Transcription termination within the Escherichia coli origin of DNA replication, oriC
β Scribed by Junker, David E. ;Rokeach, Luis A. ;Ganea, Donna ;Chiaramello, Anne ;Zyskind, Judith W.
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1986
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 1019 KB
- Volume
- 203
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0026-8925
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Initiation of DNA replication from the Escherichia coli origin, oriC, is dependent on an RNA polymerase-mediated transcription event. The function of this RNA synthetic event in initiation, however, remains obscure. Since control of the synthesis of this RNA could serve a key role in the overall initiation process, transcription regulatory sites within and near oriC were identified using the galK fusion vector system. Our results confirm the existence of a transcription termination signal within oriC, first identified by Hansen et al. (1981), for the 16 kd transcript that is transcribed counterclockwise towards oriC. Termination is shown to be 92% efficient. A similar approach led to the detection of transcription termination within the chromosomal replication origin of Klebsiella pneumoniae. Approximately 50% of the E. coli 16 kd transcripts appear to terminate before reaching oriC between the XhoI (+416 bp) and the HindIII (+243 bp) sites. The predominant 3' ends of RNA that enter oriC, as determined by SI nuclease mapping, were located at positions +20 +/- 2, +23 +/- 2, +37, +39, +52, +66, +92, and +107. These termination sites, which map cl to RNA . DNA junctions identified by Kohara et al. (1985), appear as triplets and quadruplets. The E. coli oriC Pori-L promoter described in in vitro transcription studies by Lother and Messer (1981) was not detected in this study in either wildtype cells or isogenic dnaA mutants at the nonpermissive temperature. A new promoter activity, Pori-R1, was identified within the E. coli origin in the clockwise direction.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Specialized transducing phages lambda asn harboring chromosomal DNA and genetic markers on either side of the asn gene were isolated. Phages carrying chromosomal DNA counterclockwise of the asn gene can upon infection establish themselves as self-replicating plasmids in asn, recA hosts lysogenic for
A precise genetic-physical map of the tnailv region at 82 rain on the genetic map of E. coli is obtained through deletion mapping and analysis by restriction endonuclease EcoRI of plasmids, derived from an F ~ carrying the genes between aroE and ilv. A locus, designated het, which in its diploid st
F' strains of E. coli have been isolated which are merodiploid for various chromosomal segments between 66 and 78 minutes. Strains diploid for the chromosomal DNA between the genes bgl and mtl grow slowly, have a reduced DNA/mass and an increased cell size. These properties could result if the chrom