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      Chromosome and replisome dynamics in E. coli: loss of sister cohesion triggers global chromosome movement and mediates chromosome segregation.

      1 ,
      Cell
      Elsevier BV

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          Abstract

          Chromosome and replisome dynamics were examined in synchronized E. coli cells undergoing a eukaryotic-like cell cycle. Sister chromosomes remain tightly colocalized for much of S phase and then separate, in a single coordinate transition. Origin and terminus regions behave differently, as functionally independent domains. During separation, sister loci move far apart and the nucleoid becomes bilobed. Origins and terminus regions also move. We infer that sisters are initially linked and that loss of cohesion triggers global chromosome reorganization. This reorganization creates the 2-fold symmetric, ter-in/ori-out conformation which, for E. coli, comprises sister segregation. Analogies with eukaryotic prometaphase suggest that this could be a primordial segregation mechanism to which microtubule-based processes were later added. We see no long-lived replication "factory"; replication initiation timing does not covary with cell mass, and we identify changes in nucleoid position and state that are tightly linked to cell division. We propose that cell division licenses the next round of replication initiation via these changes.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Cell
          Cell
          Elsevier BV
          0092-8674
          0092-8674
          Jun 17 2005
          : 121
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA. bates2@fas.harvard.edu
          Article
          S0092-8674(05)00393-4 NIHMS246920
          10.1016/j.cell.2005.04.013
          2973560
          15960977
          2bfa94ec-22fc-40d9-9e16-7de5d93f6830
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