Regulation of sister chromosome cohesion by the replication fork tracking protein SeqA.

Analogously to chromosome cohesion in eukaryotes, newly replicated DNA in E. coli is held together by inter-sister linkages before partitioning into daughter nucleoids. In both cases, initial joining is apparently mediated by DNA catenation, in which replication-induced positive supercoils diffuse b...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mohan C Joshi, David Magnan, Timothy P Montminy, Mark Lies, Nicholas Stepankiw, David Bates
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS Genetics
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3749930?pdf=render
id doaj-ea32c06fcd5941038325c070631acfa5
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ea32c06fcd5941038325c070631acfa52020-11-25T00:04:43ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Genetics1553-73901553-74042013-01-0198e100367310.1371/journal.pgen.1003673Regulation of sister chromosome cohesion by the replication fork tracking protein SeqA.Mohan C JoshiDavid MagnanTimothy P MontminyMark LiesNicholas StepankiwDavid BatesAnalogously to chromosome cohesion in eukaryotes, newly replicated DNA in E. coli is held together by inter-sister linkages before partitioning into daughter nucleoids. In both cases, initial joining is apparently mediated by DNA catenation, in which replication-induced positive supercoils diffuse behind the fork, causing newly replicated duplexes to twist around each other. Type-II topoisomerase-catalyzed sister separation is delayed by the well-characterized cohesin complex in eukaryotes, but cohesion control in E. coli is not currently understood. We report that the abundant fork tracking protein SeqA is a strong positive regulator of cohesion, and is responsible for markedly prolonged cohesion observed at "snap" loci. Epistasis analysis suggests that SeqA stabilizes cohesion by antagonizing Topo IV-mediated sister resolution, and possibly also by a direct bridging mechanism. We show that variable cohesion observed along the E. coli chromosome is caused by differential SeqA binding, with oriC and snap loci binding disproportionally more SeqA. We propose that SeqA binding results in loose inter-duplex junctions that are resistant to Topo IV cleavage. Lastly, reducing cohesion by genetic manipulation of Topo IV or SeqA resulted in dramatically slowed sister locus separation and poor nucleoid partitioning, indicating that cohesion has a prominent role in chromosome segregation.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3749930?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mohan C Joshi
David Magnan
Timothy P Montminy
Mark Lies
Nicholas Stepankiw
David Bates
spellingShingle Mohan C Joshi
David Magnan
Timothy P Montminy
Mark Lies
Nicholas Stepankiw
David Bates
Regulation of sister chromosome cohesion by the replication fork tracking protein SeqA.
PLoS Genetics
author_facet Mohan C Joshi
David Magnan
Timothy P Montminy
Mark Lies
Nicholas Stepankiw
David Bates
author_sort Mohan C Joshi
title Regulation of sister chromosome cohesion by the replication fork tracking protein SeqA.
title_short Regulation of sister chromosome cohesion by the replication fork tracking protein SeqA.
title_full Regulation of sister chromosome cohesion by the replication fork tracking protein SeqA.
title_fullStr Regulation of sister chromosome cohesion by the replication fork tracking protein SeqA.
title_full_unstemmed Regulation of sister chromosome cohesion by the replication fork tracking protein SeqA.
title_sort regulation of sister chromosome cohesion by the replication fork tracking protein seqa.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Genetics
issn 1553-7390
1553-7404
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Analogously to chromosome cohesion in eukaryotes, newly replicated DNA in E. coli is held together by inter-sister linkages before partitioning into daughter nucleoids. In both cases, initial joining is apparently mediated by DNA catenation, in which replication-induced positive supercoils diffuse behind the fork, causing newly replicated duplexes to twist around each other. Type-II topoisomerase-catalyzed sister separation is delayed by the well-characterized cohesin complex in eukaryotes, but cohesion control in E. coli is not currently understood. We report that the abundant fork tracking protein SeqA is a strong positive regulator of cohesion, and is responsible for markedly prolonged cohesion observed at "snap" loci. Epistasis analysis suggests that SeqA stabilizes cohesion by antagonizing Topo IV-mediated sister resolution, and possibly also by a direct bridging mechanism. We show that variable cohesion observed along the E. coli chromosome is caused by differential SeqA binding, with oriC and snap loci binding disproportionally more SeqA. We propose that SeqA binding results in loose inter-duplex junctions that are resistant to Topo IV cleavage. Lastly, reducing cohesion by genetic manipulation of Topo IV or SeqA resulted in dramatically slowed sister locus separation and poor nucleoid partitioning, indicating that cohesion has a prominent role in chromosome segregation.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3749930?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT mohancjoshi regulationofsisterchromosomecohesionbythereplicationforktrackingproteinseqa
AT davidmagnan regulationofsisterchromosomecohesionbythereplicationforktrackingproteinseqa
AT timothypmontminy regulationofsisterchromosomecohesionbythereplicationforktrackingproteinseqa
AT marklies regulationofsisterchromosomecohesionbythereplicationforktrackingproteinseqa
AT nicholasstepankiw regulationofsisterchromosomecohesionbythereplicationforktrackingproteinseqa
AT davidbates regulationofsisterchromosomecohesionbythereplicationforktrackingproteinseqa
_version_ 1725428241046437888