Bacterial Replication Termination

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====RTP Mechanism of Action====
====RTP Mechanism of Action====
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An RTP dimer binds the core sequence and the complex formed allows a second dimer to cooperatively to bind to the auxiliary site [5]. In the absence of a core site, the auxiliary site is unable to bind RTP [5]. Furthermore, without the auxiliary site, RTP is unable to block the replication fork, as the interaction of both dimers has been suggested to provide enough DNA binding strength to displace the replication fork [5]. This binding explains how the symmetrical RTP can block replication helicase machinery in an asymmetric manner. The blocking end occurs at the core site, while it is believed that the non-blocking auxiliary site may let replication through as there is less contact points of the dimer to the DNA and the replication machinery coming from this direction is predicted to displace the dimer that is weakly bound to the auxiliary site, which would then displace the dimer bound to the core [5]. Biochemical and mutational studies have identified particular residues that are vital for the functionality of RTP. Mutations within a hydrophobic region at residues Glu-30 and Tyr-33 causes the loss of contrahelicase ability [1]. These mutations do not affect dimer-dimer interactions or DNA binding activity and indicate that simple DNA binding is not able to block the replication fork. This provided evidence that RTP and the replication fork machinery interact specifically [1].</StructureSection>
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An RTP dimer binds the core sequence and the complex formed allows a second dimer to cooperatively to bind to the auxiliary site [5]. In the absence of a core site, the auxiliary site is unable to bind RTP [5]. Furthermore, without the auxiliary site, RTP is unable to block the replication fork, as the interaction of both dimers has been suggested to provide enough DNA binding strength to displace the replication fork [5]. This binding explains how the symmetrical RTP can block replication helicase machinery in an asymmetric manner. The blocking end occurs at the core site, while it is believed that the non-blocking auxiliary site may let replication through as there is less contact points of the dimer to the DNA and the replication machinery coming from this direction is predicted to displace the dimer that is weakly bound to the auxiliary site, which would then displace the dimer bound to the core [5]. Biochemical and mutational studies have identified particular residues that are vital for the functionality of RTP. Mutations within a hydrophobic region at residues Glu-30 and Tyr-33 causes the loss of contrahelicase ability [1]. These mutations do not affect dimer-dimer interactions or DNA binding activity and indicate that simple DNA binding is not able to block the replication fork. This provided evidence that RTP and the replication fork machinery interact specifically [1].
==The Terminus Utilization Substance (''Escherichia coli'' )==
==The Terminus Utilization Substance (''Escherichia coli'' )==
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Interestingly, RTP has been found to arrest replication in ''E.coli'' when bound to ''E. coli'' specific''ter'' sequences. This suggests that the Tus-''ter'' complex provides a physical barrier that is not specific to the replication fork [12]. However there is some evidence to suggest that RTP specifically recognizes the ''E.coli''DnaB helicase allowing it to functionally block replicative progression, and that Tus may act similarly [14]. Mutational analysis a contrahelicase region has shown that mutations within these regions abolish RTP's ability to arrest DnaB. This indicates that protein-protein interactions occur between these two proteins, and further structural analysis has identified that these amino acid region interacts with a hinge region on DnB helicase. These reports mean that specific surfaces of the termination proteins, RTP and Tus, could be recognizing the identical or variable surfaces of the helicases [13].
Interestingly, RTP has been found to arrest replication in ''E.coli'' when bound to ''E. coli'' specific''ter'' sequences. This suggests that the Tus-''ter'' complex provides a physical barrier that is not specific to the replication fork [12]. However there is some evidence to suggest that RTP specifically recognizes the ''E.coli''DnaB helicase allowing it to functionally block replicative progression, and that Tus may act similarly [14]. Mutational analysis a contrahelicase region has shown that mutations within these regions abolish RTP's ability to arrest DnaB. This indicates that protein-protein interactions occur between these two proteins, and further structural analysis has identified that these amino acid region interacts with a hinge region on DnB helicase. These reports mean that specific surfaces of the termination proteins, RTP and Tus, could be recognizing the identical or variable surfaces of the helicases [13].
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</StructureSection>
 
