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Les systemes Xer a une seule recombinase

Posted on:2013-10-13Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:Universite de Montreal (Canada)Candidate:Leroux, MaximeFull Text:PDF
GTID:2450390008986715Subject:Biology
Abstract/Summary:
The chromosome dimers produced during the repair of circular chromosomes can be harmful to bacteria by blocking the segregation of the chromosome and cell division. To overcome this problem, bacteria use the Xer system for the monomerisation of chromosome dimers. It has two components, XerC and XerD, which act on the dif site and complete a recombination that will lead to the separation of the two copies of the DNA. The dif site is a DNA sequence where two imperfect inverted repeats separated by six base pairs allow the binding of each recombinase. This recombination is regulated by the protein FtsK, an essential member of the cell division machinery. The Xer system has been well studied in Escherichia coli and has also been characterized in a variety of species, for example Bacillus subtilis. Furthermore, in certain species of Streptococcus, studies have identified only a single recombinase, XerS, which acts on an atypical site named difSL in order to monomerize dimeric chromosomes. Not long after, a second system using a single recombinase was identified in a group of &egr;-proteobacteria. This recombinase was named XerH and the recombination site, difH, was found to more similar to difSL than to the classical dif sites. In this thesis, results from in vitro experiments on both systems are presented, as well as some results from in vivo experiments. We show that XerS is capable of binding cooperatively to difSL and that this binding is asymmetrical. This is because XerS is able to bind to the left half of the site but not to the right half when they are separated. The cleavage by XerS is also asymmetrical, as it is more efficient on the bottom strand. As for XerH, its binding to difH is much less cooperative and doesn't have the same asymmetry. But the cleavage is also asymmetrical like the one seen in XerS. Comparing the two systems show that they are not homologuous and that more than one version of Xer systems using a single recombinase exists. These results represent the first discovery of an 11 bases pairs spacer for tyrosine recombinase. It is also the first in vitro studies of XerH.
Keywords/Search Tags:Recombinase, Xer, System
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