4.8 Article

HU multimerization shift controls nucleoid compaction

Journal

SCIENCE ADVANCES
Volume 2, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.1600650

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH Structural Cell Biology of DNA Repair Machines [P01 CA92584]
  2. NIH grant MINOS (Macromolecular Insights on Nucleic Acids Optimized by Scattering) [GM105404]
  3. U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) program Integrated Diffraction Analysis Technologies
  4. National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the NIH [P41GM103445]
  5. DOE's Office of Biological and Environmental Research [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  6. NIH Intramural Research Program
  7. Center for Cancer Research of the National Cancer Institute

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Molecular mechanisms controlling functional bacterial chromosome (nucleoid) compaction and organization are surprisingly enigmatic but partly depend on conserved, histone-like proteins HU alpha alpha and HU alpha beta and their interactions that span the nanoscale and mesoscale from protein-DNA complexes to the bacterial chromosome and nucleoid structure. We determined the crystal structures of these chromosome-associated proteins in complex with native duplex DNA. Distinct DNA binding modes of HU alpha alpha and HU alpha beta elucidate fundamental features of bacterial chromosome packing that regulate gene transcription. By combining crystal structures with solution x-ray scattering results, we determined architectures of HU-DNA nucleoproteins in solution under near-physiological conditions. These macromolecular conformations and interactions result in contraction at the cellular level based on in vivo imaging of native unlabeled nucleoid by soft x-ray tomography upon HU beta and ectopic HU alpha 38 expression. Structural characterization of charge-altered HU alpha alpha-DNA complexes reveals an HU molecular switch that is suitable for condensing nucleoid and reprogramming noninvasive Escherichia coli into an invasive form. Collective findings suggest that shifts between networking and cooperative and noncooperative DNA-dependent HU multimerization control DNA compaction and supercoiling independently of cellular topoisomerase activity. By integrating x-ray crystal structures, x-ray scattering, mutational tests, and x-ray imaging that span from protein-DNA complexes to the bacterial chromosome and nucleoid structure, we show that defined dynamic HU interaction networks can promote nucleoid reorganization and transcriptional regulation as efficient general microbial mechanisms to help synchronize genetic responses to cell cycle, changing environments, and pathogenesis.

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