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Vol. 180, Issue 13, 3360-3367, July 1, 1998
Department of Biochemistry, University of
Sydney, New South Wales 2006, Australia
The replication terminator protein (RTP) of Bacillus
subtilis interacts with its cognate DNA terminators to cause
replication fork arrest, thereby ensuring that the forks approaching
one another at the conclusion of a round of replication meet within a
restricted terminus region. A similar situation exists in
Escherichia coli, but it appears that the fork-arrest
systems in these two organisms have evolved independently of one
another. In the present work, RTP homologs in four species closely
related to B. subtilis (B. atrophaeus, B. amyloliquefaciens, B. mojavensis, and B. vallismortis) have been
identified and characterized. An RTP homolog could not be identified in
another closely related species, B. licheniformis. The
nucleotide and amino acid changes from B. subtilis
among the four homologs are consistent with the recently established
phylogenetic tree for these species. The GC contents of the
rtp genes raise the possibility that these organisms arose
within this branch of the tree by horizontal transfer into a common
ancestor after their divergence from B. licheniformis.
Only 5 amino acid residue positions were changed among the four
homologs, despite an up to 17.2% change in the nucleotide sequence, a
finding that highlights the importance of the precise folded structure
to the functioning of RTP. The absence of any significant change in the
proposed DNA-binding region of RTP emphasizes the importance of its
high affinity for the DNA terminator in its functioning. By
coincidence, the single change (E30K) found in the B. mojavensis RTP corresponds exactly to that purposefully
introduced by others into B. subtilis RTP to
implicate a crucial role for E30 in the fork-arrest mechanism. The
natural occurrence of this variant is difficult to reconcile with such
an implication, and it was shown directly that RTP.E30K functions
normally in fork arrest in B. subtilis in vivo.
Additional DNA terminators were identified in the new RTP
homolog-containing strains, allowing the definition of a
Bacillus terminator consensus and identification of two
more terminators in the B. subtilis 168 genome
sequence to bring the total to nine.
Replication Terminator Protein-Based
Replication Fork-Arrest Systems in Various
Bacillus Species
Copyright © 1998 by American Society for Microbiology
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