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Journal of Bacteriology, May 2003, p . 3068-3075, Vol . 185,
No . 10
Cell-Cycle-Regulated Expression and Subcellular Localization of the
Caulobacter crescentus SMC Chromosome Structural Protein
Rasmus B . Jensen
and Lucy Shapiro*
Department of Developmental Biology, Beckman Center, Stanford University
School of Medicine, Stanford, California 94305-5329
Received 16 January 2003/ Accepted 6 March 2003
Structural maintenance of chromosomes proteins (SMCs) bind to DNA and
function to ensure proper chromosome organization in both eukaryotes
and bacteria . Caulobacter crescentus possesses a single SMC
homolog that plays a role in organizing and segregating daughter
chromosomes . Approximately 1,500 to 2,000 SMC molecules are present
per cell during active growth, corresponding to one SMC complex per
6,000 to 8,000 bp of chromosomal DNA . Although transcription from the
smc promoter is induced during early S phase, a cell cycle
transcription pattern previously observed with multiple DNA
replication and repair genes, the SMC protein is present throughout
the entire cell cycle . Examination of the intracellular location of
SMC showed that in swarmer cells, which do not replicate DNA, the
protein forms two or three foci . Stalked cells, which are actively
engaged in DNA replication, have three or four SMC foci per cell . The
SMC foci appear randomly distributed in the cell . Many predivisional
cells have bright polar SMC foci, which are lost upon cell division .
Thus, chromosome compaction likely involves dynamic aggregates of SMC
bound to DNA . The aggregation pattern changes as a function of the
cell cycle both during and upon completion of chromosome replication .
All organisms face the challenge of chromosome compaction because the
contour length of DNA is vastly longer than the space assigned to it .
Generally, bacteria have to compact their chromosome 1,000-fold for
it to fit into the cell (20) . Yet the compacted
chromosomes must remain accessible for transcription, methylation,
and DNA repair reactions, and the condensation must be reversible to
allow DNA replication and proper separation of replicated
chromosomes . Cytological studies of living and fixed bacterial cells
have revealed that regions of the chromosomes have specific
intracellular locations, suggesting that bacterial chromosomes are
highly organized (reviewed in references 13 and
24) .
Significant condensation of bacterial chromosomes is achieved by
the supercoiling of the DNA . Supercoiling draws DNA in on itself,
forming interwound superhelixes and superhelical branches, thereby
decreasing the volume it occupies (20, 56) .
Negative supercoiling of DNA, which is observed in most bacteria,
also aids cellular processes that require separation of the DNA
strands, e.g., transcription and replication . Additionally, most
bacteria possess a homolog of the structural maintenance of
chromosomes protein (SMC), which appears to have a role in chromosome
condensation and organization (15) . SMCs are very
large, containing 800 to 1,500 amino acids, and consist of five
domains: globular N- and C-terminal domains connected by two long
coiled-coil regions, which are separated by a flexible hinge region .
The SMC protomers fold up into rod-shaped molecules, where the N- and
C-terminal domains associate, forming an ATPase domain with
structural similarity to ATP-binding cassette transport proteins (17,
19, 21, 31,
55) . SMC forms dimers through interactions in the hinge
region, forming symmetric molecules where both ends contain an
ATPase and DNA binding domain . Electron microscopy shows that the
hinge region is flexible, resulting in V-shaped molecules that when
fully stretched are 100 to 150 nm long or headphone-like structures
where the two globular domains come together (34) . ATP binding and
hydrolysis may control association of the SMC head domains from
opposite ends of the molecule, perhaps condensing regions of DNA that
are as much as 150 nm apart in a scissoring fashion .
SMCs are ubiquitous in eukaryotes and present in most eubacteria
and archaea . Eukaryotes possess multiple SMCs that function in
chromosome condensation, sister chromatid cohesion, DNA repair, and
dosage condensation (reviewed in references 5 and
51) . In eukaryotes, multiple SMC molecules and
accessory proteins assemble into complexes, such as the condensin
complex, which condenses the chromosomes during mitosis, and the
cohesin complex, which mediates sister chromatid cohesion . In
contrast, most bacteria possess only a single SMC . The gamma
proteobacteria (such as Escherichia coli) possess the MukB
protein instead of a typical bacterial SMC . Despite the lack of
obvious sequence homology, MukB is distantly related to SMC, and the
proteins are structurally and functionally similar (31,
34) . MukB and many bacterial SMCs interact with
accessory proteins, which are required for their activities (30,
33, 48) .
