Ding Jun Jin
National Institutes of Health
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Fems Microbiology Reviews | 2012
Ding Jun Jin; Cedric Cagliero; Yan Ning Zhou
Growth rate regulation in bacteria has been an important issue in bacterial physiology for the past 50 years. This review, using Escherichia coli as a paradigm, summarizes the mechanisms for the regulation of rRNA synthesis in the context of systems biology, particularly, in the context of genome-wide competition for limited RNA polymerase (RNAP) in the cell under different growth conditions including nutrient starvation. The specific location of the seven rrn operons in the chromosome and the unique properties of the rrn promoters contribute to growth rate regulation. The length of the rrn transcripts, coupled with gene dosage effects, influence the distribution of RNAP on the chromosome in response to growth rate. Regulation of rRNA synthesis depends on multiple factors that affect the structure of the nucleoid and the allocation of RNAP for global gene expression. The magic spot ppGpp, which acts with DksA synergistically, is a key effector in both the growth rate regulation and the stringent response induced by nutrient starvation, mainly because the ppGpp level changes in response to environmental cues. It regulates rRNA synthesis via a cascade of events including both transcription initiation and elongation, and can be explained by an RNAP redistribution (allocation) model.
Chemical Reviews | 2013
Ding Jun Jin; Cedric Cagliero; Yan Ning Zhou
One of the major structural differences that provides a taxonomic distinction between eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms is that prokaryotes lack the nuclear envelope, with exceptions such as planctomycetes 1, and genomic organization mechanisms found in eukaryotes. Instead, the prokaryotic genome is partitioned into a somewhat amorphous region of the cell known as the nucleoid 2–4. In both prokaryotes and eukaryotes, the genome must be compacted to fit into its allotted space while maintaining a level of organization that allows efficient functionality. In eukaryotes, this is accomplished by well-defined histone proteins that form nucleosomal and chromatin structures and yet can be remodeled to allow for the decondensation critical for gene expression 5–9. Although the bacterial genome must also be densely compacted, more than one-thousand-fold, and also organized for optimum functionality (chromosome replication/segregation, recombination and transcription) 10–14, the mechanisms by which this is accomplished remain unclear. The lack of “beads-on-a-string” morphology indicates different and/or multiple roles for nucleoid-associated proteins. Since transcription is a major cellular function and involves protein-DNA interaction and DNA topological domain structures, the transcription machinery themselves may play a role in nucleoid organization. Conversely, the nucleoid structure and organization may influence gene expression in a manner analogous to chromatin decondensation in eukaryotes. The interactions involved in nucleoid structure and gene expression continue to be challenging issues in the post-genomic era. Escherichia coli is a preferred model system for prokaryotic research due to the extensive studies into its genetic, physiology, biochemistry, and molecular biology mechanisms 15. The study of nucleoid organization is intrinsically difficult mainly due to the small size of bacteria in comparison to the limits of optical resolution of conventional instrumentation. Until very recently, images of the nucleoid have not changed much over the last four decades and reveal no structural details 16–18. Consequently, most of the earlier studies were focused on the biochemical properties and morphologies of isolated nucleoids and electron microscopic images after fixation 3–4,19–24. However, any preparation or fixation procedure will potentially introduce different organizations of the nucleoids or even artifacts. For example, different fixation procedures produced different nucleoid shapes of electron microscopic images 3. Additionally, growing evidence indicates that the organization of the nucleoid in the cell is plastic and sensitive to changes in growth and stress. The challenge of the research is to capture the “true” organization of the nucleoid reflecting the dynamic states of the nucleoid in living cells. Extensive studies have primarily emphasized the “histone-like” proteins including FIS, HU, H-NS, and IHF for their architectural roles in bending, looping, bridging and compacting DNA 25–36. The first three and RNA polymerase (RNAP) are the major nucleoid-associated proteins (NAPs) isolated from exponentially growing cells. Compared to the “histone-like” proteins, the binding