Abstract

BackgroundThe trinucleotide repeats AAT•ATT are simple DNA sequences that potentially form different types of non-B DNA secondary structures and cause genomic instabilities in vivo.Methodology and Principal FindingsThe molecular mechanism underlying the maintenance of a 24-triplet AAT•ATT repeat was examined in E.coli by cloning the repeats into the EcoRI site in plasmid pUC18 and into the attB site on the E.coli genome. Either the AAT or the ATT strand acted as lagging strand template in a replication fork. Propagations of the repeats in either orientation on plasmids did not affect colony morphology when triplet repeat transcription using the lacZ promoter was repressed either by supplementing LacIQ in trans or by adding glucose into the medium. In contrast, transparent colonies were formed by inducing transcription of the repeats, suggesting that transcription of AAT•ATT repeats was toxic to cell growth. Meanwhile, significant IS1E transposition events were observed both into the triplet repeats region proximal to the promoter side, the promoter region of the lacZ gene, and into the AAT•ATT region itself. Transposition reversed the transparent colony phenotype back into healthy, convex colonies. In contrast, transcription of an 8-triplet AAT•ATT repeat in either orientation on plasmids did not produce significant changes in cell morphology and did not promote IS1E transposition events. We further found that a role of IS1E transposition into plasmids was to inhibit transcription through the repeats, which was influenced by the presence of the H-NS protein, but not of its paralogue StpA.Conclusions and SignificanceOur findings thus suggest that the longer AAT•ATT triplet repeats in E.coli become vulnerable after transcription. H-NS and its facilitated IS1E transposition can silence long triplet repeats transcription and preserve cell growth and survival.

Highlights

  • AATNTTA triplet repeats are types of trinucleotide repeats that are highly cumulative in human genome [1,2], in contrast, they are much less abundant in many prokaryotic genomes, such as in E.coli, showing a biased distribution towards eukaryotic genomes [3,4,5,6,7]

  • Propagation and transcription of a short AATNTTA repeat of 8 triplets under otherwise similar conditions did not show cell toxicity, nor H-NS and H-NS facilitated IS1E transposition, suggesting that transcription mediated cell toxicity is dependent on the length of the AATNTTA triplet repeats, and that similar sized AATNTTA repeat may possibly be intrinsically vulnerable for transcription in all eukaryotes and prokaryotes

  • H-NS has been implicated with helping targeting DNA molecules in transposition or cleaving the ends of the transposing elements (Figure 6)[30,31,32,38,39,40]. Related to all these processes, our work suggested that H-NS affected IS1E transposition in a DNA sequence dependent manner, promoting distinct repression of AAT and ATT triplet repeats transcription and different transposition rates

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Summary

Introduction

AATNTTA triplet repeats are types of trinucleotide repeats that are highly cumulative in human genome [1,2], in contrast, they are much less abundant in many prokaryotic genomes, such as in E.coli, showing a biased distribution towards eukaryotic genomes [3,4,5,6,7]. AATNTTA repeats have been characterized in vitro to form various types of non-B DNA secondary structures, including hairpin, triplex, non-H DNA [8,9,10,11], which potentiallychallenge the stable maintenance of the repeats in genomes [8]. The non-B structures formed by AATNTTA triplet repeats were found to be similar to those of non-B secondary structures formed by disease causing trinucleotide repeats such as CAG?CTG, CGG?CCG and GAA?TTC, which are associated with more than 40 human genetic diseases, including Huntington’s disease or fragile X syndrome [8,13]. The trinucleotide repeats AATNATT are simple DNA sequences that potentially form different types of non-B DNA secondary structures and cause genomic instabilities in vivo

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