Rapid and sequential movement of individual chromosomal loci to specific subcellular locations during bacterial DNA replication

Patrick H. Viollier(Stanford University), Martin Thanbichler(Stanford University), Patrick T. McGrath(Stanford University), Lisandra West(Stanford University), Maliwan Meewan(Stanford University), Harley H. McAdams(Stanford University), Lucy Shapiro(Stanford University)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
June 3, 2004
Cited by 411Open Access
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Abstract

The chromosomal origin and terminus of replication are precisely localized in bacterial cells. We examined the cellular position of 112 individual loci that are dispersed over the circular Caulobacter crescentus chromosome and found that in living cells each locus has a specific subcellular address and that these loci are arrayed in linear order along the long axis of the cell. Time-lapse microscopy of the location of the chromosomal origin and 10 selected loci in the origin-proximal half of the chromosome showed that during DNA replication, as the replisome sequentially copies each locus, the newly replicated DNA segments are moved in chronological order to their final subcellular destination in the nascent half of the predivisional cell. Thus, the remarkable organization of the chromosome is being established while DNA replication is still in progress. The fact that the movement of these 10 loci is, like that of the origin, directed and rapid, and occurs at a similar rate, suggests that the same molecular machinery serves to partition and place many, if not most, chromosomal loci at defined subcellular sites.


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