of RNAP to DNA is much stronger. A prevailing view is that bacterial “histone-like proteins” are primarily responsible for the nucleoid organization and compaction in growing cells. Recent advances in the cell biology of E. coli RNAP and the nucleoid have shown that the distribution of RNAP, which is coupled to cell growth, plays an important role in the nucleoid dynamic structure. Emerging evidence indicates that formation of the transcription foci centered at the putative nucleolus structure is critical in nucleoid remodeling and influencing global gene expression. As other recent comprehensive reviews have dealt with the roles of other factors in bacterial nucleoid organization 37–43, this review provides an alternative and/or complementary perspective to the traditional views on bacterial nucleoid compaction and expansion.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2013
Cedric Cagliero; Ding Jun Jin
The thermodynamic association of RNA polymerase (RNAP) with DNA is sensitive to salt concentration in vitro. Paradoxically, previous studies of changes in osmolarity during steady-state cell growth found no dependence between the association of RNAP to DNA and K+ concentration in Escherichia coli. We reevaluated this issue by following the interaction of RNAP and genomic DNA in time-course experiments during the hyper-osmotic response. Our results show that the interaction is temporally controlled by the same physical chemistry principle in the cell as in vitro. RNAP rapidly dissociates from the genome during the initial response when the cytoplasmic K+ accumulates transiently, and concurrently the nucleoid becomes hyper-condensed. The freed RNAP re-associates with the genome during a subsequent osmoadaptation phase when organic osmoprotectants accumulate as K+ levels decrease. RNAP first surrounds the hyper-condensed nucleoid forming a sphere of RNAP before it progressively moves in to the center of the nucleoid. Our findings reinterpret the dynamic protein–DNA interactions during osmotic stress response. We discuss the implications of the dissociation/association of RNAP for osmotic protection and nucleoid structure.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2001
Julio E. Cabrera; Ding Jun Jin
The Escherichia coli rapA gene encodes the RNA polymerase (RNAP)-associated protein RapA, which is a bacterial member of the SWI/SNF helicase-like protein family. We have studied the rapA promoter and its regulation in vivo and determined the interaction between RNAP and the promoter in vitro. We have found that the expression of rapA is growth phase dependent, peaking at the early log phase. The growth phase control of rapA is determined at least by one particular feature of the promoter: it uses CTP as the transcription-initiating nucleotide instead of a purine, which is used for most E. coli promoters. We also found that the rapA promoter is subject to growth rate regulation in vivo and that it forms intrinsic unstable initiation complexes with RNAP in vitro. Furthermore, we have shown that a GC-rich or discriminator sequence between the -10 and +1 positions of the rapA promoter is responsible for its growth rate control and the instability of its initiation complexes with RNAP.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2014
Cedric Cagliero; Yan Ning Zhou; Ding Jun Jin
In a fast-growing Escherichia coli cell, most RNA polymerase (RNAP) is allocated to rRNA synthesis forming transcription foci at clusters of rrn operons or bacterial nucleolus, and each of the several nascent nucleoids contains multiple pairs of replication forks. The composition of transcription foci has not been determined. In addition, how the transcription machinery is three-dimensionally organized to promote cell growth in concord with replication machinery in the nucleoid remains essentially unknown. Here, we determine the spatial and functional landscapes of transcription and replication machineries in fast-growing E. coli cells using super-resolution-structured illumination microscopy. Co-images of RNAP and DNA reveal spatial compartmentation and duplication of the transcription foci at the surface of the bacterial chromosome, encompassing multiple nascent nucleoids. Transcription foci cluster with NusA and NusB, which are the rrn anti-termination system and are associated with nascent rRNAs. However, transcription foci tend to separate from SeqA and SSB foci, which track DNA replication forks and/or the replisomes, demonstrating that transcription machinery and replisome are mostly located in different chromosomal territories to maintain harmony between the two major cellular functions in fast-growing cells. Our study suggests that bacterial chromosomes are spatially and functionally organized, analogous to eukaryotes.
