似文献   

6.
Mulcair MD  Schaeffer PM  Oakley AJ  Cross HF  Neylon C  Hill TM  Dixon NE 《Cell》2006,125(7):1309-1319
During chromosome synthesis in Escherichia coli, replication forks are blocked by Tus bound Ter sites on approach from one direction but not the other. To study the basis of this polarity, we measured the rates of dissociation of Tus from forked TerB oligonucleotides, such as would be produced by the replicative DnaB helicase at both the fork-blocking (nonpermissive) and permissive ends of the Ter site. Strand separation of a few nucleotides at the permissive end was sufficient to force rapid dissociation of Tus to allow fork progression. In contrast, strand separation extending to and including the strictly conserved G-C(6) base pair at the nonpermissive end led to formation of a stable locked complex. Lock formation specifically requires the cytosine residue, C(6). The crystal structure of the locked complex showed that C(6) moves 14 A from its normal position to bind in a cytosine-specific pocket on the surface of Tus.  相似文献   

7.
We used a flow cytometric assay to determine the frequency of replication fork arrests during a round of chromosome replication in Escherichia coli. After synchronized initiation from oriC in a dnaC(Ts) strain, non-permissive conditions were imposed, such that active DnaC was not available during elongation. Under these conditions, about 18% of the cells failed to complete chromosome replication. The sites of replication arrests were random and occurred on either arm of the bidirectionally replicating chromosome, as stalled forks accumulated at the terminus from both directions. The forks at the terminal Ter sites disappeared in the absence of Tus protein, as the active forks could then pass through the terminus to reach the arrest site, and the unfinished rounds of replication would be completed without DnaC. In a dnaC2(Ts)rep double mutant, almost all cells failed to complete chromosome replication in the absence of DnaC activity. As inactivation of Rep helicase (the rep gene product) has been shown to cause frequent replication arrests inducing double-strand breaks (DSBs) in a replicating chromosome, DnaC activity appears to be essential for replication restart from DSBs during elongation.  相似文献   

8.
The assembly of the primosome, a multienzyme complex responsible for priming of lagging-strand DNA synthesis in Escherichia coli, occurs on defined regions of DNA. These primosome assembly sites are on the order of 70 nucleotides in length, yet they share little DNA sequence homology. In order to understand the interaction of the primosomal proteins with these sites, the isolation of single-base substitution mutants of the wild-type sequences has been undertaken. The response of 32 of these mutated primosome assembly sites to increasing concentrations of monovalent and divalent cations when they were used as DNA effectors for E. coli replication factor Y-catalyzed ATP hydrolysis and their efficiency as primosome-dependent DNA replication templates have revealed the existence of four distinct classes of mutations in primosome assembly sites. Class I mutations have essentially no effect on the activities elicited by the DNA site; thus, it is likely that they define nonessential or spacer nucleotide residues. Class II mutated DNAs require higher Mg2+ concentrations than the wild-type DNA to be fully activated as factor Y ATPase effectors and cannot be stimulated in the ATPase reaction by monovalent salt at suboptimal levels of Mg2+. The implication of this mutant phenotype on the role of secondary and tertiary DNA structure in determining an active site is examined in the accompanying article (Soeller, W., Abarzúa, P., and Marians, K. J. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 14293-14300). Class III mutations coinactivate both the ATPase effector and DNA replication template activity of the site, indicating that they probably represent essential contact points between factor Y and the DNA. Class IV mutated DNAs behave in a manner similar to class II mutated DNAs in the ATPase reaction, but have a replication template activity intermediate between that of the class III and class II mutant DNAs. It is possible that these mutant DNAs are deficient in their ability to catalyze, during primosome assembly, a step subsequent to that of factor Y binding.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
To clone new replication origin(s) activated under RNase H-defective (rnh ) conditions in Escherichia coli cells, whole chromosomal DNA digested with EcoRI was to with a Kmr DNA fragment and transformed into an rnh derivative host. From the Kmr transformants, we obtained eight kinds of plasmid-like DNA, each of which contained a specific DNA fragment, termed Hot, derived from the E. coli genome. Seven of the Hot DNAs (HotA-G) mapped to various sites within a narrow DNA replication termination region (about 280 kb), without any particular selection. Because Hot DNA could not be transformed into a mutant strain in which the corresponding Hot region had been deleted from the chromosome, the Hot DNA, though obtained as covalently closed circular (ccc) DNA, must have arisen by excision from the host chromosome into which it had initially integrated, rather than by autonomous replication of the transformed species. While Hot DNA does not have a weak replication origin it does have a strong recombinational hotspot active in the absence of RNase H. This notion is supported by the finding that Chi activity was present on all Hot DNAs tested and no Hot-positive clone without Chi activity was obtained, with the exception of a DNA clone carrying the dif site.  相似文献   

10.
To search for heretofore unidentified DNA replication termination (Ter) sites on the Escherichia coli chromosome, we screened the entire Kohara lambda bacteriophage library using as probes the four known 22-bp Ter sequences. We found a Ter site, which we named TerE, located at 23.2 min on the linkage map. TerE inhibits only counterclockwise DNA replication. Macroscopically, five Ter sites are located in a periodic arrangement on the genome.  相似文献   

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