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1.
DNA replication fork arrest during the termination phase of chromosome replication in Bacillus subtilis is brought about by the replication terminator protein (RTP) bound to specific DNA terminator sequences (Ter sites) distributed throughout the terminus region. An attractive suggestion by others was that crucial to the functioning of the RTP-Ter complex is a specific interaction between RTP positioned on the DNA and the helicase associated with the approaching replication fork. In support of this was the behaviour of two site-directed mutants of RTP. They appeared to bind Ter DNA normally but were ineffective in fork arrest as ascertained by in vitro Escherichia coli DnaB helicase and replication assays. We describe here a system for assessing the fork-arrest behaviour of RTP mutants in a bona fide in vivo assay in B. subtilis. One of the previously studied mutants, RTP.Y33N, was non-functional in fork arrest in vivo, as predicted. But through extensive analyses, this RTP mutant was shown to be severely defective in binding to Ter DNA, contrary to expectation. Taken in conjunction with recent findings on the other mutant (RTP.E30K), it is concluded that there is as yet no substantive evidence from the behaviour of RTP mutants to support the RTP-helicase interaction model for fork arrest. In an extension of the present work on RTP.Y33N, we determined the dissociation rates of complexes formed by wild-type (wt) RTP and another RTP mutant with various terminator sequences. The functional wtRTP-TerI complex was quite stable (half-life of 182 minutes), reminiscent of the great stability of the E. coli Tus-Ter complex. More significant were the exceptional stabilities of complexes comprising wtRTP and an RTP double-mutant (E39K.R42Q) bound to some particular terminator sequences. From the measurement of in vivo fork-arrest activities of the various complexes, it is concluded that the stability (half-life) of the whole RTP-Ter complex is not the overriding determinant of arrest, and that the RTP-Ter complex must be actively disrupted, or RTP removed, by the action of the approaching replication fork.  相似文献   

2.
We have shown previously that induction of the stringent response in Bacillus subtilis resulted in the arrest of chromosomal replication between 100 and 200 kb either side of oriC at distinct stop sites, designated LSTer and RSTer, left and right stringent terminators respectively. This replication checkpoint was also shown to involve the RTP protein, normally active at the chromosomal terminus. In this study, we show that the replication block is absolutely dependent upon RelA, correlated with high levels of ppGpp, but that efficient arrest at STer sites also requires RTP. DNA-DNA hybridization data indicated that one or more such LSTer sites mapped to gene yxcC (-128 kb from oriC). A 7.75 kb fragment containing this gene was cloned into a theta replicating plasmid, and plasmid replication arrest, requiring both RelA and RTP, was demonstrated. This effect was polar, with plasmid arrest only detected when the fragment was orientated in the same direction with respect to replication, as in the chromosome. This LSTer2 site was further mapped to a 3.65 kb fragment overlapping the next40 probe. Remarkably, this fragment contains a 17 bp sequence (B'-1) showing 76% identity with an RTP binding site (B sequence) present at the chromosomal terminus. This B'-1 sequence, located in the gene yxcC, efficiently binds RTP in vitro, as shown by DNA gel retardation studies and DNase I footprinting. Importantly, precise deletion of this sequence abolished the replication arrest. We propose that this modified B site is an essential constituent of the LSTer2 site. The differences between arrest at the normal chromosomal terminus and arrest at LSTer site are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The Bacillus subtilis 168 chromosome is known to contain at least six DNA replication terminators in the terminus region of the chromosome. By using a degenerate DNA probe for the consensus terminator sequence and low-stringency hybridization conditions, several additional minor hybridizing bands were identified. DNA corresponding to the most intense of these bands was cloned and characterized. Although localized in the terminus region, it could not bind RTP and possibly represents a degenerate terminator. A search of the SubtiList database identified an additional terminator sequence in the terminus region, near glnA. It was shown to bind RTP and to function in blocking replication fork movement in a polar manner. Its orientation conformed to the replication fork trap arrangement of the other terminators. The low-stringency hybridization experiments failed to identify any terminus region-type terminators in the region of the chromosome where postinitiation control sequences (STer sites) are known to reside. The two most likely terminators in STer site regions, in terms of sequence similarity to terminus region terminators, were identified through sequence searching. They were synthesized and were found not to bind RTP under conditions that allowed binding to terminus region terminators. Neither did they elicit fork arrest, when present in a plasmid, under stringent conditions. It is concluded that the STer site terminators, at least the first two to the left of oriC, do not have the typical consensus A+B site makeup of terminus region terminators.  相似文献   

