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Dive into the research topics where Steven J. Sandler is active.

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Featured researches published by Steven J. Sandler.


Nature | 2000

The importance of repairing stalled replication forks

Michael M. Cox; Myron F. Goodman; Kenneth N. Kreuzer; David J. Sherratt; Steven J. Sandler; Kenneth J. Marians

The bacterial SOS response to unusual levels of DNA damage has been recognized and studied for several decades. Pathways for re-establishing inactivated replication forks under normal growth conditions have received far less attention. In bacteria growing aerobically in the absence of SOS-inducing conditions, many replication forks encounter DNA damage, leading to inactivation. The pathways for fork reactivation involve the homologous recombination systems, are nonmutagenic, and integrate almost every aspect of DNA metabolism. On a frequency-of-use basis, these pathways represent the main function of bacterial DNA recombination systems, as well as the main function of a number of other enzymatic systems that are associated with replication and site-specific recombination.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2001

Development of a Genetic System for Geobacter sulfurreducens

Maddalena V. Coppi; Ching Leang; Steven J. Sandler; Derek R. Lovley

ABSTRACT Members of the genus Geobacter are the dominant metal-reducing microorganisms in a variety of anaerobic subsurface environments and have been shown to be involved in the bioremediation of both organic and metal contaminants. To facilitate the study of the physiology of these organisms, a genetic system was developed forGeobacter sulfurreducens. The antibiotic sensitivity of this organism was characterized, and optimal conditions for plating it at high efficiency were established. A protocol for the introduction of foreign DNA into G. sulfurreducens by electroporation was also developed. Two classes of broad-host-range vectors, IncQ and pBBR1, were found to be capable of replication in G. sulfurreducens. In particular, the IncQ plasmid pCD342 was found to be a suitable expression vector for this organism. When the information and novel methods described above were utilized, thenifD gene of G. sulfurreducens was disrupted by the single-step gene replacement method. Insertional mutagenesis of this key gene in the nitrogen fixation pathway impaired the ability of G. sulfurreducens to grow in medium lacking a source of fixed nitrogen. Expression of thenifD gene in trans complemented this phenotype. This paper constitutes the first report of genetic manipulation of a member of the Geobacter genus.


Biochemical Journal | 2003

Biochemical and Genetic Characterization of PpcA, a Periplasmic c-Type Cytochrome in Geobacter Sulfurreducens

Jon R. Lloyd; Ching Leang; Allison L Hodges Myerson; Maddalena V. Coppi; Stacey Cuifo; Barb Methe; Steven J. Sandler; Derek R. Lovley

A 9.6 kDa periplasmic c -type cytochrome, designated PpcA, was purified from the Fe(III)-reducing bacterium Geobacter sulfurreducens and characterized. The purified protein is basic (pI 9.5), contains three haems and has an N-terminal amino acid sequence closely related to those of the previously described trihaem c (7) cytochromes of Geobacter metallireducens and Desulfuromonas acetoxidans. The gene encoding PpcA was identified from the G. sulfurreducens genome using the N-terminal sequence, and encodes a protein of 71 amino acids (molecular mass 9.58 kDa) with 49% identity to the c (7) cytochrome of D. acetoxidans. In order to determine the physiological role of PpcA, a knockout mutant was prepared with a single-step recombination method. Acetate-dependent Fe(III) reduction was significantly inhibited in both growing cultures and cell suspensions of the mutant. When ppcA was expressed in trans, the full capacity for Fe(III) reduction with acetate was restored. The transfer of electrons from acetate to anthraquinone 2,6-disulphonate (AQDS; a humic acid analogue) and to U(VI) was also compromised in the mutant, but acetate-dependent reduction of fumarate was not altered. The rates of reduction of Fe(III), AQDS, U(VI) and fumarate were also the same in the wild type and ppcA mutant when hydrogen was supplied as the electron donor. When taken together with previous studies on other electron transport proteins in G. sulfurreducens, these results suggest that PpcA serves as an intermediary electron carrier from acetate to terminal Fe(III) reductases in the outer membrane, and is also involved in the transfer of electrons from acetate to U(VI) and humics.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2000

Role of PriA in Replication Fork Reactivation in Escherichia coli

Steven J. Sandler; Kenneth J. Marians

As a result of the work of many laboratories, a new paradigm describing the manner by which bacteria respond to repair DNA damage has emerged. This paradigm holds that under any growth condition, essentially all replication forks formed at oriC encounter DNA damage and either stall or collapse before they can complete synthesis of the genome. Maintenance of cell viability therefore requires both correction of the DNA lesion via the action of the DNA repair enzymes and replication fork restart via the combined action of the DNA recombination and replication enzymes. A proposal has been advanced to distinguish this pathway, which operates as a housekeeping function in the absence of exogenous insult to the cell and is likely to be inherently nonmutagenic, from the SOS response, which is induced by exogenous DNA damage and includes error-prone repair, that it be named CPR for coordinated processing of damaged replication forks (M. M. Cox, M. F. Goodman, K. N. Kreuzer, D. J. Sherratt, S. J. Sandler, and K. J. Marians, submitted for publication). In this minireview, we will describe the central role of PriA in the replication fork restart step of CPR.


