CTP promotes efficient ParB-dependent DNA condensation by facilitating one-dimensional diffusion from parS

Author:

Balaguer Francisco de Asis1ORCID,Aicart-Ramos Clara1ORCID,Fisher Gemma LM2,de Bragança Sara1ORCID,Martin-Cuevas Eva M1,Pastrana Cesar L1ORCID,Dillingham Mark Simon2ORCID,Moreno-Herrero Fernando1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Macromolecular Structures, Centro Nacional de Biotecnología, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Madrid, Spain

2. DNA:Protein Interactions Unit, School of Biochemistry, Biomedical Sciences Building, University of Bristol, University Walk, Bristol, United Kingdom

Abstract

Faithful segregation of bacterial chromosomes relies on the ParABS partitioning system and the SMC complex. In this work, we used single-molecule techniques to investigate the role of cytidine triphosphate (CTP) binding and hydrolysis in the critical interaction between centromere-like parS DNA sequences and the ParB CTPase. Using a combined optical tweezers confocal microscope, we observe the specific interaction of ParB with parS directly. Binding around parS is enhanced by the presence of CTP or the non-hydrolysable analogue CTPγS. However, ParB proteins are also detected at a lower density in distal non-specific DNA. This requires the presence of a parS loading site and is prevented by protein roadblocks, consistent with one-dimensional diffusion by a sliding clamp. ParB diffusion on non-specific DNA is corroborated by direct visualization and quantification of movement of individual quantum dot labelled ParB. Magnetic tweezers experiments show that the spreading activity, which has an absolute requirement for CTP binding but not hydrolysis, results in the condensation of parS-containing DNA molecules at low nanomolar protein concentrations.

Funder

European Research Council

Wellcome Trust

BBSRC

MINECO

Comunidad de Madrid

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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