Abstract

Bacterial ParB partitioning proteins involved in chromosomes and low-copy-number plasmid segregation have recently been shown to belong to a new class of CTP-dependent molecular switches. Strikingly, CTP binding and hydrolysis was shown to induce a conformational change enabling ParB dimers to switch between an open and a closed conformation. This latter conformation clamps ParB dimers on DNA molecules, allowing their diffusion in one dimension along the DNA. It has been proposed that this novel sliding property may explain the spreading capability of ParB over more than 10-Kb from parS centromere sites where ParB is specifically loaded. Here, we modeled such a mechanism as a typical reaction-diffusion system and compared this ‘Clamping & sliding’ model to the ParB DNA binding pattern from high-resolution ChIP-sequencing data. We found that this mechanism can not account for all the in vivo characteristics, especially the long range of ParB binding to DNA. In particular, it predicts a strong effect of the presence of a roadblock on the ParB binding pattern that is not observed in ChIP-seq. Moreover, the rapid assembly kinetics observed in vivo after the duplication of parS sites is not easily explained by this mechanism. We propose that ‘Clamping & sliding’ might explain the ParB spreading pattern at short distances from parS but that another mechanism must apply for ParB recruitment at larger genomic distances.

Highlights

  • Faithful segregation of the full set of genetic information is essential for all living cells

  • Partition of chromosomes and low copy number plasmids mainly relies on ParABS systems

  • ParA action separates the ParB assemblies nucleated on parS sites, which are always located near the origin of replication, and actively relocates them toward opposite cell poles

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Summary

Introduction

Faithful segregation of the full set of genetic information is essential for all living cells. Partition of chromosomes and low copy number plasmids mainly relies on ParABS systems (for reviews; Bouet and Funnell, 2019; Jalal and Le, 2020). They encode a Walker-type ATPase (ParA) and a site-specific DNA binding protein (ParB), which binds to parS centromere sites. ParA action separates the ParB assemblies nucleated on parS sites, which are always located near the origin of replication, and actively relocates them toward opposite cell poles. This process ensures that every daughter cell receives at least one copy of the replicated DNA molecules

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