4.
The current models that have been proposed to explain the mechanism of replication termination are (i) passive arrest of a replication fork by the terminus (Ter) DNA-terminator protein complex that impedes the replication fork and the replicative helicase in a polar fashion and (ii) an active barrier model in which the Ter-terminator protein complex arrests a fork not only by DNA-protein interaction but also by mechanistically significant terminator protein-helicase interaction. Despite the existence of some evidence supporting in vitro interaction between the replication terminator protein (RTP) and DnaB helicase, there has been continuing debate in the literature questioning the validity of the protein-protein interaction model. The objective of the present work was two-fold: (i) to reexamine the question of RTP-DnaB interaction by additional techniques and different mutant forms of RTP, and (ii) to investigate if a common domain of RTP is involved in the arrest of both helicase and RNA polymerase. The results validate and confirm the RTP-DnaB interaction in vitro and suggest a critical role for this interaction in replication fork arrest. The results also show that the Tyr(33) residue of RTP plays a critical role both in the arrest of helicase and RNA polymerase.  相似文献   

5.
The first stage in termination of chromosome replication in Bacillus subtilis involves arrest of the clockwise fork at the inverted repeat region (IRR), comprising the opposed IRI and IRII sequences, adjacent to the upstream region of the rtp gene, which encodes the replication terminator protein RTP. RTP binds to IRI and IRII. The ability of the IRR and its components to function as terminators, in conjunction with RTP, and their polarity of action have now been tested by the use of plasmids replicating in B. subtilis as unidirectional theta structures and into which potential terminator sequences were inserted in alternate orientations relative to fork movement. When the complete IRR was inserted into such plasmids and the new plasmids transferred into a B. subtilis strain overproducing RTP, it was able to block movement of a replication fork approaching from either direction. IRI and IRII were shown to function as polar terminators, each blocking movement of a fork when it approached from one particular direction but not the other. Furthermore, the polarity of action was in accordance with the IRR being able to operate as a replication fork trap. Thus, a fork approaching the IRR would pass through the first terminator encountered (IRI or IRII) and be halted by the second. The previously observed nonfunctioning of a particular orientation of chromosomal IRR as a fork arrest site probably reflects a limiting level of RTP in the cell. Interestingly, a 21 base-pair core sequence spanning a single RTP binding site within IRI (the 47 base-pair IRI contains 2 binding sites) was unable to arrest a fork approaching from either direction in the plasmid system. This suggests that both binding sites within an IR must be filled in order to function as an arrest site. It is possible that co-operative interaction between adjacent dimers within IRI or IRII provides the necessary conformation for causing fork arrest.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
We have delineated the amino acid to nucleotide contacts made by two interacting dimers of the replication terminator protein (RTP) of Bacillus subtilis with a novel naturally occurring bipolar replication terminus by converting RTP to a site-directed chemical nuclease and mapping its cleavage sites on the terminus. The data show a relatively symmetrical arrangement of the amino acid to base contacts, and a comparison of the bipolar contacts with that of a normal unipolar terminus suggests that the DNA-protein contacts play an important determinative role in generating polarity from structurally symmetrical RTP dimers. The amino acid to nucleotide contacts provided distance constraints that enabled us to build a three-dimensional model of the protein-DNA complex. The model is consistent with features of the bipolar Ter.RTP complex derived from mutational and cross-linking data. The bipolar terminus arrested Escherichia coli DNA replication and DnaB helicase and T7 RNA polymerase in vitro in both orientations. RTP arrested the unwinding of duplex DNA on the bipolar Ter DNA substrate regardless of the length of the duplex DNA. The latter result suggested further that the terminus arrested authentic DNA unwinding by the helicase rather than just translocation of helicase on DNA.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Two dimers of the replication terminator protein (RTP) of Bacillus subtilis bind to a chromosomal DNA terminator site to effect polar replication fork arrest. Cooperative binding of the dimers to overlapping half-sites within the terminator is essential for arrest. It was suggested previously that polarity of fork arrest is the result of the RTP dimer at the blocking (proximal) side within the complex binding very tightly and the permissive-side RTP dimer binding relatively weakly. In order to investigate this "differential binding affinity" model, we have constructed a series of mutant terminators that contain half-sites of widely different RTP binding affinities in various combinations. Although there appeared to be a correlation between binding affinity at the proximal half-site and fork arrest efficiency in vivo for some terminators, several deviated significantly from this correlation. Some terminators exhibited greatly reduced binding cooperativity (and therefore have reduced affinity at each half-site) but were highly efficient in fork arrest, whereas one terminator had normal affinity over the proximal half-site, yet had low fork arrest efficiency. The results show clearly that there is no direct correlation between the RTP binding affinity (either within the full complex or at the proximal half-site within the full complex) and the efficiency of replication fork arrest in vivo. Thus, the differential binding affinity over the proximal and distal half-sites cannot be solely responsible for functional polarity of fork arrest. Furthermore, efficient fork arrest relies on features in addition to the tight binding of RTP to terminator DNA.  相似文献   

