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1.
Escherichia coli rnh mutants lacking RNase H activity are capable of recA+-dependent DNA replication in the absence of concomitant protein synthesis (stable DNA replication). In rnh dnaA::Tn10 and rnh delta oriC double mutants in which the dnaA+-dependent initiation of DNA replication at oriC is completely blocked, the recA200 mutation encoding a thermolabile RecA protein renders both colony formation and DNA synthesis of these mutants temperature sensitive. To determine which stage of DNA replication (initiation, elongation, or termination) was blocked, we analyzed populations of these mutant cells incubated at 30 or 42 degrees C in the presence or absence of chloramphenicol (CM) by dual-parameter (DNA-light scatter) flow cytometry. Incubation at 30 degrees C in the presence of CM resulted in cells with a continuum of DNA content up to seven or more chromosome equivalents per cell. The cultures which had been incubated at 42 degrees C in the absence or presence of CM consisted of cells with integral numbers of chromosomes per cell. It is concluded that active RecA protein is required specifically for the initiation of stable DNA replication.  相似文献   

2.
When initiation of DNA replication is inhibited in wild-type Escherichia coli cells by rifampin or chloramphenicol, completion of ongoing rounds of replication (runout of replication) leads to cells containing two, four, or eight fully replicated chromosomes, as measured by flow cytometry. In recombination-deficient recA strains, a high frequency of cells with three, five, six, or seven fully replicated chromosomes was observed in addition to cells with two, four, or eight chromosomes. recA mutants affected only in the protease-stimulating function behaved like wild-type cells. Thus, in the absence of the recombinase function of RecA protein, the frequency of productive initiations was significantly reduced compared with that in its presence. DNA degradation during runout of replication in the presence of rifampin was about 15%. The DNA degradation necessary to account for the whole effect described above was in this range or even lower. However, a model involving selective and complete degradation of partially replicated chromosomes is considered unlikely. It is suggested that the lack of RecA protein causes initiations or newly formed replication forks to stall but remain reactivatable for a period of time by functional RecA protein.  相似文献   

3.
Cells carrying the thermosensitive nrdA101 allele are able to replicate entire chromosomes at 42°C when new DNA initiation events are inhibited. We investigated the role of the recombination enzymes on the progression of the DNA replication forks in the nrdA101 mutant at 42°C in the presence of rifampin. Using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), we demonstrated that the replication forks stalled and reversed during the replication progression under this restrictive condition. DNA labeling and flow cytometry experiments supported this finding as the deleterious effects found in the RecB-deficient background were suppressed specifically by the absence of RuvABC; however, this did not occur in a RecG-deficient background. Furthermore, we show that the RecA protein is absolutely required for DNA replication in the nrdA101 mutant at restrictive temperature when the replication forks are reversed. The detrimental effect of the recA deletion is not related to the chromosomal degradation caused by the absence of RecA. The inhibition of DNA replication observed in the nrdA101 recA mutant at 42°C in the presence of rifampin was reverted by the presence of the wild-type RecA protein expressed ectopically but only partially suppressed by the RecA protein with an S25P mutation [RecA(S25P)], deficient in the rescue of the stalled replication forks. We propose that RecA is required to maintain the integrity of the reversed forks in the nrdA101 mutant under certain restrictive conditions, supporting the relationship between DNA replication and recombination enzymes through the stabilization and repair of the stalled replication forks.  相似文献   

4.
Equal partitioning of the duplicated chromosomes into two daughter cells during cell division is a coordinated process and is initiated only after completion of DNA synthesis. However, this strict order of execution breaks down in CDC6-deficient cells. Cdc6, an evolutionarily conserved protein, is required for the assembly of pre-replicative complexes (pre-RCs) and is essential for the initiation of DNA replication. Yeast cells lacking Cdc6 function, though unable to initiate DNA replication, proceed to undergo “reductional anaphase” by partitioning the unreplicated chromosomes and lose viability rapidly. This extreme form of genomic instability in cdc6 cells is thought to be due to inactivation of a pre-RC based, Cdc6-dependent checkpoint mechanism that, during normal cell cycle, inhibits premature onset of mitosis until pre-RC is assembled. Here, we show that chromosome segregation in cdc6 mutant is caused not by precocious initiation of mitosis in the absence of a checkpoint, but by the deregulation of spindle dynamics induced via a regulatory network involving the ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme Cdc34, microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) and the anaphase-promoting complex (APC) activator Cdh1. This regulatory circuit governs spindle behavior in the early part of the division cycle and precipitates catastrophic chromosome segregation in the absence of DNA replication.  相似文献   

