Competing ParA structures space bacterial plasmids equally over the nucleoid.

Low copy number plasmids in bacteria require segregation for stable inheritance through cell division. This is often achieved by a parABC locus, comprising an ATPase ParA, DNA-binding protein ParB and a parC region, encoding ParB-binding sites. These minimal components space plasmids equally over th...

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Main Authors: Robert Ietswaart, Florian Szardenings, Kenn Gerdes, Martin Howard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-12-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004009&type=printable
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author Robert Ietswaart
Florian Szardenings
Kenn Gerdes
Martin Howard
author_facet Robert Ietswaart
Florian Szardenings
Kenn Gerdes
Martin Howard
author_sort Robert Ietswaart
collection DOAJ
description Low copy number plasmids in bacteria require segregation for stable inheritance through cell division. This is often achieved by a parABC locus, comprising an ATPase ParA, DNA-binding protein ParB and a parC region, encoding ParB-binding sites. These minimal components space plasmids equally over the nucleoid, yet the underlying mechanism is not understood. Here we investigate a model where ParA-ATP can dynamically associate to the nucleoid and is hydrolyzed by plasmid-associated ParB, thereby creating nucleoid-bound, self-organizing ParA concentration gradients. We show mathematically that differences between competing ParA concentrations on either side of a plasmid can specify regular plasmid positioning. Such positioning can be achieved regardless of the exact mechanism of plasmid movement, including plasmid diffusion with ParA-mediated immobilization or directed plasmid motion induced by ParB/parC-stimulated ParA structure disassembly. However, we find experimentally that parABC from Escherichia coli plasmid pB171 increases plasmid mobility, inconsistent with diffusion/immobilization. Instead our observations favor directed plasmid motion. Our model predicts less oscillatory ParA dynamics than previously believed, a prediction we verify experimentally. We also show that ParA localization and plasmid positioning depend on the underlying nucleoid morphology, indicating that the chromosomal architecture constrains ParA structure formation. Our directed motion model unifies previously contradictory models for plasmid segregation and provides a robust mechanistic basis for self-organized plasmid spacing that may be widely applicable.
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institution Kabale University
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spelling doaj-art-fa9b5e556b02408e939bdcac9bc88fec2025-08-20T03:46:12ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582014-12-011012e100400910.1371/journal.pcbi.1004009Competing ParA structures space bacterial plasmids equally over the nucleoid.Robert IetswaartFlorian SzardeningsKenn GerdesMartin HowardLow copy number plasmids in bacteria require segregation for stable inheritance through cell division. This is often achieved by a parABC locus, comprising an ATPase ParA, DNA-binding protein ParB and a parC region, encoding ParB-binding sites. These minimal components space plasmids equally over the nucleoid, yet the underlying mechanism is not understood. Here we investigate a model where ParA-ATP can dynamically associate to the nucleoid and is hydrolyzed by plasmid-associated ParB, thereby creating nucleoid-bound, self-organizing ParA concentration gradients. We show mathematically that differences between competing ParA concentrations on either side of a plasmid can specify regular plasmid positioning. Such positioning can be achieved regardless of the exact mechanism of plasmid movement, including plasmid diffusion with ParA-mediated immobilization or directed plasmid motion induced by ParB/parC-stimulated ParA structure disassembly. However, we find experimentally that parABC from Escherichia coli plasmid pB171 increases plasmid mobility, inconsistent with diffusion/immobilization. Instead our observations favor directed plasmid motion. Our model predicts less oscillatory ParA dynamics than previously believed, a prediction we verify experimentally. We also show that ParA localization and plasmid positioning depend on the underlying nucleoid morphology, indicating that the chromosomal architecture constrains ParA structure formation. Our directed motion model unifies previously contradictory models for plasmid segregation and provides a robust mechanistic basis for self-organized plasmid spacing that may be widely applicable.https://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004009&type=printable
spellingShingle Robert Ietswaart
Florian Szardenings
Kenn Gerdes
Martin Howard
Competing ParA structures space bacterial plasmids equally over the nucleoid.
PLoS Computational Biology
title Competing ParA structures space bacterial plasmids equally over the nucleoid.
title_full Competing ParA structures space bacterial plasmids equally over the nucleoid.
title_fullStr Competing ParA structures space bacterial plasmids equally over the nucleoid.
title_full_unstemmed Competing ParA structures space bacterial plasmids equally over the nucleoid.
title_short Competing ParA structures space bacterial plasmids equally over the nucleoid.
title_sort competing para structures space bacterial plasmids equally over the nucleoid
url https://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004009&type=printable
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AT florianszardenings competingparastructuresspacebacterialplasmidsequallyoverthenucleoid
AT kenngerdes competingparastructuresspacebacterialplasmidsequallyoverthenucleoid
AT martinhoward competingparastructuresspacebacterialplasmidsequallyoverthenucleoid