Abstract

ParABS, the most widespread bacterial DNA segregation system, is composed of a centromeric sequence, parS, and two proteins, the ParA ATPase and the ParB DNA binding proteins. Hundreds of ParB proteins assemble dynamically to form nucleoprotein parS-anchored complexes that serve as substrates for ParA molecules to catalyze positioning and segregation events. The exact nature of this ParBS complex has remained elusive, what we address here by revisiting the Stochastic Binding model (SBM) introduced to explain the non-specific binding profile of ParB in the vicinity of parS. In the SBM, DNA loops stochastically bring loci inside a sharp cluster of ParB. However, previous SBM versions did not include the negative supercoiling of bacterial DNA, leading to use unphysically small DNA persistences to explain the ParB binding profiles. In addition, recent super-resolution microscopy experiments have revealed a ParB cluster that is significantly smaller than previous estimations and suggest that it results from a liquid-liquid like phase separation. Here, by simulating the folding of long (≥ 30 kb) supercoiled DNA molecules calibrated with realistic DNA parameters and by considering different possibilities for the physics of the ParB cluster assembly, we show that the SBM can quantitatively explain the ChIP-seq ParB binding profiles without any fitting parameter, aside from the supercoiling density of DNA, which, remarkably, is in accord with independent measurements. We also predict that ParB assembly results from a non-equilibrium, stationary balance between an influx of produced proteins and an outflux of excess proteins, i.e., ParB clusters behave like liquid-like protein condensates with unconventional “leaky” boundaries.

Highlights

  • Bacteria display many mechanisms to control and position precisely and macromolecular complexes in their cellular environment

  • Faithful genome inheritance requires the two replicated DNA molecules to be segregated at the opposite halves of the cell

  • Supercoiled DNA and non-equilibrium formation of protein complexes: The ParBS complex supported by an ATIP-Avenir grant (CNRS) and a 80Prime CNRS grant (MIMIC)

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Summary

Introduction

Bacteria display many mechanisms to control and position precisely and macromolecular complexes in their cellular environment. ParABS uses a force dipole of chemical origin that acts on replicated DNA molecules to separate them from each other [7,8,9,10,11,12], ensuring the faithful genomic inheritance between daughter cells It is composed of a centromeric sequence, parS, and two proteins, the ParA ATPase and the ParB DNA binding proteins: hundreds of ParB proteins assemble dynamically to form nucleoprotein parS-anchored complexes (called clusters below) that serve as substrates for ParA molecules to catalyze positioning and segregation events [7,8,9,10,11,12]. This initiates the assembly of hundreds of ParB dimers in the close vicinity of parS, which are visible as intense foci in fluorescence microscopy [13]

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