Mechanisms for Chromosome and Plasmid Segregation
- 1 June 2006
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Biochemistry
- Vol. 75 (1) , 211-241
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.biochem.75.101304.124037
Abstract
The fundamental problems in duplicating and transmitting genetic information posed by the geometric and topological features of DNA, combined with its large size, are qualitatively similar for prokaryotic and eukaryotic chromosomes. The evolutionary solutions to these problems reveal common themes. However, depending on differences in their organization, ploidy, and copy number, chromosomes and plasmids display distinct segregation strategies as well. In bacteria, chromosome duplication, likely mediated by a stationary replication factory, is accompanied by rapid, directed migration of the daughter duplexes with assistance from DNA-compacting and perhaps translocating proteins. The segregation of unit-copy or low-copy bacterial plasmids is also regulated spatially and temporally by their respective partitioning systems. Eukaryotic chromosomes utilize variations of a basic pairing and unpairing mechanism for faithful segregation during mitosis and meiosis. Rather surprisingly, the yeast plasmid 2-micron circle also resorts to a similar scheme for equal partitioning during mitosis.Keywords
This publication has 99 references indexed in Scilit:
- How Do so Few Control so Many?Published by Elsevier ,2005
- Spo13 Facilitates Monopolin Recruitment to Kinetochores and Regulates Maintenance of Centromeric Cohesion during Yeast MeiosisCurrent Biology, 2004
- Checking on DNA damage in S phaseNature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2004
- Maintenance of Cohesin at Centromeres after Meiosis I in Budding Yeast Requires a Kinetochore-Associated Protein Related to MEI-S332Current Biology, 2004
- The conserved kinetochore protein shugoshin protects centromeric cohesion during meiosisNature, 2004
- Kinetochore Recruitment of Two Nucleolar Proteins Is Required for Homolog Segregation in Meiosis IDevelopmental Cell, 2003
- Dynamic proteins in bacteriaCurrent Opinion in Microbiology, 2002
- The spindle checkpoint: structural insights into dynamic signallingNature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2002
- The F plasmid centromere, sopC , is required for full repression of the sopAB operon 1 1Edited by I. B. HollandJournal of Molecular Biology, 1999
- Copy number amplification of the 2 μm circle plasmid of Saccharomyces cerevisiaeJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1986