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Dive into the research topics where Gregory T. Marczynski is active.

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Featured researches published by Gregory T. Marczynski.


Cell | 1996

Cell Cycle Control by an Essential Bacterial Two-Component Signal Transduction Protein

Kim C. Quon; Gregory T. Marczynski; Lucy Shapiro

Dividing cells must coordinate cell cycle events to ensure genetic stability. Here we identify an essential two-component signal transduction protein that controls multiple events in the Caulobacter cell cycle, including cell division, stalk synthesis, and cell cycle-specific transcription. This protein, CtrA, is homologous to response regulator transcription factors and controls transcription from a group of cell cycle-regulated promoters critical for DNA replication, DNA methylation, and flagellar biogenesis. CtrA activity in the cell cycle is controlled both transcriptionally and by phosphorylation. As purified CtrA binds an essential DNA sequence motif found within its target promoters, we propose that CtrA acts in a phosphorelay signal transduction system to control bacterial cell cycle events directly at the transcriptional level.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1992

Cell-cycle control of a cloned chromosomal origin of replication from Caulobacter crescentus

Gregory T. Marczynski; Lucille Shapiro

Caulobacter crescentus cell division is asymmetric and yields distinct swarmer cell and stalked cell progeny. Only the stalked cell initiates chromosomal replication, and the swarmer cell must differentiate into a stalked cell before chromosomal DNA replication can occur. In an effort to understand this developmental control of replication, we employed pulsed-field gel electrophoresis to localize and to isolate the chromosomal origin of replication. The C. crescentus homologues of several Escherichia coli genes are adjacent to the origin in the physical order hemE, origin, dnaA and dnaK,J. Deletion analysis reveals that the minimal sequence requirement for autonomous replication is greater than 430 base-pairs, but less than 720 base-pairs. A plasmid, whose replication relies only on DNA from the C. crescentus origin of replication, has a distinct temporal pattern of DNA synthesis that resembles that of the bona fide C. crescentus chromosome. This implies that cis-acting replication control elements are closely linked to this origin of replication. This DNA contains sequence motifs that are common to other bacterial origins, such as five DnaA boxes, an E. coli-like 13-mer, and an exceptional A + T-rich region. Point mutations in one of the DnaA boxes abolish replication in C. crescentus. This origin also possesses three additional motifs that are unique to the C. crescentus origin of replication: seven 8-mer (GGCCTTCC) motifs, nine 8-mer (AAGCCCGG) motifs, and five 9-mer (GTTAA-n7-TTAA) motifs are present. The latter two motifs are implicated in essential C. crescentus replication functions, because they are contained within specific deletions that abolish replication.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1990

Plasmid and chromosomal DNA replication and partitioning during the Caulobacter crescentus cell cycle

Gregory T. Marczynski; A Dingwall; Lucille Shapiro

Cell division in Caulobacter crescentus yields a swarmer and a stalked cell. Only the stalked cell progeny is able to replicate its chromosome, and the swarmer cell progeny must differentiate into a stalked cell before it too can replicate its chromosome. In an effort to understand the mechanisms that limit chromosomal replication to the stalked cell, plasmid DNA synthesis was analyzed during the developmental cell cycle of C. crescentus, and the partitioning of both the plasmids and the chromosomes to the progeny cells was examined. Unlike the chromosome, plasmids from the incompatibility groups Q and P replicated in all C. crescentus cell types. However, all plasmids tested showed a ten- to 20-fold higher replication rate in the stalked cells than the swarmer cells. We observed that all plasmids replicated during the C. crescentus cell cycle with comparable kinetics of DNA synthesis, even though we tested plasmids that encode very different known (and putative) replication proteins. We determined the plasmid copy number in both progeny cell types, and determined that plasmids partitioned equally to the stalked and swarmer cells. We also reexamined chromosome partitioning in a recombination-deficient strain of C. crescentus, and confirmed an earlier report that chromosomes partition to the progeny stalked and swarmer cells in a random manner that does not discriminate between old and new DNA strands.


Current Opinion in Genetics & Development | 1993

Bacterial chromosome origins of replication

Gregory T. Marczynski; Lucy Shapiro

Bacteria regulate chromosomal replication from one specific origin. We compare the regulatory requirements, DNA structures, and biochemical properties of the prototypic Escherichia coli origin with those of evolutionarily distant Bacillus subtilis and Caulobacter crescentus origins. The ubiquitous DnaA protein is a major regulator of all three bacterial origins. Unique features of these origins, however, may reflect specific regulatory requirements placed on them.


Archives of Microbiology | 1995

The control of asymmetric gene expression during Caulobacter cell differentiation

Gregory T. Marczynski; Lucille Shapiro

The dimorphic bacterium Caulobacter crescentus provides a simple model for cellular differentiation. Each cell division produces two distinct cell types: a swarmer cell and a stalked cell. These cells possess distinet functional morphologies and differential programs of transeription and DNA replication. The synthesis of a single polar flagellum is restricted to the swarmer pole of the predivisional cell by a genetic hierarchy comprising at least 50 genes whose transcription is regulated by novel and ubiquitous promoters, cognate sigma factors, and auxiliary transcriptional regulators. Chromosome replication is restricted to the stalked cell by a unique chromosome origin of replication that may be regulated by a novel cell-specific transcriptional control system. Phosphorylation signals, DNA methylation, differential chromosome structures, protein targeting, and selective protein degradation are also involved in establishing and maintaining cellular asymmetry. The molecular details of these universal cellular processes in C. crescentus will provide paradigms applicable to many general aspects of cellular differentiation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998

Negative control of bacterial DNA replication by a cell cycle regulatory protein that binds at the chromosome origin

Kim C. Quon; Bing Yang; Ibrahim J. Domian; Lucy Shapiro; Gregory T. Marczynski


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1994

A Caulobacter DNA methyltransferase that functions only in the predivisional cell

Gary Zweiger; Gregory T. Marczynski; Lucille Shapiro


Annual Review of Biochemistry | 1994

THE EXPRESSION OF ASYMMETRY DURING CAULOBACTER CELL DIFFERENTIATION

Y V Brun; Gregory T. Marczynski; Lucy Shapiro


Annual Review of Microbiology | 2002

Control of Chromosome Replication in Caulobacter Crescentus

Gregory T. Marczynski; Lucy Shapiro


Genes & Development | 1995

A developmentally regulated chromosomal origin of replication uses essential transcription elements.

Gregory T. Marczynski; Krista Lentine; Lucille Shapiro

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