Bacterial Replication Termination

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[[Image:Bidirectionalrep2.jpg | thumb | right | 500px | Bacterial replication fork [3]]]
[[Image:Bidirectionalrep2.jpg | thumb | right | 500px | Bacterial replication fork [3]]]
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==Termination (''ter'') Sites==
==Termination (''ter'') Sites==
[[Image:Ecoli ter consensus.png | thumb | left | 350px | ''E. coli ter'' consensus [4]]]
[[Image:Ecoli ter consensus.png | thumb | left | 350px | ''E. coli ter'' consensus [4]]]
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Replication is terminated in bacterial systems such as ''E.coli'' and ''B.subtilis'' by a "replication fork trap", studded with termination sites which causes the bidirectional forks to pause, encounter and fuse within a region called the terminus region [5]. In ''E.coli'' the termination regions are spread across nearly half the chromosome compared to ''B.subtilis'' where they cover only ~10%. In ''E.coli'' the 5 ''ter'' sites, J, G, F, B and C are arranged opposed to ''ter'' sites H, I, E, D and A, and can arrest the fork progressing in the clockwise direction and can block the anticlockwise direction, respectively [5]. The replication fork progressing in a clockwise direction will encounter the ''terC'' site first and pause. If the fork progressing from the anticlockwise direction meets the clockwise fork while paused, replication is terminated, however if it does not meet its anti-fork it will proceed until it reaches the next termination site, ''terB'', where it will pause again, etc [5]. Therefore multiple ''ter'' sites are important as infrequently utilized backups, to ensure that the fork does not leave the terminus region, and that termination is completed. Multiple regions to entrap the replication fork means that if an inactivating mutation arises within a ''ter'' site, then arrest can still occur at another ''ter'' sequence [6].
Replication is terminated in bacterial systems such as ''E.coli'' and ''B.subtilis'' by a "replication fork trap", studded with termination sites which causes the bidirectional forks to pause, encounter and fuse within a region called the terminus region [5]. In ''E.coli'' the termination regions are spread across nearly half the chromosome compared to ''B.subtilis'' where they cover only ~10%. In ''E.coli'' the 5 ''ter'' sites, J, G, F, B and C are arranged opposed to ''ter'' sites H, I, E, D and A, and can arrest the fork progressing in the clockwise direction and can block the anticlockwise direction, respectively [5]. The replication fork progressing in a clockwise direction will encounter the ''terC'' site first and pause. If the fork progressing from the anticlockwise direction meets the clockwise fork while paused, replication is terminated, however if it does not meet its anti-fork it will proceed until it reaches the next termination site, ''terB'', where it will pause again, etc [5]. Therefore multiple ''ter'' sites are important as infrequently utilized backups, to ensure that the fork does not leave the terminus region, and that termination is completed. Multiple regions to entrap the replication fork means that if an inactivating mutation arises within a ''ter'' site, then arrest can still occur at another ''ter'' sequence [6].

Revision as of 09:21, 3 December 2014

PDB ID 2ewj

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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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