Critical Reviews in Microbiology | 1994

Homologous Genetic Recombination: The Pieces Begin to Fall into Place

Alvin J. Clark; Steven J. Sandler

One of the authors (AJC) acknowledges with gratitude the important role Fernando Bastarrachea played in the authors discovery that E. coli could carry out homologous genetic recombination by multiple pathways. This in turn led to the discovery of several genes, including recF, recO, and recR, whose role in recombination would not otherwise have been detected. Subsequent genetic and biochemical studies have led to a general formulation in which there are multiple nucleolytic ways to achieve a presynaptic intermediate bound to RecA protein. Postsynaptic events in the general formulation occur by means of multiple branch migration enzymes to form Holliday DNA structures and a specific nuclease to cleave them. The general formulation is built on synapsis catalyzed by RecA protein. A second RecA-independent synapsis catalyzed by RecT (and RecE?) protein is now under study and a third type independent of both RecA and RecT has apparently been discovered. How these will affect the general formulation remains to be seen. Some proteins, most prominently RecF, RecO, and RecR, have no role in the general formulation. The hypothesis is presented that these proteins act as a switch between replication and recombination by helping to convert replication to recombination intermediates. Universality of the general formulation is supported by the widespread occurrence of recA, recB, recC, and recD genes among bacteria. Recent discovery of recA-like genes in several eukaryotes further supports its universality. We have contributed additional support by sequencing a recA-like gene from an archaeal species, thus making it plausible that the mechanism of synapsis worked out for E. coli RecA protein will hold for all three organismal domains. The boundaries of the puzzle of homologous genetic recombination therefore seem complete and the pieces to the complex picture they encompass are falling into place.


Molecular Microbiology | 2004

Measurement of SOS expression in individual Escherichia coli K-12 cells using fluorescence microscopy

Jesse D. McCool; Edward Long; Joseph F. Petrosino; Hilary A. Sandler; Susan M. Rosenberg; Steven J. Sandler

Many recombination, DNA repair and DNA replication mutants have high basal levels of SOS expression as determined by a sulAp‐lacZ reporter gene system on a population of cells. Two opposing models to explain how the SOS expression is distributed in these cells are: (i) the ‘Uniform Expression Model (UEM)’ where expression is evenly distributed in all cells or (ii) the ‘Two Population Model (TPM)’ where some cells are highly induced while others are not at all. To distinguish between these two models, a method to quantify SOS expression in individual bacterial cells was developed by fusing an SOS promoter (sulAp) to the green fluorescent protein (gfp) reporter gene and inserting it at attλ on the Escherichia coli chromosome. It is shown that the fluorescence in sulAp‐gfp cells is regulated by RecA and LexA. This system was then used to distinguish between the two models for several mutants. The patterns displayed by priA, dnaT, recG, uvrD, dam, ftsK, rnhA, polA and xerC mutants were explained best by the TPM while only lexA (def), lexA3 (ind–) and recA defective mutants were explained best by the UEM. These results are discussed in a context of how the processes of DNA replication and recombination may affect cells in a population differentially.


Journal of Molecular Evolution | 1997

Evolutionary Comparisons of RecA-Like Proteins Across All Major Kingdoms of Living Organisms

Volker Brendel; Luciano Brocchieri; Steven J. Sandler; Alvin J. Clark; Samuel Karlin

Abstract. Protein sequences with similarities to Escherichia coli RecA were compared across the major kingdoms of eubacteria, archaebacteria, and eukaryotes. The archaeal sequences branch monophyletically and are most closely related to the eukaryotic paralogous Rad51 and Dmc1 groups. A multiple alignment of the sequences suggests a modular structure of RecA-like proteins consisting of distinct segments, some of which are conserved only within subgroups of sequences. The eukaryotic and archaeal sequences share an N-terminal domain which may play a role in interactions with other factors and nucleic acids. Several positions in the alignment blocks are highly conserved within the eubacteria as one group and within the eukaryotes and archaebacteria as a second group, but compared between the groups these positions display nonconservative amino acid substitutions. Conservation within the RecA-like core domain identifies possible key residues involved in ATP-induced conformational changes. We propose that RecA-like proteins derive evolutionarily from an assortment of independent domains and that the functional homologs of RecA in noneubacteria comprise an array of RecA-like proteins acting in series or cooperatively.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Physical manipulation of the Escherichia coli chromosome reveals its soft nature

