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    J Biol Chem. 2008 Oct 17;283(42):28081-6. Epub 2008 Jul 24.

    Protein-nanocrystal conjugates support a single filament polymerization model in R1 plasmid segregation.

    Choi CL, Claridge SA, Garner EC, Alivisatos AP, Mullins RD.

    Department of Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, USA.

    To ensure inheritance by daughter cells, many low-copy number bacterial plasmids, including the R1 drug-resistance plasmid, encode their own DNA segregation systems. The par operon of plasmid R1 directs construction of a simple spindle structure that converts free energy of polymerization of an actin-like protein, ParM, into work required to move sister plasmids to opposite poles of rod-shaped cells. The structures of individual components have been solved, but little is known about the ultrastructure of the R1 spindle. To determine the number of ParM filaments in a minimal R1 spindle, we used DNA-gold nanocrystal conjugates as mimics of the R1 plasmid. We found that each end of a single polar ParM filament binds to a single ParR/parC-gold complex, consistent with the idea that ParM filaments bind in the hollow core of the ParR/parC ring complex. Our results further suggest that multifilament spindles observed in vivo are associated with clusters of plasmids segregating as a unit.

    PMID: 18658133 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    PMCID: 2568930

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