Literature DB >> 33504660

Single-Molecule Dynamics at a Bacterial Replication Fork after Nutritional Downshift or Chemically Induced Block in Replication.

Rogelio Hernández-Tamayo1,2, Hannah Schmitz3,2, Peter L Graumann1,2.   

Abstract

Replication forks must respond to changes in nutrient conditions, especially in bacterial cells. By investigating the single-molecule dynamics of replicative helicase DnaC, DNA primase DnaG, and lagging-strand polymerase DnaE in the model bacterium Bacillus subtilis, we show that proteins react differently to stress conditions in response to transient replication blocks due to DNA damage, to inhibition of the replicative polymerase, or to downshift of serine availability. DnaG appears to be recruited to the forks by a diffusion and capture mechanism, becomes more statically associated after the arrest of polymerase, but binds less frequently after fork blocks due to DNA damage or to nutritional downshift. These results indicate that binding of the alarmone (p)ppGpp due to stringent response prevents DnaG from binding to forks rather than blocking bound primase. Dissimilar behavior of DnaG and DnaE suggests that both proteins are recruited independently to the forks rather than jointly. Turnover of all three proteins was increased during replication block after nutritional downshift, different from the situation due to DNA damage or polymerase inhibition, showing high plasticity of forks in response to different stress conditions. Forks persisted during all stress conditions, apparently ensuring rapid return to replication extension.IMPORTANCE All cells need to adjust DNA replication, which is achieved by a well-orchestrated multiprotein complex, in response to changes in physiological and environmental conditions. For replication forks, it is extremely challenging to meet with conditions where amino acids are rapidly depleted from cells, called the stringent response, to deal with the inhibition of one of the centrally involved proteins or with DNA modifications that arrest the progression of forks. By tracking helicase (DnaC), primase (DnaG), and polymerase (DnaE), central proteins of Bacillus subtilis replication forks, at a single molecule level in real time, we found that interactions of the three proteins with replication forks change in different manners under different stress conditions, revealing an intriguing plasticity of replication forks in dealing with replication obstacles. We have devised a new tool to determine rates of exchange between static movement (binding to a much larger complex) and free diffusion, showing that during stringent response, all proteins have highly increased exchange rates, slowing down overall replication, while inactivation of polymerase or replication roadblocks leaves forks largely intact, allowing rapid restart once obstacles are removed.
Copyright © 2021 Hernández-Tamayo et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bacillus subtilis; DNA helicase; DNA polymerase; DNA primase; DNA replication; helicase; replication; single-molecule microscopy; single-molecule tracking; stringent response

Year:  2021        PMID: 33504660      PMCID: PMC7885319          DOI: 10.1128/mSphere.00948-20

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  mSphere        ISSN: 2379-5042            Impact factor:   4.389


  57 in total

1.  The replication checkpoint control in Bacillus subtilis: identification of a novel RTP-binding sequence essential for the replication fork arrest after induction of the stringent response.

Authors:  S Autret; A Levine; F Vannier; Y Fujita; S J Séror
Journal:  Mol Microbiol       Date:  1999-03       Impact factor: 3.501

Review 2.  Regulating DNA replication in eukarya.

Authors:  Khalid Siddiqui; Kin Fan On; John F X Diffley
Journal:  Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol       Date:  2013-09-01       Impact factor: 10.005

3.  Optimal estimation of diffusion coefficients from single-particle trajectories.

Authors:  Christian L Vestergaard; Paul C Blainey; Henrik Flyvbjerg
Journal:  Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys       Date:  2014-02-28

4.  Bacillus subtilis RarA acts at the interplay between replication and repair-by-recombination.

Authors:  Hector Romero; Rubén Torres; Rogelio Hernández-Tamayo; Begoña Carrasco; Silvia Ayora; Peter L Graumann; Juan C Alonso
Journal:  DNA Repair (Amst)       Date:  2019-03-21

5.  TrackMate: An open and extensible platform for single-particle tracking.

Authors:  Jean-Yves Tinevez; Nick Perry; Johannes Schindelin; Genevieve M Hoopes; Gregory D Reynolds; Emmanuel Laplantine; Sebastian Y Bednarek; Spencer L Shorte; Kevin W Eliceiri
Journal:  Methods       Date:  2016-10-03       Impact factor: 3.608

6.  High-throughput, subpixel precision analysis of bacterial morphogenesis and intracellular spatio-temporal dynamics.

Authors:  Oleksii Sliusarenko; Jennifer Heinritz; Thierry Emonet; Christine Jacobs-Wagner
Journal:  Mol Microbiol       Date:  2011-03-17       Impact factor: 3.501

7.  Stoichiometry and architecture of active DNA replication machinery in Escherichia coli.

Authors:  Rodrigo Reyes-Lamothe; David J Sherratt; Mark C Leake
Journal:  Science       Date:  2010-04-23       Impact factor: 47.728

8.  Binding mechanism of metal⋅NTP substrates and stringent-response alarmones to bacterial DnaG-type primases.

Authors:  Richard U Rymer; Francisco A Solorio; Ashley K Tehranchi; Clement Chu; Jacob E Corn; James L Keck; Jue D Wang; James M Berger
Journal:  Structure       Date:  2012-07-12       Impact factor: 5.006

Review 9.  Recent functional insights into the role of (p)ppGpp in bacterial physiology.

Authors:  Vasili Hauryliuk; Gemma C Atkinson; Katsuhiko S Murakami; Tanel Tenson; Kenn Gerdes
Journal:  Nat Rev Microbiol       Date:  2015-04-08       Impact factor: 60.633

10.  Microdomain formation is a general property of bacterial membrane proteins and induces heterogeneity of diffusion patterns.

Authors:  Daniella Lucena; Marco Mauri; Felix Schmidt; Bruno Eckhardt; Peter L Graumann
Journal:  BMC Biol       Date:  2018-09-03       Impact factor: 7.431

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  3 in total

1.  The Alarmone (p)ppGpp Regulates Primer Extension by Bacterial Primase.

Authors:  Christina N Giramma; McKenna B DeFoer; Jue D Wang
Journal:  J Mol Biol       Date:  2021-08-10       Impact factor: 6.151

2.  Characterization of the self-targeting Type IV CRISPR interference system in Pseudomonas oleovorans.

Authors:  Xiaohan Guo; Mariana Sanchez-Londono; José Vicente Gomes-Filho; Rogelio Hernandez-Tamayo; Selina Rust; Leah M Immelmann; Pascal Schäfer; Julia Wiegel; Peter L Graumann; Lennart Randau
Journal:  Nat Microbiol       Date:  2022-09-29       Impact factor: 30.964

3.  Subcellular Dynamics of a Conserved Bacterial Polar Scaffold Protein.

Authors:  Giacomo Giacomelli; Helge Feddersen; Feng Peng; Gustavo Benevides Martins; Manuela Grafemeyer; Fabian Meyer; Benjamin Mayer; Peter L Graumann; Marc Bramkamp
Journal:  Genes (Basel)       Date:  2022-01-30       Impact factor: 4.096

  3 in total

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