Frontiers in Microbiology | 2015
Ding Jun Jin; Cedric Cagliero; Carmen Mata Martin; Jérôme Izard; Yan Ning Zhou
Our knowledge of the regulation of genes involved in bacterial growth and stress responses is extensive; however, we have only recently begun to understand how environmental cues influence the dynamic, three-dimensional distribution of RNA polymerase (RNAP) in Escherichia coli on the level of single cell, using wide-field fluorescence microscopy and state-of-the-art imaging techniques. Live-cell imaging using either an agarose-embedding procedure or a microfluidic system further underscores the dynamic nature of the distribution of RNAP in response to changes in the environment and highlights the challenges in the study. A general agreement between live-cell and fixed-cell images has validated the formaldehyde-fixing procedure, which is a technical breakthrough in the study of the cell biology of RNAP. In this review we use a systems biology perspective to summarize the advances in the cell biology of RNAP in E. coli, including the discoveries of the bacterial nucleolus, the spatial compartmentalization of the transcription machinery at the periphery of the nucleoid, and the segregation of the chromosome territories for the two major cellular functions of transcription and replication in fast-growing cells. Our understanding of the coupling of transcription and bacterial chromosome (or nucleoid) structure is also summarized. Using E. coli as a simple model system, co-imaging of RNAP with DNA and other factors during growth and stress responses will continue to be a useful tool for studying bacterial growth and adaptation in changing environment.
Critical Reviews in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2017
Ding Jun Jin; Carmen Mata Martin; Zhe Sun; Cedric Cagliero; Yan Ning Zhou
Abstract We have learned a great deal about RNA polymerase (RNA Pol), transcription factors, and the transcriptional regulation mechanisms in prokaryotes for specific genes, operons, or transcriptomes. However, we have only begun to understand how the transcription machinery is three-dimensionally (3D) organized into bacterial chromosome territories to orchestrate the transcription process and to maintain harmony with the replication machinery in the cell. Much progress has been made recently in our understanding of the spatial organization of the transcription machinery in fast-growing Escherichia coli cells using state-of-the-art superresolution imaging techniques. Co-imaging of RNA polymerase (RNA Pol) with DNA and transcription elongation factors involved in ribosomal RNA (rRNA) synthesis, and ribosome biogenesis has revealed similarities between bacteria and eukaryotes in the spatial organization of the transcription machinery for growth genes, most of which are rRNA genes. Evidence supports the notion that RNA Pol molecules are concentrated, forming foci at the clustering of rRNA operons resembling the eukaryotic nucleolus. RNA Pol foci are proposed to be active transcription factories for both rRNA genes expression and ribosome biogenesis to support maximal growth in optimal growing conditions. Thus, in fast-growing bacterial cells, RNA Pol foci mimic eukaryotic Pol I activity, and transcription factories resemble nucleolus-like compartmentation. In addition, the transcription and replication machineries are mostly segregated in space to avoid the conflict between the two major cellular functions in fast-growing cells.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2017
Qingxuan Zhou; Yan Ning Zhou; Ding Jun Jin; Yuk-Ching Tse-Dinh
Abstract Escherichia coli topoisomerase I (TopA), a regulator of global and local DNA supercoiling, is modified by Nε-Lysine acetylation. The NAD+-dependent protein deacetylase CobB can reverse both enzymatic and non-enzymatic lysine acetylation modification in E. coli. Here, we show that the absence of CobB in a ΔcobB mutant reduces intracellular TopA catalytic activity and increases negative DNA supercoiling. TopA expression level is elevated as topA transcription responds to the increased negative supercoiling. The slow growth phenotype of the ΔcobB mutant can be partially compensated by further increase of intracellular TopA level via overexpression of recombinant TopA. The relaxation activity of purified TopA is decreased by in vitro non-enzymatic acetyl phosphate mediated lysine acetylation, and the presence of purified CobB protects TopA from inactivation by such non-enzymatic acetylation. The specific activity of TopA expressed from His-tagged fusion construct in the chromosome is inversely proportional to the degree of in vivo lysine acetylation during growth transition and growth arrest. These findings demonstrate that E. coli TopA catalytic activity can be modulated by lysine acetylation–deacetylation, and prevention of TopA inactivation from excess lysine acetylation and consequent increase in negative DNA supercoiling is an important physiological function of the CobB protein deacetylase.
