Ordered association of helicase loader proteins with the Bacillus subtilis origin of replication in vivo
Open Access
- 13 January 2010
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Molecular Microbiology
- Vol. 75 (2) , 452-461
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2958.2009.06999.x
Abstract
The essential proteins DnaB, DnaD and DnaI of Bacillus subtilis are required for initiation, but not elongation, of DNA replication, and for replication restart at stalled forks. The interactions and functions of these proteins have largely been determined in vitro based on their roles in replication restart. During replication initiation in vivo, it is not known if these proteins, and the replication initiator DnaA, associate with oriC independently of each other by virtue of their DNA binding activities, as a (sub)complex like other loader proteins, or in a particular dependent order. We used temperature-sensitive mutants or a conditional degradation system to inactivate each protein and test for association of the other proteins with oriC in vivo. We found that there was a clear order of stable association with oriC; DnaA, DnaD, DnaB, and finally DnaI-mediated loading of helicase. The loading of helicase via stable intermediates resembles that of eukaryotes and the established hierarchy provides several potential regulatory points. The general approach described here can be used to analyse assembly of other complexes.Keywords
This publication has 65 references indexed in Scilit:
- Structural Synergy and Molecular Crosstalk between Bacterial Helicase Loaders and Replication InitiatorsCell, 2008
- Inducible protein degradation in Bacillus subtilis using heterologous peptide tags and adaptor proteins to target substrates to the protease ClpXPMolecular Microbiology, 2008
- Orc6 is required for dynamic recruitment of Cdt1 during repeated Mcm2–7 loadingGenes & Development, 2007
- The interaction of DiaA and DnaA regulates the replication cycle in E. coli by directly promoting ATP–DnaA-specific initiation complexesGenes & Development, 2007
- Nutritional Control of Elongation of DNA Replication by (p)ppGppCell, 2007
- Helicase binding to DnaI exposes a cryptic DNA-binding site during helicase loading in Bacillus subtilisNucleic Acids Research, 2006
- TheBacillus subtilisPrimosomal Protein DnaD Untwists Supercoiled DNAJournal of Bacteriology, 2006
- Sequential ATP Hydrolysis by Cdc6 and ORC Directs Loading of the Mcm2-7 HelicaseMolecular Cell, 2006
- ATPase-dependent cooperative binding of ORC and Cdc6 to origin DNANature Structural & Molecular Biology, 2005
- ATP Hydrolysis by ORC Catalyzes Reiterative Mcm2-7 Assembly at a Defined Origin of ReplicationMolecular Cell, 2004