5.
6.
RecA protein is essential for the very high level of resistance of Deinococcus radiodurans to DNA damage induced by ionizing radiation or other DNA-damaging agents. Since the mechanism(s) involved in the control of recA expression and the extent of RecA induction following DNA damage in this species are still unclear, we have performed a genetic analysis of the recA locus and quantified the basal and induced levels of RecA protein in wild type, recA, and lexA mutants. We found that the two genes upstream of recA in the predicted cinA ligT recA operon appear to have no role in the regulation of recA expression or function, despite the fact that the reading frames in the operon overlap. By using a translational fusion of recA to a lacZ reporter gene, we showed that induction began with no delay following exposure to gamma-radiation or treatment with mitomycin, and continued at a constant rate until it reached a plateau. The induction efficiency increased linearly with inducer dose, levelling off at a concentration fourfold above the background. The basal concentration of RecA protein measured by Western blotting corresponded to approximately 11,000 monomers per cell, and the induced concentration to around 44,000 monomers per cell. These levels remained unchanged upon disruption of the lexA gene, indicating that LexA does not plays a role in recA regulation. However, inactivation of lexA caused cells to aggregate, suggesting that LexA may control the activity or expression of as yet undefined membrane functions. Cells bearing the recA670 mutation showed an elevated constitutive expression of recA in the absence of DNA damage. This phenotype did not result from the defect in DNA repair associated with the RecA670 protein, since the increased basal level of recA expression was also found in recA670/ recA(+) diploid cells that are proficient in DNA repair. These results suggest that RecA may be involved in regulating its own expression, possibly by stimulating proteolytic modification of other regulatory proteins.  相似文献   

7.
Plasmid recombination, like other homologous recombination in Escherichia coli, requires RecA protein in most conditions. We have found that the plasmid recombination defect in a recA mutant can be efficiently suppressed by the beta protein of bacteriophage lambda. beta protein is required for homologous recombination of lambda chromosomes during lytic phage growth in a recA host and is known to have a strand-annealing activity resembling that of RecA protein. The bioluminescence recombination assay was used for genetic analysis of beta-protein-mediated plasmid recombination. Efficient suppression of the recA mutation by beta protein required the absence of the E. coli nucleases exonuclease I and RecBCD nuclease. These nucleases inhibit a RecA-mediated plasmid recombination pathway that is more efficient than the pathway functioning in wild-type cells. Like RecA-mediated plasmid recombination in RecBCD- ExoI- cells, beta-protein-mediated plasmid recombination depended on concurrent DNA replication and on the activity of the recQ gene. However, unlike RecA-mediated plasmid recombination, beta-protein-mediated recombination in RecBCD- ExoI- cells was independent of recF and recJ activities. We propose that inactivation of exonuclease I and RecBCD nuclease stabilizes a recombination intermediate that is involved in RecA- and beta-protein-catalyzed homologous pairing reactions. We suggest that the intermediate may be linear plasmid DNA with a protruding 3' end, since these nucleases are known to interfere with the synthesis of such linear forms. The different recF and recJ requirements for beta-protein-dependent and RecA-dependent recombinations imply that the mechanisms of formation or processing of the putative intermediate differ in the two cases.  相似文献   

8.
Positioning of replicated chromosomes in Escherichia coli.   总被引:17,自引:11,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
The positioning of replicated chromosomes at one-fourth and three-fourths of the cell length was inhibited when protein synthesis was inhibited by chloramphenicol or rifampin or by starvation for amino acids. Under these conditions, the progress of chromosome replication continued and replicated chromosomes were located close to each other as one nucleoid mass at midcell. Cells which already had two separate daughter chromosomes located at the cell quarters divided into two daughter cells under these conditions. When protein synthesis resumed, daughter chromosomes moved from midcell to the cell quarters, respectively, before any detectable increase in cell length was observed. The chromosome positioning occurred even under inhibition of the initiation of chromosome replication and under inactivation of DNA gyrase. The chromosome positioning presumably requires new synthesis of a particular protein(s) or translation itself.  相似文献   

