Abstract

Minichromosomes are plasmids with the origin of chromosome replication, oriC, as their only origin of replication. In Escherichia coli, minichromosomes are compatible with the chromosome and replicate in a cell-cycle-specific manner at the same time as oriC located on the chromosome initiates replication. In int strains, oriC has been inactivated and replaced by a plasmid origin. Because plasmids control their own replication, chromosome replication is uncoupled from the normal cell-cycle control and is random with respect to the cell cycle in the int strains. We have used an intP1 strain to address the question of whether minichromosome replication is coupled to the replication of the chromosome or is governed by cell-cycle-specific signals. Minichromosome replication was analysed by density-shift experiments and found not to be random in the randomly replicating intP1 host. This suggests that the cell-cycle-specific control functions of oriC replication are operating also in the intP1 strain.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call