SMC from Bacillus subtilis or Caulobacter crescentus and MukB
from E . coli appear to have similar functions . The proteins
are not essential, but disruption of smc or mukB results in
temperature-sensitive growth (4, 23,
36, 38) . The DNA is decondensed
in the smc and mukB deletion strains, the origin-proximal region
of the chromosome is mislocalized in a subpopulation of the
cells, and there is a DNA segregation defect (4,
14, 23, 36,
38, 58) . Thus, bacterial SMCs appear to
function in condensing and organizing the chromosome . The defects of
the E . coli mukB and B . subtilis smc mutants can be
suppressed by mutations in topoisomerase I, resulting in DNA with
more negative supercoiling (20, 29,
46) . Since increased negative supercoiling makes the
DNA more compact (20, 56), this
suppression supports a function for SMC and MukB in condensing the
chromosome . Analysis of the intracellular localization of SMC in
B . subtilis and MukB in E . coli showed that the proteins
bind to the chromosomal DNA and form specific foci (4,
7, 16, 30,
33, 39) . In the absence of SMC,
the origins in B . subtilis move away from each other normally
after initiation of DNA replication but the termini are unable to
separate . These observations suggest that SMC is not a part of the
apparatus responsible for movement of the newly replicated
chromosomal origins but rather functions later in the DNA compaction
and segregation processes (14) .
We showed previously that Caulobacter SMC is required for proper
chromosome organization and the completion of chromosome segregation
(23) . In Caulobacter, many genes involved in
cell-cycle-regulated events are differentially transcribed during the
part of the cell cycle in which they function and many exhibit
dynamic intracellular localization patterns (28,
47) . We show here that transcription of smc
is increased at the beginning of the S phase, coincident with the
transcription of many genes involved in DNA replication and repair,
although the SMC abundance does not change significantly during the
cell cycle . There are between 1,500 and 2,000 SMC molecules per cell,
sufficient for it to have a global role in organizing the chromosome .
Instead of a stoichiometric distribution along the DNA, SMC forms a
small number of foci, and the number increases at the G1-to-S
transition . The predivisional cell accumulates bright SMC foci at the
poles of the cell . Thus, either SMC complexes bind only to a few
sites in the chromosome or aggregation of SMC molecules brings
different regions of the chromosome into close proximity .
Strains, plasmids, and growth conditions. C . crescentus
strain CB15N (also named NA1000) (10) and derivatives
were grown at 30°C in M2-glucose minimal medium or PYE medium (9) .
Synchronization was performed as described previously (10) .
The smc knockout strain CB15N smc
was described previously (23) .
Low-copy-number plasmid pRBJ570 containing the entire smc region
was constructed . The 3' end of smc was amplified by PCR using
the primers SMC23 (5'-CCAATGTCGACCGCTACTG-3') and SMC24
(5'-ACAGGATCCCTGCTGGTGGTGATCTCGT-3') . An EcoRI-NcoI
fragment from pGZ7 (61) containing the majority of
the smc gene and the upstream region and the PCR fragment
digested with NcoI and BamHI were ligated into pMR20 (44)
digested with BamHI and EcoRI, resulting in pRBJ570 .
The plasmid contains the entire smc gene and
3.2
kb of DNA upstream of smc and 0.3 kb downstream .
The orfA deletion strain CB15N orfA
was constructed by a two-step knockout technique . A DNA fragment
containing an in-frame deletion of the majority of the orfA
open reading frame was constructed by double PCR . For the first PCR
round, the primers OrfA1 (5'-AATTGAATTCTGCTGAAGGACCTGGAAGAC-3') and
OrfA2 (5'-CGCCAGGGCGAAGATCTTGCTGGCCGCGAGGGCG-3') or OrfA3
(5'-CGCCCTCGCGGCCAGCAAGATCTTCGCCCTGGCG-3') and SMC27
(5'-AATTGGATCCTCTTCCAGACGCGAGAGATT-3') were used . For the second
round of PCR, we used these two PCR products as the template and the
primers OrfA1 and SMC27 . The BamHI- and EcoRI-digested
PCR product was cloned into the sacB-containing integration
plasmid pNPTS138 (M . R . K . Alley), resulting in plasmid pRBJ515 . The
plasmid was integrated by a single crossover event into the
chromosome of CB15N or CB15N containing plasmid pRBJ570, expressing
the OrfA gene product in trans . Next, cells were grown without
selection to allow a second recombination event, removing the
integrated plasmid and either the full-length orfA gene or the
version of orfA with the in-frame deletion . Sucrose-resistant
and kanamycin-sensitive clones were isolated to select for
orfA
cells . PCR was used to identify clones with an in-frame deletion in
the orfA gene . Clones with an orfA deletion were
recovered only when the complementing plasmid pRBJ570 was present in
the cells .
