Abstract

Initiation of chromosomal replication and its cell cycle-coordinated regulation bear crucial and fundamental mechanisms in most cellular organisms. Escherichia coli DnaA protein forms a homomultimeric complex with the replication origin (oriC). ATP-DnaA multimers unwind the duplex within the oriC unwinding element (DUE). In this study, structural analyses suggested that several residues exposed in the central pore of the putative structure of DnaA multimers could be important for unwinding. Using mutation analyses, we found that, of these candidate residues, DnaA Val-211 and Arg-245 are prerequisites for initiation in vivo and in vitro. Whereas DnaA V211A and R245A proteins retained normal affinities for ATP/ADP and DNA and activity for the ATP-specific conformational change of the initiation complex in vitro, oriC complexes of these mutant proteins were inactive in DUE unwinding and in binding to the single-stranded DUE. Unlike oriC complexes including ADP-DnaA or the mutant DnaA, ATP-DnaA-oriC complexes specifically bound the upper strand of single-stranded DUE. Specific T-rich sequences within the strand were required for binding. The corresponding conserved residues of the DnaA ortholog in Thermotoga maritima, an ancient eubacterium, were also required for DUE unwinding, consistent with the idea that the mechanism and regulation for DUE unwinding can be evolutionarily conserved. These findings provide novel insights into mechanisms for pore-mediated origin unwinding, ATP/ADP-dependent regulation, and helicase loading of the initiation complex.

Highlights

  • Arg-285 plays a crucial role in the ATP-specific conformational change of the initiation complex, which is required for open complex formation [7]

  • Using a newly constructed system of an electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA), we revealed that the ATP form of these mutant DnaA multimers on oriC, unlike that of wild-type DnaA, are inactive in direct binding to ssDUE

  • Structural Models of the Initiation Complex—By analogy to some AAAϩ protein multimers, we hypothesized that DnaA multimers on oriC have a central pore that plays a crucial role in duplex within the oriC unwinding element (DUE) unwinding

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Summary

Mechanism and Regulation of the Origin Unwinding

The AAAϩ superfamily includes various proteins that can induce ATP binding/hydrolysis-dependent conformational changes [21, 24, 25]. Arg-285 plays a crucial role in the ATP-specific conformational change of the initiation complex, which is required for open complex formation [7]. This residue is required for binding of ATPDnaA protomers to the specific low affinity sites within oriC. We first constructed homology models of the DnaA oligomer that forms a pore using a crystal structure of the AAAϩ domain of the hyperthermophilic eubacterium Thermotoga maritima DnaA ortholog (tmaDnaA) We used this model to select candidates for the crucial residues on the pore surface of DnaA and analyzed the corresponding mutant proteins of tmaDnaA and E. coli DnaA. We propose a novel mechanism for ATP-dependent regulation of open complex formation

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
Protein KD Stoichiometry Protein KD Stoichiometry nM
Transformation efficiencya
DISCUSSION
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