Topoisomerase I Essentiality, DnaA-Independent Chromosomal Replication, and Transcription-Replication Conflict in Escherichia coli
J. Krishna Leela, Nalini Raghunathan, J. Gowrishankar
Abstract
In all life forms, double-helical DNA exists in a topologically supercoiled state. The enzymes DNA gyrase and topoisomerase I act, respectively, to introduce and to relax negative DNA supercoils in Escherichia coli. That gyrase deficiency leads to bacterial death is well established, but the essentiality of topoisomerase I for viability has been less certain. This study confirms that topoisomerase I is essential for E. coli viability and suggests that in its absence, aberrant chromosomal DNA replication and excessive transcription-replication conflicts occur that are responsible for lethality.
Topics & Concepts
DnaABiologyDNA supercoilTopoisomeraseTranscription (linguistics)DNA replicationDNAGeneticsDNA gyraseMolecular biologyRNA polymeraseEscherichia coliOrigin of replicationGenePhilosophyLinguisticsCancer therapeutics and mechanismsDNA Repair MechanismsAntibiotic Resistance in Bacteria