Plasmids containing transcriptional fusions between the smc
promoter and a promoterless lacZ gene were constructed as follows .
The NruI, ScaI-NruI, and NruI-ScaI
fragments containing the region upstream of smc were inserted
into the transcriptional fusion vector pRKLac290 (12),
resulting in pRBJ591, pRBJ592, and pRBJ593, respectively . To
construct transcriptional fusions containing shorter DNA fragments,
regions upstream of smc were amplified by PCR using the
following primer sets and cloned into pRKLac290: for pRBJ594, primers
SMC30 (5'-ATATGAATTCAAGCTTGCCCCATGCTAGTTTCCTC-3') and SMC31
(5'-ATATGGATCCGCGACGATGGTGACTCG-3'); for pRBJ595, SMC32
(5'-ATATGAATTCAAGCTTATCATCAAGGGCCGCAAC-3') and SMC31; for pRBJ596,
SMC33 (5'-ATATGAATTCAAGCTTCGCTGGAAAAGCAACTGG-3') and SMC31; for
pRBJ597, SMC34 (5'-ATATGAATTCAAGCTTCTTTTTCGCCGCCTAGAG-3') and SMC31;
for pRBJ598, SMC30 and SMC35 (5'-ATATGGATCCCTTGTCAATGGTCCGATCC-3') .
The pRBJ580 plasmid, used for overexpressing His6-SMC, was
constructed by ligating the MluI-BamHI fragment from
pRBJ570 and an NdeI- and MluI-digested PCR product made
with primers SMC25 (5'-GGAATTCCATATGGTGCAGTTCCAGCGCCTC-3') and SMC26
(5'-ACGACAGGCGCTTGTACTTC-3') into NdeI- and BamHI-digested
pET28a (Novagen) . The plasmid was transformed into the E . coli
strain BL21(DE3)/pLysS (Novagen) .
The SMC-yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) fusion strain was constructed
as follows . The 3' end of smc was amplified by PCR using the
primers SMC5 (5'-AAAACTGCAGATGGAGCCTGAGGAGCTG-3') and SMC6
(5'-TTGGGATCCTCAGCCGCCACCAGCTTCTC-3') . The BamHI- and PstI-digested
PCR product and the BamHI-EcoRI yfp fragment
from pEYFP (Clontech) were cloned into the PstI- and EcoRI-digested
integration vector pNPT228 (M . R . K . Alley), resulting in pRBJ600 .
The plasmid was integrated into the chromosome of CB15N by a single
crossover event . We used PCR to confirm that the integration resulted
in an SMC-YFP-expressing strain . Western blotting using anti-SMC or
anti-green fluorescent protein (GFP) antibodies showed that a fusion
protein of the expected size was expressed .
Transcription analysis. The transcriptional start site of
the smc promoter was mapped by primer extension analysis as
described previously (43) . The primer SMC29
(5'-GCGACGTAGGTGACTCG-3') with sequence complementary to the 5' end
of the orfA gene upstream of smc was used . To examine
the cell cycle transcription pattern of the orfA and smc
promoter, cells containing a Psmc-lacZ transcriptional fusion
(pRBJ593) were synchronized . At various times during the cell
cycle, aliquots of cells were pulse-labeled for 5 min with [35S]methionine,
the cells were lysed, and ß-galactosidase and flagellin
proteins were immunoprecipitated as described previously (43) .
