Affiliation:
1. Channing Laboratory, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, 181 Longwood Avenue, Boston Massachusetts 02115
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Partitioning of low-copy-number plasmids to daughter cells often depends on ParA and ParB proteins acting on centromere-like
parS
sites. Similar chromosome-encoded
par
loci likely also contribute to chromosome segregation. Here, we used bioinformatic approaches to search for chromosomal
parS
sites in 400 prokaryotic genomes. Although the consensus sequence matrix used to search for
parS
sites was derived from two gram-positive species, putative
parS
sites were identified on the chromosomes of 69% of strains from all branches of bacteria. Strains that were not found to contain
parS
sites clustered among relatively few branches of the prokaryotic evolutionary tree. In the vast majority of cases,
parS
sites were identified in origin-proximal regions of chromosomes. The widespread conservation of
parS
sites across diverse bacteria suggests that
par
loci evolved very early in the evolution of bacterial chromosomes and that the absence of
parS
,
parA
, and/or
parB
in certain strains likely reflects the loss of one of more of these loci much later in evolution. Moreover, the highly conserved origin-proximal position of
parS
suggests
par
loci are primarily devoted to regulating processes that involve the origin region of bacterial chromosomes. In species containing multiple chromosomes, the
parS
sites found on secondary chromosomes diverge significantly from those found on their primary chromosomes, suggesting that chromosome segregation of multipartite genomes requires distinct replicon-specific
par
loci. Furthermore,
parS
sites on secondary chromosomes are not well conserved among different species, suggesting that the evolutionary histories of secondary chromosomes are more diverse than those of primary chromosomes.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
232 articles.
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