The coordinated replication of Vibrio cholerae's two chromosomes required the acquisition of a unique domain by the RctB initiator.

Nucleic Acids Res

Institut Pasteur, Université de Paris, Unité Plasticité du Génome Bactérien, Département Génomes et Génétique, Paris 75015, France.

Published: November 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Vibrio cholerae, the bacterium causing cholera, has two chromosomes that replicate in a coordinated manner, with Chr2 replication initiated only after a specific site on Chr1 is replicated.
  • - The protein RctB plays a key role in this process, functioning as an initiator at one binding site and as a repressor at another, but the exact mechanism connecting RctB to the replication signal from Chr1 is not completely understood.
  • - This study reveals that the crtS site on Chr1 prevents repression of Chr2 initiation by blocking the 39m sites on Chr2, and highlights the importance of a specific part of the RctB protein that is conserved in Vibrio but not in other

Article Abstract

Vibrio cholerae, the pathogenic bacterium that causes cholera, has two chromosomes (Chr1, Chr2) that replicate in a well-orchestrated sequence. Chr2 initiation is triggered only after the replication of the crtS site on Chr1. The initiator of Chr2 replication, RctB, displays activities corresponding with its different binding sites: initiator at the iteron sites, repressor at the 39m sites, and trigger at the crtS site. The mechanism by which RctB relays the signal to initiate Chr2 replication from crtS is not well-understood. In this study, we provide new insights into how Chr2 replication initiation is regulated by crtS via RctB. We show that crtS (on Chr1) acts as an anti-inhibitory site by preventing 39m sites (on Chr2) from repressing initiation. The competition between these two sites for RctB binding is explained by the fact that RctB interacts with crtS and 39m via the same DNA-binding surface. We further show that the extreme C-terminal tail of RctB, essential for RctB self-interaction, is crucial for the control exerted by crtS. This subregion of RctB is conserved in all Vibrio, but absent in other Rep-like initiators. Hence, the coordinated replication of both chromosomes likely results from the acquisition of this unique domain by RctB.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8565311PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkab903DOI Listing

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