iScience (Jun 2022)

Bacterial H-NS contacts DNA at the same irregularly spaced sites in both bridged and hemi-sequestered linear filaments

  • Beth A. Shen,
  • Christine M. Hustmyer,
  • Daniel Roston,
  • Michael B. Wolfe,
  • Robert Landick

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 6
p. 104429

Abstract

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Summary: Gene silencing in bacteria is mediated by chromatin proteins, of which Escherichia coli H-NS is a paradigmatic example. H-NS forms nucleoprotein filaments with either one or two DNA duplexes. However, the structures, arrangements of DNA-binding domains (DBDs), and positions of DBD–DNA contacts in linear and bridged filaments are uncertain. To characterize the H-NS DBD contacts that silence transcription by RNA polymerase, we combined ·OH footprinting, molecular dynamics, statistical modeling, and DBD mapping using a chemical nuclease (Fe2+-EDTA) tethered to the DBDs (TEN-map). We find that H-NS DBDs contact DNA at indistinguishable locations in bridged or linear filaments and that the DBDs vary in orientation and position with ∼10-bp average spacing. Our results support a hemi-sequestration model of linear-to-bridged H-NS switching. Linear filaments able to inhibit only transcription initiation switch to bridged filaments able to inhibit both initiation and elongation using the same irregularly spaced DNA contacts.

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