10.
The interaction between the DNA replication terminator, IRI, of Bacillus subtilis and its cognate replication terminator protein (RTP) has been examined by the technique of missing nucleoside interference (MNI). IRI contains two adjacent binding sites (A and B) for RTP dimers. The B site is proximal to the replication fork arrest site. The present results have shown that nucleoside contacts with RTP in the two sites are very different. There are more extensive contacts of nucleosides in both strands of the B site with RTP compared with the A site. The data also strongly suggest that filling by RTP of the B site occurs first and is needed for subsequent co-operative filling of an overlapping A site. The A site alone binds RTP poorly. The findings are consistent with interaction occurring between RTP dimers bound to adjacent sites of IRI, which would explain why RTP bound to the B site alone cannot cause replication fork arrest.  相似文献   

11.
Fob1p protein has been implicated in the termination of replication forks at the two tandem termini present in the non-transcribed spacer region located between the sequences encoding the 35 S and the 5 S RNAs of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. However, the biochemistry and mode of action of this protein were previously unknown. We have purified the Fob1p protein to near-homogeneity, and we developed a novel technique to show that it binds specifically to the Ter1 and Ter2 sequences. Interestingly, the two sequences share no detectable homology. We present two lines of evidence showing that the interaction of the Fob1p with the Ter sites causes replication termination. First, a mutant of FOB1, L104S, that significantly reduced the binding of the mutant form of the protein to the tandem Ter sites, also failed to promote replication termination in vivo. The mutant did not diminish nucleolar transport, and interaction of the mutant form of Fob1p with itself and with another protein encoded in the locus YDR026C suggested that the mutation did not cause global misfolding of the protein. Second, DNA site mutations in the Ter sequences that separately and specifically abolished replication fork arrest at Ter1 or Ter2 also eliminated sequence-specific binding of the Fob1p to the two sites. The work presented here definitively established Ter DNA-Fob1p interaction as an important step in fork arrest.  相似文献   

