Stochastic self-assembly of ParB proteins at centromeres builds bacterial DNA segregation apparatus - Laboratoire Charles Coulomb (L2C) Accéder directement au contenu
Communication Dans Un Congrès Année : 2015

Stochastic self-assembly of ParB proteins at centromeres builds bacterial DNA segregation apparatus

Résumé

Many canonical processes in molecular biology rely on the dynamic assembly of higher-order nucleoprotein complexes. In bacteria, the assembly mechanism of ParABS, the nucleoprotein super-complex that actively segregates the bacterial chromosome and many plasmids, remains elusive. We combined super-resolution microscopy, quantitative genome-wide surveys, biochemistry, and mathematical modeling to investigate the assembly of ParB at the centromere-like sequences parS. We found that nearly all ParB molecules are actively confined around parS by a network of synergistic protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions. Interrogation of the empirically determined, high-resolution ParB genomic distribution with modeling suggests that instead of binding only to specific sequences and subsequently spreading, ParB binds stochastically around parS over long distances. We propose a new model for the formation of the ParABS partition complex based on nucleation and caging: ParB forms a dynamic lattice with the DNA around parS. This assembly model and approach to characterizing large-scale, dynamic interactions between macromolecules may be generalizable to many unrelated machineries that self-assemble in superstructures.
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hal-01955916 , version 1 (14-12-2018)

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  • HAL Id : hal-01955916 , version 1

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Jean-Charles Walter. Stochastic self-assembly of ParB proteins at centromeres builds bacterial DNA segregation apparatus. Architecture et Dynamique Nucléaire (ADN), Apr 2015, Paris, Jussieu, France. ⟨hal-01955916⟩
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