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Journal of Bacteriology, October 1999, p. 6053-6062, Vol. 181, No. 19
0021-9193/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
The ripX Locus of Bacillus
subtilis Encodes a Site-Specific Recombinase Involved in Proper
Chromosome Partitioning
Stephen A.
Sciochetti,1
Patrick J.
Piggot,1,*
David J.
Sherratt,2 and
Garry
Blakely2
Department of Microbiology and Immunology,
Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
19140,1 and Microbiology Unit,
Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3QU,
United Kingdom2
Received 24 May 1999/Accepted 21 July 1999
The Bacillus subtilis ripX gene encodes a protein that
has 37 and 44% identity with the XerC and XerD site-specific
recombinases of Escherichia coli. XerC and XerD are
hypothesized to act in concert at the dif site to resolve
dimeric chromosomes formed by recombination during replication.
Cultures of ripX mutants contained a subpopulation of
unequal-size cells held together in long chains. The chains included
anucleate cells and cells with aberrantly dense or diffuse nucleoids,
indicating a chromosome partitioning failure. This result is consistent
with RipX having a role in the resolution of chromosome dimers in
B. subtilis. Spores contain a single uninitiated
chromosome, and analysis of germinated, outgrowing spores showed that
the placement of FtsZ rings and septa is affected in ripX
strains by the first division after the initiation of germination. The
introduction of a recA mutation into ripX
strains resulted in only slight modifications of the ripX
phenotype, suggesting that chromosome dimers can form in a
RecA-independent manner in B. subtilis. In addition to
RipX, the CodV protein of B. subtilis shows extensive
similarity to XerC and XerD. The RipX and CodV proteins were shown to
bind in vitro to DNA containing the E. coli dif site.
Together they functioned efficiently in vitro to catalyze site-specific
cleavage of an artificial Holliday junction containing a
dif site. Inactivation of codV alone did not
cause a discernible change in phenotype, and it is speculated that RipX
can substitute for CodV in vivo.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Temple
University School of Medicine, 3400 North Broad St., Philadelphia, PA
19140. Phone: (215) 707-7927. Fax: (215) 707-7788. E-mail:
piggotp{at}astro.ocis.temple.edu.
Journal of Bacteriology, October 1999, p. 6053-6062, Vol. 181, No. 19
0021-9193/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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