Antibody production and Western blotting. His6-SMC
was overproduced in E . coli from the plasmid pRBJ580 and
purified with Talon resin (Clontech) as described by the
manufacturer . Antibodies were produced in rabbits with the His6-SMC
protein as the antigen . The antibodies were affinity purified
as described previously (45) and used at a 1:2,000 dilution
for Western blotting (8) . For determining the relative
abundance of SMC during the cell cycle, samples were normalized so
equal amounts of total protein were loaded in all lanes . For
quantitative Western analysis, cell lysates from a known number of
cells were prepared as follows . Caulobacter cells were grown
in M2-glucose medium at 30°C . Dilutions of the culture were plated to
determine the number of cells per milliliter . Concentrated sodium
dodecyl sulfate (SDS) loading buffer was added directly to an
aliquot of the culture, and the mixture was immediately heated to
95°C for 5 min . The cell lysates and known quantities of purified His6-SMC
protein were serially diluted in SDS loading buffer containing 50 µg
of bovine serum albumin/ml and applied to an SDS-8% polyacrylamide
gel . The SMC protein was detected by Western blotting . The films were
scanned, and the relative signals from the bands were quantified with
ImageQuant (Molecular Dynamics) . The signals from the protein
standard were used to make a standard curve, and the amounts of SMC
in the cell lysates were determined . The signals were in the linear
range, and the correlation coefficients for the standard curves
were at least 0.98 for all determinations . The number of SMC
molecules per cell reported is an average of four determinations .
Microscopy. For immunofluorescence microscopy, synchronized
CB15N cells were fixed with 3% formaldehyde or methanol at different
stages of the cell cycle . The fixation solution was removed by
filtration . Immunofluorescence microscopy was performed as described
previously (8) . Affinity-purified anti-SMC
antibodies were used at a 1:100 dilution, and Alexa-488-labeled
secondary antibodies (Molecular Probes) were used at a 1:200
dilution . For live-cell microscopy, SMC-YFP-expressing cells were
immobilized by using a thin layer of agarose as described previously
(22) . Nomarski differential interference contrast
(DIC) and fluorescence images were acquired with a Nikon E800
microscope with a 100x DIC objective and a
5-Mhz Micromax 5600 cooled charge-coupled device camera controlled
through Metamorph (Universal Imaging Corp.) . Images were processed
with Metamorph and Photoshop (Adobe) .
Mapping the smc promoter. Analysis of the chromosomal
region containing the smc gene showed that smc is
directly downstream of a hypothetical open reading frame (named
orfA) with homology to putative open reading frames of unknown
function in other bacteria (24) (Fig . 1A) .
To determine if orfA is an essential gene, we attempted to
construct an in-frame deletion where the majority of the putative
open reading frame was removed . We were unable to obtain a
orfA
strain unless the strain simultaneously contained a plasmid (pRBJ570)
expressing the orfA gene product in trans .
Additionally, the orfA-containing plasmid could not be cured
from the chromosomal orfA deletion strain, whereas it was
readily cured from the wild-type strain . Thus, orfA is an
essential gene .
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FIG . 1 . Mapping of the promoter transcribing the smc gene . (A)
Schematic showing the organization of the chromosomal region containing
the smc gene . Bars above the line, genes (black) and an open
reading frame (grey) transcribed from left to right; bars below the
line, gene and open reading frame transcribed in the opposite direction .
Arrow, orfA and smc promoter mapped in this study . Below
is shown the extent of the regions upstream of smc that were
cloned in front of a promoterless lacZ gene, resulting in
different transcriptional fusions . The ß-galactosidase activities (in
Miller units) of strains containing these plasmids are shown . All
activities reported are averages of at least four independent
measurements . (B) Mapping of the transcriptional start site of the
orfA and smc promoter by primer extension analysis . A DNA
sequencing ladder was generated with the oligonucleotide used for the
primer extension analysis . Lane 1, yeast tRNA; lane 2, total RNA
isolated from Caulobacter cells . Arrow, only major band within
the DNA region present in the pRBJ597 plasmid . (C) Sequence of the
orfA and smc promoter region . Arrow, mapped start site; grey
shading, promoter -35 and -10 elements . GAnTC methylation sites are
underlined.
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Since there are only 23 bp between the stop site of orfA and
the start site of smc, the promoter transcribing smc is probably
located upstream of orfA . To map the orfA and smc
promoter, we constructed a series of transcriptional fusions to
lacZ containing different regions upstream of smc (Fig.
