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The atypical response regulator HP1021 controls formation of the Helicobacter pylori replication initiation complex
Authors:Rafał Donczew  Łukasz Makowski  Paweł Jaworski  Martyna Bezulska  Małgorzata Nowaczyk  Jolanta Zakrzewska‐Czerwińska  Anna Zawilak‐Pawlik
Affiliation:1. Department of Microbiology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Institute of Immunology and Experimental Therapy, Wroc?aw, Poland;2. Faculty of Biotechnology, University of Wroc?aw, Wroc?aw, Poland
Abstract:The replication of a bacterial chromosome is initiated by the DnaA protein, which binds to the specific chromosomal region oriC and unwinds duplex DNA within the DNA‐unwinding element (DUE). The initiation is tightly regulated by many factors, which control either DnaA or oriC activity and ensure that the chromosome is duplicated only when the conditions favor the survival of daughter cells. The factors controlling oriC activity often belong to the protein families of two‐component systems. Here, we found that Helicobacter pylori oriC activity is controlled by HP1021, a member of the atypical response regulator family. HP1021 protein specifically interacts with H. pylori oriC at HP1021 boxes (5′‐TGTT[TA]C[TA]‐3′), which overlap with three modules important for oriC function: DnaA boxes, the hypersensitivity (hs) region and the DUE. Consequently, HP1021 binding to oriC precludes DnaA‐oriC interactions and inhibits DNA unwinding at the DUE. Thus, HP1021 constitutes a negative regulator of the H. pylori orisome assembly in vitro. Furthermore, HP1021 boxes were found upstream of at least 70 genes, including those encoding CagA and Fur proteins. We postulate that HP1021 might coordinate chromosome replication, and thus bacterial growth, with other cellular processes and conditions in the human stomach.
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