Abstract

In bacteria, the restart of stalled DNA replication forks requires the DNA helicase PriA. PriA can recognize and remodel abandoned DNA replication forks, unwind DNA in the 3'-to-5' direction, and facilitate the loading of the helicase DnaB onto the DNA to restart replication. Single-stranded DNA-binding protein (SSB) is typically present at the abandoned forks, but it is unclear how SSB and PriA interact, although it has been shown that the two proteins interact both physically and functionally. Here, we used atomic force microscopy to visualize the interaction of PriA with DNA substrates with or without SSB. These experiments were done in the absence of ATP to delineate the substrate recognition pattern of PriA before its ATP-catalyzed DNA-unwinding reaction. These analyses revealed that in the absence of SSB, PriA binds preferentially to a fork substrate with a gap in the leading strand. Such a preference has not been observed for 5'- and 3'-tailed duplexes, suggesting that it is the fork structure that plays an essential role in PriA's selection of DNA substrates. Furthermore, we found that in the absence of SSB, PriA binds exclusively to the fork regions of the DNA substrates. In contrast, fork-bound SSB loads PriA onto the duplex DNA arms of forks, suggesting a remodeling of PriA by SSB. We also demonstrate that the remodeling of PriA requires a functional C-terminal domain of SSB. In summary, our atomic force microscopy analyses reveal key details in the interactions between PriA and stalled DNA replication forks with or without SSB.

Highlights

  • In bacteria, the restart of stalled DNA replication forks requires the DNA helicase PriA

  • We used atomic force microscopy to visualize the interaction of PriA with DNA substrates with or without Single-stranded DNA– binding protein (SSB)

  • The assembly of each DNA substrate was verified by contour length measurements (Fig. S1)

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Summary

Introduction

The restart of stalled DNA replication forks requires the DNA helicase PriA. These experiments were done in the absence of ATP to delineate the substrate recognition pattern of PriA before its ATP-catalyzed DNA-unwinding reaction. Our atomic force microscopy analyses reveal key details in the interactions between PriA and stalled DNA replication forks with or without SSB. PriA recognizes abandoned DNA replication forks with either duplex DNA or SSB-coated ssDNA and processes these to expose ssDNA as a binding site for primosome components (PriB and DnaT), followed by the reloading of the replicative helicase DnaB [22, 28]. The mechanism of binding is identical to that between the RecG OBfold and the linker domain of SSB (30 –32)

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Conclusion

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