1A) . Full promoter activity was observed with
pRBJ597 containing a 309-bp fragment located immediately upstream of
the orfA start site . A fragment further upstream (pRBJ598)
exhibited no promoter activity . Furthermore, no promoter activity was
observed with an internal orfA fragment (pRBJ592) . Thus,
orfA and smc appear to be in an operon . The lower
ß-galactosidase activity that was observed when the fusion point was
within the smc gene (pRBJ591) was probably caused by the
presence of a weak transcriptional terminator between orfA and
smc.
The start site of the orfA and smc promoter was mapped by
primer extension analysis . There was only one prominent band within
the DNA region that gave full promoter activity with transcriptional
fusions (pRBJ597), showing that the orfA and smc genes are
transcribed from a single promoter, located immediately upstream of
the start site of orfA (Fig . 1B and C) . The
-35 and -10 regions of the smc promoter show a reasonably good
match to the published Caulobacter consensus
70
promoter sequence (32) .
Cell cycle regulation of smc transcription. To
determine if the transcription of the orfA-smc operon is
under cell cycle control, swarmer cells of the strain CB15N/pRBJ593,
containing a Psmc-lacZ transcriptional fusion, were
isolated and allowed to progress synchronously through the cell
cycle . The levels of transcription from the orfA and smc
promoter at different time points during the cell cycle were measured
by pulse-labeling newly synthesized proteins with [35S]methionine
and immunoprecipitating the ß-galactosidase protein (Fig.
2A) . The radioactivity in the ß-galactosidase band
represents the activity of the smc promoter during the 5-min
pulse-labeling . Synthesis of the 25-kDa flagellin protein was used as
an internal control, since this protein is expressed specifically in
swarmer and predivisional cells (11) . In these
experiments, the orfA and smc promoter was induced two- to
threefold in stalked cells, during early S phase . The cell cycle
timing of orfA and smc transcription and the level of
induction are similar to the transcription pattern previously
observed with several genes involved in DNA replication and repair (26,
28, 42, 43,
59) .
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FIG . 2 . Analysis of the smc transcription pattern and SMC level
during the cell cycle . (A) Swarmer cells from strain CB15N/pRBJ593,
containing a Psmc-lacZ transcriptional fusion, were
isolated and allowed to progress synchronously through the cell cycle .
At the indicated times (minutes), an aliquot of the cells was
pulse-labeled for 5 min with [35S]methionine . The
ß-galactosidase and the 25-kDa flagellin proteins were
immunoprecipitated from cell lysates, followed by SDS-polyacrylamide
electrophoresis . Schematics show cell cycle progression of the strain .
(B) The amounts of radioactivity in the different bands were quantified
with a phosphorimager . Circles, radioactivity in the ß-galactosidase
band; squares, radioactivity in the flagellin bands . (C) The relative
amount of the SMC during the cell cycle was analyzed by Western blotting
using anti-SMC antibodies . Samples were withdrawn at the indicated time
points (minutes), and equal amounts of total protein were loaded in all
lanes.
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The smc promoter contains two GAnTC sites overlapping essential
promoter elements at the -35 region and at the transcription
start site (Fig . 1C) . These sites are known to be potential
methylation sites for the essential CcrM methyltransferase (61) .
In Caulobacter, DNA methylation takes place only late in S phase,
so GAnTC sites remain hemimethylated from the time the replication
fork passes that region of the chromosome until the end of the
cell cycle, when CcrM is expressed (49) . For at least two
Caulobacter genes, the methylation status of GAnTC sites in the
promoter regions has roles in regulating gene expression (41,
50) . To examine if the methylation state of the
GAnTC sites in the orfA and smc promoter influenced
promoter activity, we examined the transcript levels when the
abundance of the CcrM methyltransferase was varied . No significant
change in transcript levels was observed in ccrM mutants that
either overexpress or deplete CcrM (data not shown), indicating that
the methylation state of the GAnTC sites in the smc promoter
does not play an important role in regulating the orfA and
smc promoter activity .