12.
T Sahoo  B K Mohanty  I Patel    D Bastia 《The EMBO journal》1995,14(3):619-628
The termination of DNA replication at a sequence-specific replication terminus in Bacillus subtilis is catalyzed by a dimeric replication terminator protein (RTP) of subunit mol. wt 14,500. RTP has become an attractive protein with which to study the molecular mechanism of termination because its crystal structure has now been solved and the previous lack of an in vitro replication system has been largely overcome by our discovery that the protein terminates replication in vivo and in vitro in the well-studied Gram-negative Escherichia coli system. We have exploited the surrogate in vitro system to show that RTP acts as a polar contrahelicase to DnaB helicase of E. coli only when two RTP dimers are bound co-operatively to overlapping core and auxiliary sequences comprising the terminus. A core sequence by itself binds one dimer of RTP, but elicits no contrahelicase activity. Binding of two RTP dimers to a tandem head-to-tail core repeat also elicits no contrahelicase activity, thus suggesting that a specific stereochemical interaction between two RTP dimers and with the terminator site is essential for termination. RTP blocks unwinding of DNA substrates containing heteroduplex regions that include the terminus and are in the size range of approximately 50 to > 1000 bp in length. Thus, the protein blocks authentic helicase-catalyzed unwinding rather than just the translocation of the helicase on DNA.  相似文献   

13.
DNase I footprinting of the interaction between the replication terminator protein (RTP) of Bacillus subtilis and the inverted repeat region (IRR) at the chromosome terminus, to which it binds to block the clockwise replication fork, showed that two major regions of 41 base pairs (bp) were protected from cleavage. These regions corresponded approximately to the imperfect inverted repeats (IRI and IRII) identified previously. Band retardation analyses of the interaction between RTP and portions of the IRR established that each inverted repeat (IRI or IRII) contained two RTP binding sites. By sedimentation equilibrium in the ultracentrifuge, RTP was found to exist as a dimer of 29 kDa at neutral pH and concentrations above 0.2 g/l. Quantitative studies of the RTP-IRR interaction using [3H]RTP and [32P]IRR showed that the fully saturated complex contained eight RTP monomers per IRR. It is concluded that a dimer of RTP binds to each of the four sites in IRR. The apparent dissociation constant for the interaction was estimated (in the presence of 50% glycerol) to be 1.2 x 10(-11) M (dimer of RTP). Glycerol was found to have a marked effect on the affinity of RTP for the IRR and on the relative amounts of the interaction complexes formed; in the absence of glycerol the dissociation constant was approximately 50-fold higher and there was pronounced co-operative binding of RTP dimers to adjacent sites in each inverted repeat. Examination of the DNA sequence in IRI and IRII identified two 8 bp direct repeats in each. The regions protected from DNase I cleavage in each inverted repeat and the protection afforded by a core sequence spanning just one of the 8 bp direct repeats were consistent with each 8 bp repeat representing a recognition sequence for the RTP dimer. A model describing the binding of RTP to the IRR is presented.  相似文献   

14.
Termination of DNA replication in Bacillus subtilis involves the polar arrest of replication forks by a specific complex formed between the replication terminator protein (RTP) and DNA terminator sites. While determination of the crystal structure of RTP has facilitated our understanding of how a single RTP dimer interacts with terminator DNA, additional information is required in order to understand the assembly of a functional fork arrest complex, which requires an interaction between two RTP dimers and the terminator site. In this study, we show that the conformation of the major B.subtilis DNA terminator,TerI, becomes considerably distorted upon binding RTP. Binding of the first dimer of RTP to the B site of TerI causes the DNA to become slightly unwound and bent by approximately 40 degrees. Binding of a second dimer of RTP to the A site causes the bend angle to increase to approximately 60 degrees . We have used this new data to construct two plausible models that might explain how the ternary terminator complex can block DNA replication in a polar manner. In the first model, polarity of action is a consequence of the two RTP-DNA half-sites having different conformations. These different conformations result from different RTP-DNA contacts at each half-site (due to the intrinsic asymmetry of the terminator DNA), as well as interactions (direct or indirect) between the RTP dimers on the DNA. In the second model, polar fork arrest activity is a consequence of the different affinities of RTP for the A and B sites of the terminator DNA, modulated significantly by direct or indirect interactions between the RTP dimers.  相似文献   

