Autor: |
Odsbu, Ingvild, Klungsøyr, Hege K., Fossum, Solveig, Skarstad, Kirsten |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
Genes to Cells; Nov2005, Vol. 10 Issue 11, p1039-1049, 11p, 3 Diagrams, 2 Charts, 3 Graphs |
Abstrakt: |
The Escherichia coli SeqA protein binds preferentially to hemimethylated DNA and is required for inactivation (sequestration) of newly formed origins. A mutant SeqA protein, SeqA4 (A25T), which is deficient in origin sequestration in vivo, was found here to have lost the ability to form multimers, but could bind as dimers with wild-type affinity to a pair of hemimethylated GATC sites. In vitro, binding of SeqA dimers to a plasmid first generates a topology change equivalent to a few positive supercoils, then the binding leads to a topology change in the “opposite” direction, resulting in a restraint of negative supercoils. Binding of SeqA4 mutant dimers produced the former effect, but not the latter, showing that a topology change equivalent to positive supercoiling is caused by the binding of single dimers, whereas restraint of negative supercoils requires multimerization via the N-terminus. In vivo, mutant SeqA4 protein was not capable of forming foci observed by immunofluorescence microscopy, showing that N-terminus–dependent multimerization is required for building SeqA foci. Overproduction of SeqA4 led to partially restored initiation synchrony, indicating that origin sequestration may not depend on efficient higher-order multimerization into foci, but do require a high local concentration of SeqA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: |
Complementary Index |
Externí odkaz: |
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