Abundance of the SMC during the cell cycle. To determine the
abundance of the SMC at specific stages of the cell cycle, we
produced antibodies to SMC . Western blots showed a band of the
expected size ( 125
kDa) in extracts of the wild-type strain, a larger protein ( 150
kDa) in a smc-yfp fusion strain, and no signal in extracts of
the smc deletion strain (data not shown) . Thus, the antibodies
are specific to SMC . Western blots of cell samples taken at different
time points from a culture progressing synchronously through the cell
cycle showed that SMC is present in approximately equal amounts at
all times (Fig . 2C) . Thus, SMC is probably a stable
protein, so SMC molecules synthesized earlier remain in the cell, and
the modest two- to threefold induction of orfA and smc
transcription in early S phase does not result in a significant
increase in the abundance of the SMC . Similar cell cycle regulation
of transcription, but only very little variation in protein
abundance, have previously been observed with other Caulobacter
proteins (22) . It is possible that the temporal
regulation of transcription of the first gene in the operon, orfA,
is important in modulating the concentration of its protein product
at specific times in the cell cycle .
The number of SMC molecules present per cell has implications for
the function of SMC . Therefore, we measured the number of SMC
molecules per Caulobacter cell by quantitative Western blotting .
Different dilutions of extracts from a known number of cells
and known quantities of purified His6-SMC were fractionated
using SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis . Western blots
with anti-SMC antibodies were used to detect the protein (data not
shown) . The amount of SMC in the cell lysates was determined from a
standard curve . We calculated that 1,690 ± 270 SMC molecules per cell
are present in actively growing Caulobacter cells .
Caulobacter SMC most likely forms a dimer, as is observed with
B . subtilis SMC (34) . Therefore, if the SMC complexes are
evenly distributed throughout the chromosome, there would be
approximately one SMC complex per 6,000 to 8,000 bp of chromosomal
DNA in actively growing Caulobacter cells .
Intracellular localization of SMC during the cell cycle. To
carry out functions of DNA compaction and segregation, SMC is likely
to interact with the DNA in an ordered pattern . If SMC binds to sites
throughout the chromosome, SMC may be distributed throughout the
cell . However, if SMC binds to a few sites in the chromosome or SMC
molecules aggregate at specific sites in the cell, SMC foci should be
observed . Thus, knowing the intracellular location of SMC may give
information about the functions of SMC . Initially, we determined the
intracellular localization of SMC by immunofluorescence microscopy
with affinity-purified anti-SMC antibodies . Immunofluorescence
microscopy using these antibodies gave a strong signal in more than
98% of the wild-type cells and no significant signal when
smc
cells were used (data not shown), showing that the signal is specific
for SMC . At different time points during the cell cycle, cells were
fixed and the intracellular location of SMC was determined by
immunofluorescence microscopy (Fig . 3) . In all cell
types SMC exhibited a punctate pattern, forming a limited number of
small foci located throughout the cells . Weak background fluorescence
in the cells, which could originate from noncomplexed SMC molecules,
was observed .
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FIG . 3 . Intracellular localization of the SMC in cells at different
stages of the Caulobacter cell cycle as determined by indirect
immunofluorescence microscopy . Swarmer cells were isolated and allowed
to progress synchronously through the cell cycle . When the cells reached
the indicated stages of the cell cycle (0, 60, 90, or 120 min,
respectively), they were fixed and the intracellular location of SMC was
visualized by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy using
affinity-purified anti-SMC antibodies . Only a low level of background
signal was observed with a
smc
strain, showing that the signal is specific for SMC . Shown are Nomarski
DIC microscopy images of the cells, immunofluorescence microscopy (IFM)
images of the cells showing the intracellular localizations of SMC, and
images of 4',6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI)-stained chromosomal DNA
in the cells . Arrows, typical predivisional cells with bright SMC
staining near the poles of the cells . Bar, 2 µm.
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Approximately 30 to 40% of the predivisional cells showed large and
bright polar SMC foci (Fig . 3), suggesting that SMCs aggregate
near the poles at some point during the predivisional cell stage
of the cell cycle . Since these polar foci are largely missing
from swarmer and stalked cells, the polar SMC aggregates must
dissociate upon cell division . The same localization pattern was
observed when the cells were grown in a minimal medium (generation
time, 150 min) and a rich growth medium (generation time, 70 min)
(data not shown) .
We quantified the number of SMC foci per cell at different stages
of the cell cycle (Fig . 4) . The number of SMC foci per cell
varied, even among cells in the same stage of the cell cycle,
with swarmer cells exhibiting predominantly two or three foci per
cell, with a transition to three or four foci per cell coincident
with the initiation of DNA replication in the stalked cell . The late
predivisional cell, containing two fully replicated chromosomes,
exhibited two to five SMC foci per cell .