9.
The DNA–membrane complex has been the subject of intensive investigation for over 35 years as the possible site for DNA replication in the prokaryotic cell and the site through which newly synthesized chromosomes are segregated into daughter cells. However, the molecular mechanisms which control these phenomena are, for the most part, poorly understood despite genetic, biochemical, and morphologic evidence in favour of their existence. This is probably due to the transient nature and non-covalent interactions that occur between DNA and the membrane. In addition, there is a paucity of knowledge concerning the nature of the membrane receptors for DNA and whether the membrane plays simply a structural or metabolic role in the two processes. Plasmids can provide important insights into the role of the membrane in replication and partitioning because the plasmid life cycle is relatively simple, with replication occurring during the cell cycle and partitioning during cell division. The replicon model of Jacob et al. (1963, Cold Spring Harbor Symp Quant Biol 28: 329–348) still represents a good conceptual framework (with modifications) to explain how plasmid replication and partitioning are linked by the membrane. In its simplest form, the model focuses on specific membrane binding sites (possibly along the equator of the cell) for plasmid (or bacterial) replication, with the membrane acting as a motive force to separate the newly synthesized replicons and their attached sites into daughter cells. Indeed, proteins involved in both plasmid replication and partitioning have been found in membrane fractions and some plasmids require membrane binding for initiation and an active partitioning. We propose that several factors are critical for both plasmid DNA replication and partitioning. One factor is the extent of negative supercoiling (brought about by an interplay of various topoisomerases, but most importantly by DNA gyrase). Supercoiling is known to be critical for initiation of DNA replication but may also be important for the formation of a partition complex in contact with the cell membrane. Another factor is the presence of specific subdomains of the membrane which can interact specifically with origin DNA and possibly other regions involved in partitioning. Such domains may be induced transiently or be present at all times during the cell cycle.  相似文献   

10.
Slowly growing Escherichia coli cells have a simple cell cycle, with replication and progressive segregation of the chromosome completed before cell division. In rapidly growing cells, initiation of replication occurs before the previous replication rounds are complete. At cell division, the chromosomes contain multiple replication forks and must be segregated while this complex pattern of replication is still ongoing. Here, we show that replication and segregation continue in step, starting at the origin and progressing to the replication terminus. Thus, early-replicated markers on the multiple-branched chromosomes continue to separate soon after replication to form separate protonucleoids, even though they are not segregated into different daughter cells until later generations. The segregation pattern follows the pattern of chromosome replication and does not follow the cell division cycle. No extensive cohesion of sister DNA regions was seen at any growth rate. We conclude that segregation is driven by the progression of the replication forks.  相似文献   

11.
RecA is important in recombination, DNA repair and repair of replication forks. It functions through the production of a protein-DNA filament. To study the localization of RecA in live Escherichia coli cells, the RecA protein was fused to the green fluorescence protein (GFP). Strains with this gene have recombination/DNA repair activities three- to tenfold below wild type (or about 1000-fold above that of a recA null mutant). RecA-GFP cells have a background of green fluorescence punctuated with up to five foci per cell. Two types of foci have been defined: 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI)-sensitive foci that are bound to DNA and DAPI-insensitive foci that are DNA-less aggregates/storage structures. In log phase cells, foci were not localized to any particular region. After UV irradiation, the number of foci increased and they localized to the cell centre. This suggested colocalization with the DNA replication factory. recA, recB and recF strains showed phenotypes and distributions of foci consistent with the predicted effects of these mutations.  相似文献   

