Abstract

This review summarizes the mechanisms of the initiator protein DnaA in replication initiation and its regulation in Escherichia coli. The chromosomal origin (oriC) DNA is unwound by the replication initiation complex to allow loading of DnaB helicases and replisome formation. The initiation complex consists of the DnaA protein, DnaA-initiator-associating protein DiaA, integration host factor (IHF), and oriC, which contains a duplex-unwinding element (DUE) and a DnaA-oligomerization region (DOR) containing DnaA-binding sites (DnaA boxes) and a single IHF-binding site that induces sharp DNA bending. DiaA binds to DnaA and stimulates DnaA assembly at the DOR. DnaA binds tightly to ATP and ADP. ATP-DnaA constructs functionally different sub-complexes at DOR, and the DUE-proximal DnaA sub-complex contains IHF and promotes DUE unwinding. The first part of this review presents the structures and mechanisms of oriC-DnaA complexes involved in the regulation of replication initiation. During the cell cycle, the level of ATP-DnaA level, the active form for initiation, is strictly regulated by multiple systems, resulting in timely replication initiation. After initiation, regulatory inactivation of DnaA (RIDA) intervenes to reduce ATP-DnaA level by hydrolyzing the DnaA-bound ATP to ADP to yield ADP-DnaA, the inactive form. RIDA involves the binding of the DNA polymerase clamp on newly synthesized DNA to the DnaA-inactivator Hda protein. In datA-dependent DnaA-ATP hydrolysis (DDAH), binding of IHF at the chromosomal locus datA, which contains a cluster of DnaA boxes, results in further hydrolysis of DnaA-bound ATP. SeqA protein inhibits untimely initiation at oriC by binding to newly synthesized oriC DNA and represses dnaA transcription in a cell cycle dependent manner. To reinitiate DNA replication, ADP-DnaA forms oligomers at DnaA-reactivating sequences (DARS1 and DARS2), resulting in the dissociation of ADP and the release of nucleotide-free apo-DnaA, which then binds ATP to regenerate ATP-DnaA. In vivo, DARS2 plays an important role in this process and its activation is regulated by timely binding of IHF to DARS2 in the cell cycle. Chromosomal locations of DARS sites are optimized for the strict regulation for timely replication initiation. The last part of this review describes how DDAH and DARS regulate DnaA activity.

Highlights

  • The genome of Escherichia coli consists of a single circular 4.6 Mb chromosome, with a unique replication origin called oriC

  • A complex consisting of oriC, integration host factor (IHF), DiaA, and oligomeric ATP-DnaA is considered to make up the initiation complex in E. coli (Keyamura et al, 2007, 2009)

  • This complex unwinds the oriC duplex-unwinding element (DUE), enabling loading of DnaB helicases onto singlestranded DNA by specific protein–protein interactions and dissociations, which in turn leads to formation of replisomes

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The genome of Escherichia coli consists of a single circular 4.6 Mb chromosome, with a unique replication origin called oriC. The 245 bp minimal oriC region has multiple binding sites for the chromosomal replication initiator protein DnaA (DnaA boxes), and a single binding site for the integration host factor (IHF), in addition to an AT-rich duplex-unwinding element (DUE) (Figures 1A, 2A; Kaguni, 2011; Leonard and Grimwade, 2015; Wolanski et al, 2015; Shimizu et al, 2016). The 262 bp minimal datA region has a specific DnaA-box cluster and a single IHF-binding site (IBS) (Kasho and Katayama, 2013; Kasho et al, 2017; Figure 1B). Features of the minimal 245 bp oriC sequence are shown, including DnaA boxes (triangles), IHF-binding site (IBS; rectangle), and duplex-unwinding element (DUE) AT-rich 13 bp elements (red arrows). Readers who are interested only in DDAH and DARS systems might skip the Section “DnaA Complex on oriC,” while readers who are interested only in oriC-DnaA complexes might skip the Sections “DDAH System and DARS System.”

BASIC FEATURES OF oriC AND DnaA oriC
The Role of DiaA
DDAH SYSTEM
Structure of datA
DARS SYSTEM
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