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FIG . 4 . Distribution of the numbers of SMC foci per cell in swarmer
cells (A), stalked cells (B), and late predivisional cells (C) . The
numbers of SMC foci, visualized by immunofluorescence microscopy, per
cell at each stage of the cell cycle were determined . The schematics to
the right show cells at the respective stage of the cell cycle and
typical SMC localization patterns . At least 200 cells were counted at
each stage.
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To confirm the intracellular localization pattern of SMC observed by
immunofluorescence microscopy, we examined the subcellular
localization of SMC in live cells by using fusions to GFP or YFP . A
fusion of YFP to the C terminus of SMC was constructed, and the
smc-yfp gene fusion replaced the wild type smc allele in
single copy in the Caulobacter chromosome under the control of
the endogenous smc promoter . The strain expressing SMC-YFP as
its only source of SMC protein showed no growth or cell cycle
defects, indicating that the fusion protein is fully functional . To
examine the intracellular location of SMC during the Caulobacter
cell cycle, we synchronized the smc-yfp fusion strain . At different
times during the cell cycle, the intracellular location of SMC-YFP
was examined by fluorescence microscopy (Fig . 5) . There
were several SMC-YFP foci per cell, as was observed by
immunofluorescence microscopy of fixed cells . Many predivisional
cells had large and bright polar SMC-YFP foci and faint foci located
at other positions within the cells . Identical subcellular
localization was obtained with a fusion of GFP to the N terminus of
SMC (data not shown) . Thus, the localization pattern observed in live
cells with smc-yfp or gfp-smc fusions is identical to the
subcellular localization of native SMC, determined by
immunofluorescence microscopy .
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FIG . 5 . Intracellular localization of SMC in live cells at different
stages of the cell cycle . SMC-YFP-expressing cells were synchronized,
and samples were taken for microscopy when the cells reached the
indicated stages (0, 60, 90, or 120 min into the cell cycle,
respectively) . DIC microscopy images of the cells (top) and YFP
fluorescence (bottom) are shown . Arrows, predivisional cells with bright
polar SMC-YFP foci . Scale bar, 2 µm.
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SMCs are ubiquitously present in eukaryotes, eubacteria, and archaea .
Where examined, the SMCs function in organizing chromosomal DNA (5,
15, 51) . Caulobacter possesses a
single SMC homolog, and deletion of SMC results in irregular
nucleoids . Visualization of the intracellular locations of the
origin- and terminus-proximal regions of the chromosome shows that
they are mislocalized in a subpopulation of the
smc
cells . Additionally, these regions are less condensed in the
smc
strain than in the wild-type strain . Thus, deletion of smc
results in chromosome organization defects (23) .
At elevated temperatures, the
smc
cells, like strains with defects in chromosome replication or
segregation, arrest at the predivisional cell stage (6,
40, 57, 60) . Thus,
Caulobacter SMC plays a role in maintaining proper organization
of the chromosomal DNA, and lack of SMC-mediated chromosome
organization during rapid growth results in a chromosome segregation
defect .
In exponentially growing Caulobacter cells, approximately 1,500
to 2,000 SMC molecules are present per cell, corresponding to
approximately one SMC complex per 6,000 to 8,000 bp of chromosomal
DNA . This density of SMC complexes is similar to the densities of
condensin complexes in eukaryotes and SMC in B . subtilis (30,
52) but is much lower than the density of histone-like
proteins in E . coli, which are present at one complex per 200
to 600 bp in exponentially growing cells (2) . Thus,
there are sufficient SMC molecules in Caulobacter to affect
the global structure of the nucleoid but too few to compact the
chromosome directly by wrapping DNA around them . Condensation of the
DNA by a scissoring action that brings the two SMC head domains
from opposite ends of the protein into contact is unlikely to
occur in a stoichiometric manner because too few SMC molecules are
present but may operate at selected regions of the chromosome .
Relevant to these mechanisms is the question of how SMC is dynamically
deployed within the cell .
Examination of the intracellular localization of SMC during the
Caulobacter cell cycle showed a punctate pattern, with SMC
forming two to five small foci distributed throughout the cell (Fig.