12.
To study the fate of linear DNA in Escherichia coli cells, we linearized plasmid DNA at a specific site in vivo and monitored its behavior in recA mutant cells deficient in recombinational repair. Earlier, we had found that in wild-type (WT) cells linearized DNA is degraded to completion by RecBCD nuclease. We had also found that in WT cells chi sites on linear DNA inhibit RecBCD degradation by turning off its nucleolytic activities. Now we report that chi sites do not work in the absence of the RecA protein, suggesting that RecA is required in vivo to turn off the degradative activities of the RecBCD enzyme. We also report that the degradation of linearized plasmid DNA, even devoid of chi sites, is never complete in recA cells. Investigation of this linear DNA stability indicates that a fraction of recA cells are recBC phenocopies due to ongoing chromosomal DNA degradation, which titrates RecBCD nuclease. A possible role for RecBCD-promoted DNA degradation in controlling chromosomal DNA replication in E. coli is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
RecA protein in the SOS response: milestones and mysteries   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
E M Witkin 《Biochimie》1991,73(2-3):133-141
The role of RecA protein in the SOS response of Escherichia coli is traced from the isolation of the first recA mutant to our current understanding of the scope and regulation of this DNA damage-inducible system. In addition, possible RecA protein activities that may be essential in the expression of several SOS phenotypes (stable DNA replication, DNA replication recovery, SOS mutagenesis and RecA association with the cell membrane) are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
In the Escherichia coli chromosome, DNA replication forks arrested by a Tus-Ter complex or by DNA damage are reinitiated through pathways that involve RecA and numerous other recombination functions. To examine the role of recombination in the processing of replication forks arrested by a Tus-Ter complex, the requirements for recombination-associated gene products were assessed in cells carrying Ter plasmids, i.e., plasmids that contain a Ter site oriented to block DNA replication. Of the E. coli recombination functions tested, only loss of recA conferred an observable phenotype on cells containing a Ter plasmid, which was inefficient transformation and reduced ability to maintain a Ter plasmid when Tus was expressed. Given the current understanding of replication reinitiation, the simplest explanation for the restriction of Ter plasmid maintenance was a reduced ability to restart plasmid replication in a recA tus(+) background. However, we were unable to detect a difference in the efficiency of replication arrest by Tus in recA-proficient and recA-deficient cells, which suggests that the inability to restart arrested replication forks is not the cause of the restriction on growth, but is due to an additional function provided by RecA. Other explanations for restriction of Ter plasmid maintenance were examined, including plasmid multimerization, plasmid rearrangements, and copy number differences. The most likely cause of the restriction on Ter plasmid maintenance was a reduced copy number in recA cells that was detected when the copy number was measured in relation to an external control. Possibly, loss of RecA function leads to improper processing of replication forks arrested at a Ter site, leading to the generation of degradation-prone substrates.  相似文献   

15.
The process of partitioning bacterial sister chromosomes into daughter cells seems to be distinct from chromatid segregation during eukaryotic mitosis. In Escherichia coli, partitioning starts soon after initiation of replication, when the two newly replicated oriCs move from the cell centre to quarter positions within the cell. As replication proceeds, domains of the compact, supercoiled chromosome are locally decondensed ahead of the replication fork. The nascent daughter chromosomes are recondensed and moved apart through the concerted activities of topoisomerases and the SeqA (sequestration) and MukB (chromosome condensation) proteins, all of which modulate nucleoid superhelicity. Thus, genes involved in chromosome topology, once set aside as ‘red herrings’ in the search for ‘true’ partition functions, are again recognized as being important for chromosome partitioning in E. coli.  相似文献   

16.
Bacterial RecA protein is required for repair of two-strand DNA lesions that disable whole chromosomes. recA mutants are viable, suggesting a considerable cellular capacity to avoid these chromosome-disabling lesions. recA-dependent mutants reveal chromosomal lesion avoidance pathways. Here we characterize one such mutant, rdgB/yggV, deficient in a putative inosine/xanthosine triphosphatase, conserved throughout kingdoms of life. The rdgB recA lethality is suppressed by inactivation of endonuclease V (gpnfi) specific for DNA-hypoxanthines/xanthines, suggesting that RdgB either intercepts improper DNA precursors dITP/dXTP or works downstream of EndoV in excision repair of incorporated hypoxathines/xanthines. We find that DNA isolated from rdgB mutants contains EndoV-recognizable modifications, whereas DNA from nfi mutants does not, substantiating the dITP/dXTP interception by RdgB. rdgB recBC cells are inviable, whereas rdgB recF cells are healthy, suggesting that chromosomes in rdgB mutants suffer double-strand breaks. Chromosomal fragmentation is indeed observed in rdgB recBC mutants and is suppressed in rdgB recBC nfi mutants. Thus, one way to avoid chromosomal lesions is to prevent hypoxanthine/xanthine incorporation into DNA via interception of dITP/dXTP.  相似文献   