==Biological Significance==
==Biological Significance==
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As most genes are orientated towards the terminus, from the origin, if replication is not arrested, it progresses into regions being actively transcribed and collides into the transcription RNA polymerase [11]. It is also suggested that termination may occur by specific "''dif''" sites; conserved sites that are located near the terminus region that are involved in homologous recombination [15]. In fact the ''dif''-terminus hypothesis proposes that termination occurs at or near these sites, where after termination of the replication forks, the two recombinases, XerC and XerD (proteins originating from ''E.coli''), cause site-specific recombination at these ''dif''-sites, and that this would resolve the concatenated chromosomes and complete replication [15]. This mechanism implies that this replication termination by RTP and Tus proteins is merely advantageous to the bacteria and not necessary [15].
As most genes are orientated towards the terminus, from the origin, if replication is not arrested, it progresses into regions being actively transcribed and collides into the transcription RNA polymerase [11]. It is also suggested that termination may occur by specific "''dif''" sites; conserved sites that are located near the terminus region that are involved in homologous recombination [15]. In fact the ''dif''-terminus hypothesis proposes that termination occurs at or near these sites, where after termination of the replication forks, the two recombinases, XerC and XerD (proteins originating from ''E.coli''), cause site-specific recombination at these ''dif''-sites, and that this would resolve the concatenated chromosomes and complete replication [15]. This mechanism implies that this replication termination by RTP and Tus proteins is merely advantageous to the bacteria and not necessary [15].
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</StructureSection>
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__NOTOC__
==References==
==References==

Revision as of 11:16, 12 September 2013

The Replication Terminator Protein (RTP) complexed to it's ter site 1f4k

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate


References

[1] Bussiere D, Bastia D. (1999). Termination of DNA replication of bacterial and plasmid chromosomes. Molecular microbiology 31: 1611-1618

[2] Rothstein R, Michel B, Gangloff S. (2000). Replication fork pausing and recombination or “gimme a break”. Genes and development 14: 1-10

[3] Yuen D. (2007) Circular Bacterial Chromosome. Available (online): http://www.territorioscuola.com/wikipedia/en.wikipedia.php?title=Circular_bacterial_chromosome Viewed: 22.5.11.

[4] Mulcair M. D, Schaeffer P. M, Oakley A. J, Cross H.F, Neylon C, Hill T. M, Dixon1 N.E. (2006) A Molecular Mousetrap Determines Polarity of Termination of DNA Replication in E. coli. Cell 125: 1309–1319

[5] Wilce J, A. Wake G, King G. (2001). Termination of replication in bacteria. Encyclopedia of life sciences.

[6] Duggin I, Bell S. (2009) Termination Structures in the Escherichia coli Chromosome Replication Fork Trap. Journal of molecular biology 387: 532-539

[7] Bussiere D, Bastia D, White S. (1995). Crystal structure of the replication terminator protein from B.subtillis at 2.6 A. Cell 80: 651-660

[8] Wilce J, Vivian J, Hastings A, Otting G, Folmer R, Duggin I, Wake R, Wilce M (2001) Structure of the RTP-DNA complex and the mechanism of polar replication fork arrest. Nature structural biology 8: 206-210

[9] Mulugu S, Potnis A, Shamsuzzaman, Tailor J, Alexander K, Bastia D (2001) Mechanism of termination of DNA replication of Escherichia coli involves helicase-contrahelicase interaction. PNAS 98: 9569-9574

[10] Neylon C, Kralicek A, Hill T, Dixon N. (2005) Replication termination in Escherichia coli: structure and anithelicase activity of the Tus-Ter complex. Microbiology and molecular biology reviews. 69: 501-526

[11] Duggin I, Wake G, Bell S, Hill T. (2008) The replication fork trap and termination of chromosome. Molecular microbiology 70: 1323-1333

[12] Komada K, Horiuchi T, Ohsumi K, Shimamoto N, Morikawa K. (1996) Structure of a replication terminator protein complexed with DNA. Nature 383: 598-603

[13] Wake R, King G. (1997) A tale of two terminators of two terminators: crystal structures sharpen the debate on DNA replication fork arrest mechanisms. Structure 5: 1-5

[14] Manna A, Karnire P. S, Dirksen E, Bussreie C, White S, Bastia D. (1996) Helicase-Contrahelicase interaction and the mechanism of termination of DNA replication. Cell 87:881-891

[15] Carnoy C, Roten C. (2009). The dif/Xer recombination systems in proteobacteria. , PLOS ONE 4(9): e6531. doi:10.1371

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