3 to 5) . We cannot rule out the possibility
that, in addition to the SMC molecules that form foci, nonaggregated
SMC molecules may be distributed throughout the cell . Many
predivisional cells had bright polar SMC foci, indicating that some
SMCs aggregate near the poles during a period in the predivisional
cell stage of the cell cycle . Since only a subpopulation of the
predivisional cells (30 to 40%) had bright polar foci, SMCs may
aggregate near the poles only during a brief period of the cell
cycle . A similar pattern of SMC localization was observed in B .
subtilis, with SMC localized in a punctate pattern as well as
forming specific polar foci (16, 33) .
Similarly, MukB in E . coli forms multiple foci within the
nucleoid (7) . However, other studies report that
SMC and MukB localize as discrete foci in positions similar to that
of the replisome (30, 39) . The differences
in localization may reflect the use of different methods for
examining the localization of the proteins or different growth
conditions . The Caulobacter SMC localization pattern reported
here was observed by immunofluorescence microscopy of fixed cells and
smc-yfp or gfp-smc fusions in live cells and was
observed in minimal as well as rich growth media . Since
immunofluorescence microscopy and live-cell microscopy are very
different methods, the consistent SMC localization pattern is most
likely an accurate reflection of the localization of SMC within the
Caulobacter cell . SMC localization clearly differs from
replisome localization in Caulobacter (25) .
SMCs possess a DNA binding motif, and DNA binding has been observed
with both bacterial and eukaryotic SMC proteins (1,
3, 18, 19,
27, 37, 53) . Therefore,
the majority of the SMCs are expected to interact with the
chromosome . The formation of discrete SMC foci at different positions
in the cell most likely represents the association of multiple SMCs .
If the SMCs simultaneously bind to multiple sites throughout the
chromosome, different chromosomal regions could be brought into close
proximity by SMC aggregation . Purified B . subtilis SMC can, in
the presence of ATP, aggregate single-stranded DNA (18) .
It was suggested that aggregation of single-stranded DNA brings
unpaired regions of the bacterial chromosome together, thereby
compacting it . Alternatively, SMC could bind with high affinity to a
small number of chromosomal regions, thereby concentrating SMC in
regions of the cell where chromosomal domains with multiple SMC
binding sites are located . This case would be similar to that of
yeast cohesin, which binds to specific regions of the chromosome and
forms multiple discrete foci in spread nuclei (3,
35, 53, 54) .
Organization and condensation of the chromosomal DNA by SMC could
take place when chromosome replication has been completed, or
chromosomal domains could be formed and condensed during the process
of DNA replication, shortly after a given region has been replicated .
SMC appears to be deployed to more sites in stalked cells than in
swarmer cells, since two or three SMC foci generally are observed in
swarmer cells and three or four foci are present in stalked cells,
even though a constant amount of SMC is present . Since the chromosome
is being replicated in stalked cells, this increase in number of SMC
foci may mean that SMC organizes and condenses the chromosome
continuously during DNA replication, not only after completion of DNA
replication . This is supported by the analysis of the smc cell
cycle transcription pattern . The orfA and smc promoter
is activated during early S phase, a cell cycle transcription pattern
similar to that previously observed with several DNA replication and
repair genes (26, 28,
42, 43, 59) . It is
clearly different from the cell cycle transcription pattern of known
partitioning genes, which are expressed much later in the cell cycle
(28) .
In the predivisional cell stage of the cell cycle, many cells
showed bright polar SMC foci and only faint foci in other parts of
the cell . In those cells, the two new daughter chromosomes are
separated from each other and the nucleoids are further condensed to
form a DNA-free region at the place where septation takes place . If
SMCs remain bound to sites throughout the chromosome while
aggregating near the poles, they could have a role in the further
condensation of the chromosomes that takes place at this time in the
cell cycle . Thus, SMC may function both during DNA replication, by
refolding and condensing newly replicated DNA, and after completion
of DNA replication, by condensing the entire nucleoid .
We thank Ann Reisenauer for testing the role of methylation in
regulating promoter activity .
R . B . Jensen was supported by postdoctoral fellowships from EMBO
and the Carlsberg foundation . This work was supported by National
Institutes of Health grants GM32506/5120MZ and GM51426 and Office of
Naval Research grant N00014-96-1-0564 .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Developmental Biology, Beckman Center, Stanford University School of Medicine,
Stanford, CA 94305-5329 . Phone: (650) 725-7678 . Fax: (650) 725-7739 . E-mail: shapiro@cmgm.stanford.edu.
Present address: Genencor International Inc., Palo Alto, CA 94304 .
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