1. How bacteria initiate DNA replication comes into focus.
- Author
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Rashid, Fahad and Berger, James M.
- Subjects
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BACTERIAL DNA , *ADENOSINE triphosphatase , *DNA , *PROTEINS , *MELTING - Abstract
The ability to initiate DNA replication is a critical step in the proliferation of all organisms. In bacteria, this process is mediated by an ATP‐dependent replication initiator protein, DnaA, which recognizes and melts replication origin (
oriC ) elements. Despite decades of biochemical and structural work, a mechanistic understanding of how DnaA recognizes and unwindsoriC has remained enigmatic. A recent study by Pelliciari et al. provides important new structural insights into how DnaA fromBacillus subtilis recognizes and processes its cognateoriC , showing how DnaA uses sequence features encoded in the origin to engage melted DNA. Comparison of the DnaA‐oriC structure with archaeal/eukaryl replication origin complexes based on Orc‐family proteins reveals a high degree of similarity in origin engagement by initiators from di domains of life, despite fundamental differences in origin melting mechanisms. These findings provide valuable insights into bacterial replication initiation and highlight the intriguing evolutionary history of this fundamental biological process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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