학술논문

The role of Helicobacter pylori DnaA domain I in orisome assembly on a bipartite origin of chromosome replication.
Document Type
Article
Source
Molecular Microbiology. Feb2020, Vol. 113 Issue 2, p338-355. 18p. 5 Illustrations, 3 Diagrams, 1 Chart, 1 Graph.
Subject
*CHROMOSOME replication
*HELICOBACTER pylori
*DNA denaturation
*PROTEIN binding
Language
ISSN
0950-382X
Abstract
The main roles of the DnaA protein are to bind the origin of chromosome replication (oriC), to unwind DNA and to provide a hub for the step‐wise assembly of a replisome. DnaA is composed of four domains, with each playing a distinct functional role in the orisome assembly. Out of the four domains, the role of domain I is the least understood and appears to be the most species‐specific. To better characterise Helicobacter pylori DnaA domain I, we have constructed a series of DnaA variants and studied their interactions with H. pylori bipartite oriC. We show that domain I is responsible for the stabilisation and organisation of DnaA‐oriC complexes and provides cooperativity in DnaA–DNA interactions. Domain I mediates cross‐interactions between oriC subcomplexes, which indicates that domain I is important for long‐distance DnaA interactions and is essential for orisosme assembly on bipartite origins. HobA, which interacts with domain I, increases the DnaA binding to bipartite oriC; however, it does not stimulate but rather inhibits DNA unwinding. This suggests that HobA helps DnaA to bind oriC, but an unknown factor triggers DNA unwinding. Together, our results indicate that domain I self‐interaction is important for the DnaA assembly on bipartite H. pylori oriC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]