4.8 Article

Crystal structure and centromere binding of the plasmid segregation protein ParB from pCXC100

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 39, Issue 7, Pages 2954-2968

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkq915

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology [2008AA022310]
  2. Beijing Municipal Government
  3. National Natural Science Foundation [30770422]
  4. National Basic Research Program 973 of China [2005CB724604]

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Plasmid pCXC100 from the Gram-positive bacterium Leifsonia xyli subsp. cynodontis uses a type Ib partition system that includes a centromere region, a Walker-type ATPase ParA and a centromere-binding protein ParB for stable segregation. However, ParB shows no detectable sequence homology to any DNA-binding motif. Here, we study the ParB centromere interaction by structural and biochemical approaches. The crystal structure of the C-terminal DNA-binding domain of ParB at 1.4 A resolution reveals a dimeric ribbon-helix-helix (RHH) motif, supporting the prevalence of RHH motif in centromere binding. Using hydroxyl radical footprinting and quantitative binding assays, we show that the centromere core comprises nine uninterrupted 9-nt direct repeats that can be successively bound by ParB dimers in a cooperative manner. However, the interaction of ParB with a single subsite requires 18 base pairs covering one immediate repeat as well as two halves of flanking repeats. Through mutagenesis, sequence specificity was determined for each position of an 18-bp subsite. These data suggest an unique centromere recognition mechanism by which the repeat sequence is jointly specified by adjacent ParB dimers bound to an overlapped region.

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