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  • Title: Excess SeqA prolongs sequestration of oriC and delays nucleoid segregation and cell division.
    Author: Bach T, Krekling MA, Skarstad K.
    Journal: EMBO J; 2003 Jan 15; 22(2):315-23. PubMed ID: 12514137.
    Abstract:
    Following initiation of chromosomal replication in Escherichia coli, newly initiated origins (oriCs) are prevented from further initiations by a mechanism termed sequestration. During the sequestration period (which lasts about one-third of a cell cycle), the origins remain hemimethylated. The SeqA protein binds hemimethylated oriC in vitro. In vivo, the absence of SeqA causes overinitiation and strongly reduces the duration of hemimethylation. The pattern of immunostained SeqA complexes in vivo suggests that SeqA has a role in organizing hemimethylated DNA at the replication forks. We have examined the effects of overexpressing SeqA under different cellular conditions. Our data demonstrate that excess SeqA significantly increases the time oriC is hemimethylated following initiation of replication. In some cells, sequestration continued for more than one generation and resulted in inhibition of primary initiation. SeqA overproduction also interfered with the segregation of sister nucleoids and caused a delay in cell division. These results suggest that SeqA's function in regulation of replication initiation is linked to chromosome segregation and possibly cell division.
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