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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://tdudspace.texicon.in:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/688
Title: Laboratory Evolution Experiments Help Identify a Predominant Region of Constitutive Stable DNA Replication Initiation
Authors: Veetil, Reshma T.
Malhotra, Nitish
Dubey, Akshara
Seshasayee, Aswin Sai Narain
Keywords: DNA replication
DnaA
R-loops
constitutive stable DNA replication
evolution
gene expression
head-on collision
replication-transcription conflicts
Issue Date: Feb-2020
Publisher: mSphere
Citation: Veetil RT, Malhotra N, Dubey A, Seshasayee ASN. 2020. Laboratory evolution experiments help identify a predominant region of constitutive stable DNA replication initiation. mSphere 5:e00939-19. https://doi .org/10.1128/mSphere.00939-19.
Abstract: The bacterium Escherichia coli can initiate replication in the absence of the replication initiator protein DnaA and/or the canonical origin of replication oriC in a rnhA background. This phenomenon, which can be primed by R-loops, is called constitutive stable DNA replication (cSDR). Whether DNA replication during cSDR initiates in a stochastic manner through the length of the chromosome or at specific sites and how E. coli can find adaptations to loss of fitness caused by cSDR remain inadequately answered. We use laboratory evolution experiments of rnhA- dnaA strains followed by deep sequencing to show that DNA replication preferentially initiates within a broad region located 0.4 to 0.7 Mb clockwise of oriC. This region includes many bisulfite-sensitive sites, which have been previously defined as R-loop-forming regions, and includes a site containing sequence motifs that favor R-loop formation. Initiation from this region would result in head-on replicationtranscription conflicts at rRNA loci. Inversions of these rRNA loci, which can partly resolve these conflicts, help the bacterium suppress the fitness defects of cSDR. These inversions partially restore the gene expression changes brought about by cSDR. The inversion, however, increases the possibility of conflicts at essential mRNA genes, which would utilize only a minuscule fraction of RNA polymerase molecules, most of which transcribe rRNA genes. Whether subsequent adaptive strategies would attempt to resolve these conflicts remains an open question.
URI: http://tdudspace.texicon.in:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/688
Appears in Collections:Researcher/Student Publications

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