15.
The replication terminus region of the Bacillus subtilis chromosome, comprising TerI and TerII plus the rtp gene (referred to as the terC region) was relocated to serC (257 degrees) and cym (10 degrees) on the anticlockwise- and clockwise-replicating segments of the chromosome, respectively. In both cases, it was found that only the orientation of the terC region that placed TerI in opposition to the approaching replication fork was functional in fork arrest. When TerII was opposed to the approaching fork, it was nonfunctional. These findings confirm and extend earlier work which involved relocations to only the clockwise-replicating segment, at metD (100 degrees) and pyr (139 degrees). In the present work, it was further shown that in the strain in which TerII was opposed to an approaching fork at metD, overproduction of the replication terminator protein (RTP) enabled TerII to function as an arrest site. Thus, chromosomal TerII is nonfunctional in arrest in vivo because of a limiting level of RTP. Marker frequency analysis showed that TerI at both cym and metD caused only transient arrest of a replication fork. Arrest appeared to be more severe in the latter situation and caused the two forks to meet at approximately 145 degrees (just outside or on the edge of the replication fork trap). The minimum pause time erected by TerI at metD was calculated to be approximately 40% of the time taken to complete a round of replication. This significant pause at metD caused the cells to become elongated, indicating that cell division was delayed. Further work is needed to establish the immediate cause of the delay in division.  相似文献   

16.
M T Smith  R G Wake 《Gene》1989,85(1):187-192
It was earlier proposed that clockwise replication fork arrest at the chromosome terminus in Bacillus subtilis is dependent upon expression of the rtp gene adjacent to the site of arrest, terC [Smith and Wake, J. Bacteriol. 170 (1988) 4083-4090]. A merodiploid strain of B. subtilis, in which rtp was placed under the control of the IPTG-inducible spac-1 promoter, was constructed. Replication fork arrest at terC, as monitored by the level of a forked DNA molecule of predicted dimensions, was shown to be dependent upon IPTG-induced expression of rtp in this strain. The very low concentration of IPTG needed to induce a substantial level of fork arrest suggests that relatively little RTP, the protein product of rtp, is needed for fork arrest at terC.  相似文献   

17.
The replication terminator protein (RTP) of Bacillus subtilis impedes replication fork movement in a polar mode upon binding as two interacting dimers to each of the replication termini. The mode of interaction of RTP with the terminus DNA is of considerable mechanistic significance because the DNA-protein complex not only localizes the helicase-blocking activity to the terminus, but also generates functional asymmetry from structurally symmetric protein dimers. The functional asymmetry is manifested in the polar impedance of replication fork movement. Although the crystal structure of the apoprotein has been solved, hitherto there was no direct evidence as to which parts of RTP were in contact with the replication terminus. Here we have used a variety of approaches, including saturation mutagenesis, genetic selection for DNA-binding mutants, photo cross-linking, biochemical and functional characterizations of the mutant proteins, and X-ray crystallography, to identify the regions of RTP that are either in direct contact with or are located within 11 angstroms of the replication terminus. The data show that the unstructured N-terminal arm, the alpha3 helix and the beta2 strand are involved in DNA binding. The mapping of amino acids of RTP in contact with DNA, confirms a 'winged helix' DNA-binding motif.  相似文献   

18.
19.
In Bacillus subtilis, the termination of DNA replication via polar fork arrest is effected by a specific protein:DNA complex formed between the replication terminator protein (RTP) and DNA terminator sites. We report the crystal structure of a replication terminator protein homologue (RTP.C110S) of B. subtilis in complex with the high affinity component of one of its cognate DNA termination sites, known as the TerI B-site, refined at 2.5 A resolution. The 21 bp RTP:DNA complex displays marked structural asymmetry in both the homodimeric protein and the DNA. This is in contrast to the previously reported complex formed with a symmetrical TerI B-site homologue. The induced asymmetry is consistent with the complex's solution properties as determined using NMR spectroscopy. Concomitant with this asymmetry is variation in the protein:DNA binding pattern for each of the subunits of the RTP homodimer. It is proposed that the asymmetric "wing" positions, as well as other asymmetrical features of the RTP:DNA complex, are critical for the cooperative binding that underlies the mechanism of polar fork arrest at the complete terminator site.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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