17.
Y Cao  R R Rowland    T Kogoma 《Journal of bacteriology》1993,175(22):7247-7253
In Escherichia coli rnhA mutants, several normally repressed origins (oriK sites) of DNA replication are activated. The type of DNA replication initiated from these origins, termed constitutive stable DNA replication, does not require DnaA protein or the oriC site, which are essential for normal DNA replication. It requires active RecA protein. We previously found that the lexA71(Def)::Tn5 mutation can suppress this RecA requirement and postulated that the derepression of a LexA regulon gene(s) leads to the activation of a bypass pathway, Rip (for RecA-independent process). In this study, we isolated a miniTn10spc insertion mutant that abolishes the ability of the lexA(Def) mutation to suppress the RecA requirement of constitutive stable DNA replication. Cloning and DNA sequencing analysis of the mutant revealed that the insertion occurs at the 3' end of the coding region of the polA gene, which encodes DNA polymerase I. The mutant allele, designated polA25::miniTn10spc, is expected to abolish the polymerization activity but not the 5'-->3' or 3'-->5' exonuclease activity. Thus, the Rip bypass pathway requires active DNA polymerase I. Since the lethal combination of recA(Def) and polA25::miniTn10spc could be suppressed by derepression of the LexA regulon only when DNA replication is driven by the oriC system, it was suggested that the bypass pathway has a specific requirement for DNA polymerase I at the initiation step in the absence of RecA. An accompanying paper (Y. Cao and T. Kogoma, J. Bacteriol. 175:7254-7259, 1993) describes experiments to determine which activities of DNA polymerase I are required at the initiation step and discusses possible roles for DNA polymerase in the Rip bypass pathway.  相似文献   

18.
Major heat shock proteins, such as the Escherichia coli DnaK protein, not only are required for cell growth after heat shock but seem to possess important functions in cellular metabolism at normal growth temperatures as well. E. coli delta dnaK52 mutants have severe cellular defects at 30 degrees C, one of which is in cell division (B. Bukau and G. C. Walker, J. Bacteriol, 171:2337-2346, 1989). Here we show that at 30 degrees C, delta dnaK52 mutants have defects in chromosome segregation and in maintenance of low-copy-number plasmids. Fluorescence microscopic analysis revealed that chromosomes were frequently lacking at peripheries of cell filaments of delta dnaK52 mutants and clustered at other locations. In other parts of the cell filaments, chromosomes were apparently normally distributed and they were also present in most of the small cells found in populations of delta dnaK52 cells. These defects might be at the level of DNA replication, since delta dnaK52 mutants have a threshold lower rate of DNA synthesis than wild-type cells. Chromosome segregation defects of delta dnaK52 mutants were also observed in an rnh dnaA mutant background, in which initiation of DNA replication is DnaA-oriC independent. We also found that low-copy-number P1 miniplasmids could not be stably maintained in delta dnaK52 mutants at 30 degrees C. delta par P1 miniplasmids that carry the P1-encoded rep functions required for their replication but lack the P1-encoded par functions required for faithful partitioning of the plasmids during cell division were also unstable in delta dnaK52 mutants. Taken together, our results indicate important, although not absolutely essential, functions for DnaK at 30 degrees C in one or more processes necessary for correct replication and/or partitioning of chromosomes and P1 miniplasmids. Furthermore, we found that P1 miniplasmids were also highly unstable in dnaJ259 mutants, indicating a role for the DnaJ heat shock protein in maintenance of these plasmids.  相似文献   

19.
Y. Cao  T. Kogoma 《Genetics》1995,139(4):1483-1494
The mechanism of recA polA lethality in Escherichia coli has been studied. Complementation tests have indicated that both the 5' -> 3' exonuclease and the polymerization activities of DNA polymerase I are essential for viability in the absence of RecA protein, whereas the viability and DNA replication of DNA polymerase I-defective cells depend on the recombinase activity of RecA. An alkaline sucrose gradient sedimentation analysis has indicated that RecA has only a minor role in Okazaki fragment processing. Double-strand break repair is proposed for the major role of RecA in the absence of DNA polymerase I. The lexA(Def)::Tn5 mutation has previously been shown to suppress the temperature-sensitive growth of recA200(Ts) polA25::spc mutants. The lexA(Def) mutation can alleviate impaired DNA synthesis in the recA200(Ts) polA25::spc mutant cells at the restrictive temperature. recF(+) is essential for this suppression pathway. recJ and recQ mutations have minor but significant adverse effects on the suppression. The recA200(Ts) allele in the recA200(Ts) polA25::spc lexA(Def) mutant can be replaced by δrecA, indicating that the lexA(Def)-induced suppression is RecA independent. lexA(Def) reduces the sensitivity of δrecA polA25::spc cells to UV damage by ~10(4)-fold. lexA(Def) also restores P1 transduction proficiency to the δrecA polA25::spc mutant to a level that is 7.3% of the recA(+) wild type. These results suggest that lexA(Def) activates a RecA-independent, RecF-dependent recombination repair pathway that suppresses the defect in DNA replication in recA polA double mutants.  相似文献   

20.
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