Abstract

Escherichia coli cells treated with a combination of cyanide (CN) and hydrogen peroxide (HP) succumb to catastrophic chromosome fragmentation (CCF), detectable in pulsed-field gels as >100 double-strand breaks per genome equivalent. Here we show that CN + HP-induced double-strand breaks are independent of replication and occur uniformly over the chromosome,-therefore we used CCF to probe the nucleoid structure by measuring DNA release from precipitated nucleoids. CCF releases surprisingly little chromosomal DNA from the nucleoid suggesting that: (i) the nucleoid is a single DNA-protein complex with only limited stretches of protein-free DNA and (ii) CN + HP-induced breaks happen within these unsecured DNA stretches, rather than at DNA attachments to the central scaffold. Mutants lacking individual nucleoid-associated proteins (NAPs) release more DNA during CCF, consistent with NAPs anchoring chromosome to the central scaffold (Dps also reduces the number of double-strand breaks directly). Finally, significantly more broken DNA is released once ATP production is restored, with about two-thirds of this ATP-dependent DNA release being due to transcription, suggesting that transcription complexes act as pulleys to move DNA loops. In addition to NAPs, recombinational repair of double-strand breaks also inhibits DNA release by CCF, contributing to a dynamic and complex nucleoid structure.

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