The Stringent Response Inhibits DNA Replication Initiation in E. coli by Modulating Supercoiling of oriC

To survive bouts of starvation, cells must inhibit DNA replication. In bacteria, starvation triggers production of a signaling molecule called ppGpp (guanosine tetraphosphate) that helps reprogram cellular physiology, including inhibiting new rounds of DNA replication. While ppGpp has been known to...

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Main Authors: James A. Kraemer, Allen G. Sanderlin, Michael T. Laub
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2019-07-01
Series:mBio
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01330-19
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spelling doaj-713b5c27898f493e8dae8f4968d93ebc2021-07-02T09:46:31ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologymBio2150-75112019-07-01104e01330-1910.1128/mBio.01330-19The Stringent Response Inhibits DNA Replication Initiation in E. coli by Modulating Supercoiling of oriCJames A. KraemerAllen G. SanderlinMichael T. LaubTo survive bouts of starvation, cells must inhibit DNA replication. In bacteria, starvation triggers production of a signaling molecule called ppGpp (guanosine tetraphosphate) that helps reprogram cellular physiology, including inhibiting new rounds of DNA replication. While ppGpp has been known to block replication initiation in Escherichia coli for decades, the mechanism responsible was unknown. Early work suggested that ppGpp drives a decrease in levels of the replication initiator protein DnaA. However, we found that this decrease is not necessary to block replication initiation. Instead, we demonstrate that ppGpp leads to a change in DNA topology that prevents initiation. ppGpp is known to inhibit bulk transcription, which normally introduces negative supercoils into the chromosome, and negative supercoils near the origin of replication help drive its unwinding, leading to replication initiation. Thus, the accumulation of ppGpp prevents replication initiation by blocking the introduction of initiation-promoting negative supercoils. This mechanism is likely conserved throughout proteobacteria.The stringent response enables bacteria to respond to a variety of environmental stresses, especially various forms of nutrient limitation. During the stringent response, the cell produces large quantities of the nucleotide alarmone ppGpp, which modulates many aspects of cell physiology, including reprogramming transcription, blocking protein translation, and inhibiting new rounds of DNA replication. The mechanism by which ppGpp inhibits DNA replication initiation in Escherichia coli remains unclear. Prior work suggested that ppGpp blocks new rounds of replication by inhibiting transcription of the essential initiation factor dnaA, but we found that replication is still inhibited by ppGpp in cells ectopically producing DnaA. Instead, we provide evidence that a global reduction of transcription by ppGpp prevents replication initiation by modulating the supercoiling state of the origin of replication, oriC. Active transcription normally introduces negative supercoils into oriC to help promote replication initiation, so the accumulation of ppGpp reduces initiation potential at oriC by reducing transcription. We find that maintaining transcription near oriC, either by expressing a ppGpp-blind RNA polymerase mutant or by inducing transcription from a ppGpp-insensitive promoter, can strongly bypass the inhibition of replication by ppGpp. Additionally, we show that increasing global negative supercoiling by inhibiting topoisomerase I or by deleting the nucleoid-associated protein gene seqA also relieves inhibition. We propose a model, potentially conserved across proteobacteria, in which ppGpp indirectly creates an unfavorable energy landscape for initiation by limiting the introduction of negative supercoils into oriC.https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01330-19dna topologydnaappgppreplication initiationstringent response
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James A. Kraemer
Allen G. Sanderlin
Michael T. Laub
spellingShingle James A. Kraemer
Allen G. Sanderlin
Michael T. Laub
The Stringent Response Inhibits DNA Replication Initiation in E. coli by Modulating Supercoiling of oriC
mBio
dna topology
dnaa
ppgpp
replication initiation
stringent response
author_facet James A. Kraemer
Allen G. Sanderlin
Michael T. Laub
author_sort James A. Kraemer
title The Stringent Response Inhibits DNA Replication Initiation in E. coli by Modulating Supercoiling of oriC
title_short The Stringent Response Inhibits DNA Replication Initiation in E. coli by Modulating Supercoiling of oriC
title_full The Stringent Response Inhibits DNA Replication Initiation in E. coli by Modulating Supercoiling of oriC
title_fullStr The Stringent Response Inhibits DNA Replication Initiation in E. coli by Modulating Supercoiling of oriC
title_full_unstemmed The Stringent Response Inhibits DNA Replication Initiation in E. coli by Modulating Supercoiling of oriC
title_sort stringent response inhibits dna replication initiation in e. coli by modulating supercoiling of oric
publisher American Society for Microbiology
series mBio
issn 2150-7511
publishDate 2019-07-01
description To survive bouts of starvation, cells must inhibit DNA replication. In bacteria, starvation triggers production of a signaling molecule called ppGpp (guanosine tetraphosphate) that helps reprogram cellular physiology, including inhibiting new rounds of DNA replication. While ppGpp has been known to block replication initiation in Escherichia coli for decades, the mechanism responsible was unknown. Early work suggested that ppGpp drives a decrease in levels of the replication initiator protein DnaA. However, we found that this decrease is not necessary to block replication initiation. Instead, we demonstrate that ppGpp leads to a change in DNA topology that prevents initiation. ppGpp is known to inhibit bulk transcription, which normally introduces negative supercoils into the chromosome, and negative supercoils near the origin of replication help drive its unwinding, leading to replication initiation. Thus, the accumulation of ppGpp prevents replication initiation by blocking the introduction of initiation-promoting negative supercoils. This mechanism is likely conserved throughout proteobacteria.The stringent response enables bacteria to respond to a variety of environmental stresses, especially various forms of nutrient limitation. During the stringent response, the cell produces large quantities of the nucleotide alarmone ppGpp, which modulates many aspects of cell physiology, including reprogramming transcription, blocking protein translation, and inhibiting new rounds of DNA replication. The mechanism by which ppGpp inhibits DNA replication initiation in Escherichia coli remains unclear. Prior work suggested that ppGpp blocks new rounds of replication by inhibiting transcription of the essential initiation factor dnaA, but we found that replication is still inhibited by ppGpp in cells ectopically producing DnaA. Instead, we provide evidence that a global reduction of transcription by ppGpp prevents replication initiation by modulating the supercoiling state of the origin of replication, oriC. Active transcription normally introduces negative supercoils into oriC to help promote replication initiation, so the accumulation of ppGpp reduces initiation potential at oriC by reducing transcription. We find that maintaining transcription near oriC, either by expressing a ppGpp-blind RNA polymerase mutant or by inducing transcription from a ppGpp-insensitive promoter, can strongly bypass the inhibition of replication by ppGpp. Additionally, we show that increasing global negative supercoiling by inhibiting topoisomerase I or by deleting the nucleoid-associated protein gene seqA also relieves inhibition. We propose a model, potentially conserved across proteobacteria, in which ppGpp indirectly creates an unfavorable energy landscape for initiation by limiting the introduction of negative supercoils into oriC.
topic dna topology
dnaa
ppgpp
replication initiation
stringent response
url https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01330-19
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