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The plasmid R6K contains three distinct origins of replication: alpha, beta, and gamma. The gamma sequence is essential in cis and acts as an enhancer that activates the distant alpha and beta origins. R6K therefore represents a favorable procaryotic model system with which to unravel the biochemical mechanisms underlying selective origin activation, particularly activation involving distant sites on the same chromosome. We have discovered that plasmids containing the origins alpha and gamma required the Escherichia coli DnaA initiator protein in addition to the R6K-encoded initiator protein, Pi, and other host replisomal proteins for their maintenance in vivo. Plasmids initiating replication from origin beta required only the Pi initiator protein and other host replisomal proteins. We have exploited the differential requirement for the DnaA protein by origins gamma and beta to selectively study and localize the minimal origin beta sequences by deletion analysis as one test of a looping model of origin activation. A 64-bp region spanning the extreme -COOH terminal coding sequence of the Pi protein was found to be essential for replication in vivo in the absence of DnaA protein, consistent with the approximate physical location of the beta origin. Replication emanating from origin beta could be abolished in vivo by deletion of the 9-bp target site for Pi protein-mediated DNA looping between the gamma origin/enhancer and the distant beta origin. Electron microscopy of nascent replication intermediates generated in vivo directly confirmed our genetic localization of the beta origin. Our results strongly suggest that activation of the beta origin by a distant replication enhancer element requires a small target sequence essential for initiator protein-mediated DNA looping.  相似文献   

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A Miron  S Mukherjee    D Bastia 《The EMBO journal》1992,11(3):1205-1216
We have isolated mutants of the pi initiator protein of the plasmid R6K that are defective in DNA looping in vitro but retain their normal DNA binding affinity for the primary binding sites (iterons) at the gamma origin/enhancer. One such looping defective mutant called R6 was determined to be a proline to leucine change at position 46 near the N terminus of the pi protein. Using a set of genetic assays that discriminate between the activation of the gamma origin/enhancer from those of the distantly located alpha and beta origins, we show that the looping defective initiator protein fails to activate the alpha and beta origins but derepresses initiation from the normally silent gamma origin in vivo. The results conclusively prove that DNA looping is required to activate distant replication origins located at distances of up to 3 kb from the replication enhancer.  相似文献   

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Enhancers are regulatory DNA sequences that can work over a large distance. Efficient enhancer action over a distance clearly requires special mechanisms for facilitating communication between the enhancer and its target. While the chromatin looping model can explain the majority of the observations, some recent experimental findings suggest that a chromatin scanning mechanism is used to establish the loop. These new findings help to understand the mechanism of action of the elements that can prevent enhancer-promoter communication (insulators).  相似文献   

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Enhancer-promoter interactions in eukaryotic genomes are often controlled by sequence elements that block the actions of enhancers. Although the experimental evidence suggests that those sequence elements contribute to forming loops of chromatin, the molecular mechanism of how such looping affects the enhancer-blocking activity is still largely unknown. In this article, the roles of DNA looping in enhancer blocking are investigated by numerically simulating the DNA conformation of a prototypical model system of gene regulation. The simulated results show that the enhancer function is indeed blocked when the enhancer is looped out so that it is separated from the promoter, which explains experimental observations of gene expression in the model system. The local structural distortion of DNA caused by looping is important for blocking, so the ability of looping to block enhancers can be lost when the loop length is much larger than the persistence length of the chain.  相似文献   

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The classic model of eukaryotic gene expression requires direct spatial contact between a distal enhancer and a proximal promoter. Recent Chromosome Conformation Capture (3C) studies show that enhancers and promoters are embedded in a complex network of looping interactions. Here we use a polymer model of chromatin fiber to investigate whether, and to what extent, looping interactions between elements in the vicinity of an enhancer-promoter pair can influence their contact frequency. Our equilibrium polymer simulations show that a chromatin loop, formed by elements flanking either an enhancer or a promoter, suppresses enhancer-promoter interactions, working as an insulator. A loop formed by elements located in the region between an enhancer and a promoter, on the contrary, facilitates their interactions. We find that different mechanisms underlie insulation and facilitation; insulation occurs due to steric exclusion by the loop, and is a global effect, while facilitation occurs due to an effective shortening of the enhancer-promoter genomic distance, and is a local effect. Consistently, we find that these effects manifest quite differently for in silico 3C and microscopy. Our results show that looping interactions that do not directly involve an enhancer-promoter pair can nevertheless significantly modulate their interactions. This phenomenon is analogous to allosteric regulation in proteins, where a conformational change triggered by binding of a regulatory molecule to one site affects the state of another site.  相似文献   

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Expression of PRL, a member of the GH family of genes, is restricted to the lactotroph cells of the anterior pituitary. The proximal promoter of the rat PRL (rPRL) gene contains four factor-binding sites. Three nonadjacent elements, footprints (FP) I, III, and IV, are separated by an integral number of helical turns and bind a pituitary-specific factor, LSF-1. FP II binds another factor present in pituitary and nonpituitary cells. The mechanisms by which DNA-bound proteins influence RNA polymerase-II activity over large distances are not fully understood, but protein-protein interactions, with looping of intervening DNA, may bring distant sites into close proximity. Here, we demonstrate, using protein titration studies, that LSF-1 binds to the most proximal FP I element with the highest affinity, whereas it binds the more distal elements, FP III and FP IV, with progressively lower affinities. Time-course and salt-sensitivity studies reveal that binding of LSF-1 to all three pituitary-specific rPRL promoter sites occurs rapidly (less than or equal to 1 min) and requires fairly high salt concentrations (greater than or equal to 300 mM KCl) to destabilize protein-DNA interactions. Moreover, once bound, the pituitary nuclear factor(s) induces a conformational change in rPRL DNA structure with greatly delayed kinetics (greater than 15 min) and at a different salt concentration than are required for simply factor binding. Taken together, these data suggest a model in which LSF-1 initially binds fairly rapidly to multiple nonadjacent elements and then interacts with itself or other DNA-bound proteins much more slowly, possibly looping or bending the rPRL promoter.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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