| Literature DB >> 28191853 |
Aleksandre Japaridze1, Georgi Muskhelishvili2,3, Fabrizio Benedetti4,5, Agni F M Gavriilidou6, Renato Zenobi6, Paolo De Los Rios5,7, Giovanni Longo1,8, Giovanni Dietler1.
Abstract
Bacterial chromosome has a compact structure that dynamically changes its shape in response to bacterial growth rate and growth phase. Determining how chromatin remains accessible to DNA binding proteins, and transcription machinery is crucial to understand the link between genetic regulation, DNA structure, and topology. Here, we study very large supercoiled dsDNA using high-resolution characterization, theoretical modeling, and molecular dynamics calculations. We unveil a new type of highly ordered DNA organization forming in the presence of attractive DNA-DNA interactions, which we call hyperplectonemes. We demonstrate that their formation depends on DNA size, supercoiling, and bacterial physiology. We compare structural, nanomechanic, and dynamic properties of hyperplectonemes bound by three highly abundant nucleoid-associated proteins (FIS, H-NS, and HU). In all these cases, the negative supercoiling of DNA determines molecular dynamics, modulating their 3D shape. Overall, our findings provide a mechanistic insight into the critical role of DNA topology in genetic regulation.Entities:
Keywords: DNA; FIS; H-NS; HU; nucleoid associated proteins; plectonemes; self-organization; supercoiling
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28191853 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b05294
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189