bioRxiv | 2018
Xiaoli Weng; Christopher Bohrer; Kelsey Bettridge; Arvin Lagda; Cedric Cagliero; Ding Jun Jin; Jie Xiao
Recent studies have shown that RNA polymerase (RNAP) is spatially organized into distinct clusters in E. coli and B. subtilis cells. Spatially organized molecular components in prokaryotic systems imply compartmentalization without the use of membranes, which may offer new insights into pertinent functions and regulations. However, the function of RNAP clusters and whether its formation is driven by active ribosomal RNA (rRNA) transcription remain elusive. In this work, we investigated the spatial organization of RNAP in E. coli cells using quantitative superresolution imaging. We observed that RNAP formed large, distinct clusters under a rich medium growth condition and preferentially located in the center of the nucleoid. Two-color superresolution colocalization imaging showed that under the rich medium growth condition, nearly all RNAP clusters were active in synthesizing rRNA, suggesting that rRNA synthesis may be spatially separated from mRNA synthesis that most likely occurs at the nucleoid periphery. Surprisingly, a large fraction of RNAP clusters persisted under conditions in which rRNA synthesis was reduced or abolished, or when only one out of the seven rRNA operons (rrn) remained. Furthermore, when gyrase activity was inhibited, we observed a similar rRNA synthesis level, but multiple dispersed, smaller rRNA and RNAP clusters occupying not only the center but also the periphery of the nucleoid, comparable to an expanded nucleoid. These results suggested that RNAP was organized into active transcription centers for rRNA synthesis under the rich medium growth condition; their presence and spatial organization, however, were independent of rRNA synthesis activity under the conditions used but were instead influenced by the structure and characteristics of the underlying nucleoid. Our work opens the door for further investigations of the function and molecular nature of RNAP clusters and points to a potentially new mechanism of transcription regulation by the spatial organization of individual molecular components.
Frontiers in Microbiology | 2018
Carmen Mata Martín; Zhe Sun; Yan Ning Zhou; Ding Jun Jin
In the fast-growing Escherichia coli cells, RNA polymerase (RNAP) molecules are concentrated and form foci at clusters of ribosomal RNA (rRNA) operons resembling eukaryotic nucleolus. The bacterial nucleolus-like organization, spatially compartmentalized at the surface of the compact bacterial chromosome (nucleoid), serves as transcription factories for rRNA synthesis and ribosome biogenesis, which influences the organization of the nucleoid. Unlike wild type that has seven rRNA operons in the genome in a mutant that has six (Δ6rrn) rRNA operons deleted in the genome, there are no apparent transcription foci and the nucleoid becomes uncompacted, indicating that formation of RNAP foci requires multiple copies of rRNA operons clustered in space and is critical for nucleoid compaction. It has not been determined, however, whether a multicopy plasmid-borne rRNA operon (prrnB) could substitute the multiple chromosomal rRNA operons for the organization of the bacterial nucleolus-like structure in the mutants of Δ6rrn and Δ7rrn that has all seven rRNA operons deleted in the genome. We hypothesized that extrachromosomal nucleolus-like structures are similarly organized and functional in trans from prrnB in these mutants. In this report, using multicolor images of three-dimensional superresolution Structured Illumination Microscopy (3D-SIM), we determined the distributions of both RNAP and NusB that are a transcription factor involved in rRNA synthesis and ribosome biogenesis, prrnB clustering, and nucleoid structure in these two mutants in response to environmental cues. Our results found that the extrachromosomal nucleolus-like organization tends to be spatially located at the poles of the mutant cells. In addition, formation of RNAP foci at the extrachromosomal nucleolus-like structure condenses the nucleoid, supporting the idea that active transcription at the nucleolus-like organization is a driving force in nucleoid compaction.