SYNMIKRO, LOEWE Center for Synthetic Microbiology, Marburg, Germany
Department of Chemistry, Philipps Universität Marburg, Marburg, Germany.
mSphere. 2021 Jan 27;6(1):e00948-20. doi: 10.1128/mSphere.00948-20.
Replication forks must respond to changes in nutrient conditions, especially in bacterial cells. By investigating the single-molecule dynamics of replicative helicase DnaC, DNA primase DnaG, and lagging-strand polymerase DnaE in the model bacterium , we show that proteins react differently to stress conditions in response to transient replication blocks due to DNA damage, to inhibition of the replicative polymerase, or to downshift of serine availability. DnaG appears to be recruited to the forks by a diffusion and capture mechanism, becomes more statically associated after the arrest of polymerase, but binds less frequently after fork blocks due to DNA damage or to nutritional downshift. These results indicate that binding of the alarmone (p)ppGpp due to stringent response prevents DnaG from binding to forks rather than blocking bound primase. Dissimilar behavior of DnaG and DnaE suggests that both proteins are recruited independently to the forks rather than jointly. Turnover of all three proteins was increased during replication block after nutritional downshift, different from the situation due to DNA damage or polymerase inhibition, showing high plasticity of forks in response to different stress conditions. Forks persisted during all stress conditions, apparently ensuring rapid return to replication extension. All cells need to adjust DNA replication, which is achieved by a well-orchestrated multiprotein complex, in response to changes in physiological and environmental conditions. For replication forks, it is extremely challenging to meet with conditions where amino acids are rapidly depleted from cells, called the stringent response, to deal with the inhibition of one of the centrally involved proteins or with DNA modifications that arrest the progression of forks. By tracking helicase (DnaC), primase (DnaG), and polymerase (DnaE), central proteins of replication forks, at a single molecule level in real time, we found that interactions of the three proteins with replication forks change in different manners under different stress conditions, revealing an intriguing plasticity of replication forks in dealing with replication obstacles. We have devised a new tool to determine rates of exchange between static movement (binding to a much larger complex) and free diffusion, showing that during stringent response, all proteins have highly increased exchange rates, slowing down overall replication, while inactivation of polymerase or replication roadblocks leaves forks largely intact, allowing rapid restart once obstacles are removed.
复制叉必须响应营养条件的变化,尤其是在细菌细胞中。通过研究模型细菌中复制解旋酶 DnaC、DNA 引物酶 DnaG 和滞后链聚合酶 DnaE 的单分子动力学,我们表明,蛋白质对由于 DNA 损伤、复制聚合酶抑制或丝氨酸可用性下降导致的短暂复制阻断的应激条件的反应不同。DnaG 似乎通过扩散和捕获机制被募集到叉上,在聚合酶被阻止后变得更静态地相关,但由于 DNA 损伤或营养下降,在叉被阻断后结合频率较低。这些结果表明,由于严格反应,警报素 (p)ppGpp 的结合阻止了 DnaG 结合到叉上,而不是阻止结合的引物酶。DnaG 和 DnaE 的不同行为表明,两种蛋白质都是独立地被募集到叉上,而不是共同地。在营养下降后的复制阻断期间,所有三种蛋白质的周转率都增加,与 DNA 损伤或聚合酶抑制的情况不同,表明在不同的应激条件下,叉具有很高的可塑性。在所有应激条件下,叉都持续存在,显然确保了快速恢复复制延伸。所有细胞都需要根据生理和环境条件的变化,通过一个精心协调的多蛋白复合物来调整 DNA 复制。对于复制叉来说,满足细胞中氨基酸迅速耗尽的条件,称为严格反应,应对其中一种核心蛋白的抑制或阻止叉前进的 DNA 修饰,是极具挑战性的。通过实时在单分子水平上跟踪复制叉的中心蛋白解旋酶(DnaC)、引物酶(DnaG)和聚合酶(DnaE),我们发现,在不同的应激条件下,这三种蛋白质与复制叉的相互作用以不同的方式发生变化,揭示了复制叉在处理复制障碍方面令人着迷的可塑性。我们设计了一种新的工具来确定静态运动(与更大的复合物结合)和自由扩散之间的交换速率,结果表明,在严格反应期间,所有蛋白质的交换速率都大大增加,从而减缓了整体复制速度,而聚合酶失活或复制障碍使叉基本保持完整,一旦障碍物被清除,就可以快速重新启动。