Process by which one cell splits into two daughter cells.
Often circular (but not always).
Less structured; no telomeres (to replicate ends)
Yes, if new replication rounds start before previous ones finish.
At a specific site called oriC.
Bidirectionally around the chromosome.
At a unique site or when replication forks meet.
~260 bp region with binding sites for replication proteins. (intiates replication)
DnaA (ATP-bound form- only type that can bind t and I)
Binds high-affinity sites, recruits IHF & Fis, bends DNA, and opens the helix at the DUE (DNA unwinding element).
large multimer is formed (roll up the DNA), when paired with IHF and FIs it bends DNA (strains h bonds) to open up the double helix
Loads DnaB helicase onto oriC.
Functions as helicase; interacts with DnaA to further unwind DNA.
It leaves the complex once DnaB is loaded.
Acts as primase; with DnaB forms the primosome → lays down RNA primers.
May lay down the first primer or transcribe through oriC to help DnaA bind.
(1) Forks reach ter sites, or (2) forks run into each other.
they are 22 bp long sites that act as one-way “traps” → forks can pass in one direction but are blocked in the other.
terA, D, I, H: replisome can pass through clockwise but not counter clockwise
terC, B, F, G, J: replisome can pass through counter clockwise but not clockwise
Ensure forks meet and terminate at discrete locations.
Replicated chromosomes must be separated.
Large chromosome size, recombination joining replicated chromosomes, and tangling.
By labeling chromosomes with GFP and using fluorescence microscopy.
Double-length circular chromosomes joined by recombination (~15% of cells). They prevent chromosome segregation. By Xer recombinase acting at dif sites near the terminus.
no, the dna is broken between bases then backbone is ligated back together
XerC and XerD recombinases.
XerCD binds dif sites near ter, cuts dsDNA, exchanges strands, and ligates at dif to convert dimers into two monomers.
FtsK (motor), which helps position chromosomes for resolution. accuratley moves replicated chromos into daughter cells
FtsK is a cell division protein at the septum. It acts as a DNA translocase, moving dif sites to the septum and activating XerCD to resolve chromosome dimers. It uses KOPS sequences to know which way to pump the chromosome- locates midpoint of dimer.
Daughter DNA molecules linked like rings in a chain- formed during dna replication.
By Topoisomerase IV (Type II topo), which cuts both strands of one DNA, passes the other through, then reseals. FtsK, which helps position chromosomes for resolution.
Condense newly replicated chromosomes to prevent entanglement. work with topoisomerases to condense DNA after decatenation.
MukB.
Dumbbell-shaped proteins that bind DNA and hold it in large loops.
Apportioning of replicated, segregated chromosomes into daughter cells.
No, it varies between bacteria, but many systems resemble plasmid partitioning.
Actin-like Par proteins, which push/pull chromosomes via polymerization and depolymerization cycles.
To ensure each daughter cell gets one complete chromosome.
Min proteins and nucleoid occlusion (NO).
By preventing septum formation at the poles, either through oscillation (E. coli) or polar localization (other bacteria), ensuring the FtsZ division ring forms only at midcell.
In E. coli, Min proteins oscillate between poles, keeping MinC levels lowest at midcell, allowing FtsZ to form the division ring at the center.
In some bacteria, Min proteins stay at the poles, permanently blocking septum formation there, ensuring FtsZ assembles at midcell.
DNA-binding proteins (Noc in B. subtilis, SlmA in E. coli) prevent FtsZ ring/septum from forming over the nucleoid. this stops the cell division from cutting the chromo in half.
Using the Helmstetter & Cooper “Baby Machine” experiment (1968).
objective: dna content measured at diff stages in cell cycle to see how rep and division coordinated
1. label dna of bacteria with radioactivity
2. synchronizse bac: attach to solid surface and collect released daughter cells
3. all daughter cells collected at given time = same age
4. measurace radioactive dna to determine how much of parent chromo replicated at time x
Time between initiation of chromo replication events correlates with growth rate.
Replication time and time between replication completion & division are constant.
At fast growth, multiple replication rounds may initiate before earlier ones finish.
DnaA must now bind more oriCs, slowing initiation.
They compete with duplicated oriC sites for DnaA binding, reducing available DnaA and preventing premature re-initiation of replication.
Only ATP-bound DnaA can initiate replication at oriC. (I, t , DUE)
Loading of β sliding clamp (DnaN) causes DnaA to hydrolyze ATP → inactive ADP-bound form (replisome intiation is inactie immediatley after replication starts)
By hemi-methylation and SeqA binding.
Dam methylase (at 5′-GATC-3′ sites).
Binds to 11 hemi-methylated GATC sites in oriC right after replication, preventing DnaA-ATP binding and intiation of DNA rep
Until Dam methylase fully methylates DNA, then SeqA falls off and oriC becomes accessible to DnA-ATP again.
no, methylates dna minutes after replication