James Pelletier; Ken Halvorsen; Bae-Yeun Ha; Raffaella Paparcone; Steven J. Sandler; Conrad L. Woldringh; Wesley P. Wong; Suckjoon Jun

Replicating bacterial chromosomes continuously demix from each other and segregate within a compact volume inside the cell called the nucleoid. Although many proteins involved in this process have been identified, the nature of the global forces that shape and segregate the chromosomes has remained unclear because of limited knowledge of the micromechanical properties of the chromosome. In this work, we demonstrate experimentally the fundamentally soft nature of the bacterial chromosome and the entropic forces that can compact it in a crowded intracellular environment. We developed a unique “micropiston” and measured the force-compression behavior of single Escherichia coli chromosomes in confinement. Our data show that forces on the order of 100 pN and free energies on the order of 105 kBT are sufficient to compress the chromosome to its in vivo size. For comparison, the pressure required to hold the chromosome at this size is a thousand-fold smaller than the surrounding turgor pressure inside the cell. Furthermore, by manipulation of molecular crowding conditions (entropic forces), we were able to observe in real time fast (approximately 10 s), abrupt, reversible, and repeatable compaction–decompaction cycles of individual chromosomes in confinement. In contrast, we observed much slower dissociation kinetics of a histone-like protein HU from the whole chromosome during its in vivo to in vitro transition. These results for the first time provide quantitative, experimental support for a physical model in which the bacterial chromosome behaves as a loaded entropic spring in vivo.


Molecular Microbiology | 1999

dnaC mutations suppress defects in DNA replication- and recombination-associated functions in priB and priC double mutants in Escherichia coli K-12

Steven J. Sandler; Kenneth J. Marians; Kenton H. Zavitz; Jaime Coutu; Michelle A. Parent; Alvin J. Clark

PriA, PriB and PriC were originally discovered as proteins essential for the ΦX174 in vitro DNA replication system. Recent studies have shown that PriA mutants are poorly viable, have high basal levels of SOS expression (SOSH), are recombination deficient (Rec−), sensitive to UV irradiation (UVS) and sensitive to rich media. These data suggest that priAs role may be more complex than previously thought and may involve both DNA replication and homologous recombination. Based on the ΦX174 system, mutations in priB and priC should cause phenotypes like those seen in priA2::kan mutants. To test this, mutations in priB and priC were constructed. We found that, contrary to the ΦX174 model, del(priB)302 and priC303::kan mutants have almost wild‐type phenotypes. Most unexpectedly, we then found that the priBC double mutant had very poor viability and/or a slow growth rate (even less than a priA2::kan mutant). This suggests that priB and priC have a redundant and important role in Escherichia coli. The priA2::kan suppressor, dnaC809, partially suppressed the poor viability/slow growth phenotype of the priBC double mutant. The resulting triple mutant (priBC dnaC809 ) had small colony size, recombination deficiency and levels of SOS expression similar to a priA2::kan mutant. The priBC dnaC809 mutant, however, was moderately UVR and had good viability, unlike a priA2::kan mutant. Additional mutations in the triple mutant were selected to suppress the slow growth phenotype. One suppressor restored all phenotypes tested to nearly wild‐type levels. This mutation was identified as dnaC820 (K178N) [mapping just downstream of dnaC809 (E176G)]. Experiments suggest that dnaC820 makes dnaC809 suppression of priA and or priBC mutants priB and or priC independent. A model is proposed for the roles of these proteins in terms of restarting collapsed replication forks from recombinational intermediates.


Molecular Microbiology | 2005

Localization of RecA in Escherichia coli K-12 using RecA–GFP

Nicholas Renzette; Nathan Gumlaw; Jared T. Nordman; Marlee Krieger; Su-Ping Yeh; Edward Long; Richard C. Centore; Ruethairat Boonsombat; Steven J. Sandler

RecA is important in recombination, DNA repair and repair of replication forks. It functions through the production of a protein–DNA filament. To study the localization of RecA in live Escherichia coli cells, the RecA protein was fused to the green fluorescence protein (GFP). Strains with this gene have recombination/DNA repair activities three‐ to tenfold below wild type (or about 1000‐fold above that of a recA null mutant). RecA–GFP cells have a background of green fluorescence punctuated with up to five foci per cell. Two types of foci have been defined: 4,6‐diamidino‐2‐phenylindole (DAPI)‐sensitive foci that are bound to DNA and DAPI‐insensitive foci that are DNA‐less aggregates/storage structures. In log phase cells, foci were not localized to any particular region. After UV irradiation, the number of foci increased and they localized to the cell centre. This suggested colocalization with the DNA replication factory. recA, recB and recF strains showed phenotypes and distributions of foci consistent with the predicted effects of these mutations.

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Alvin J. Clark

University of California

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James L. Keck

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Nicholas Renzette

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Kenneth J. Marians

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Maxime Leroux

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Richard C. Centore

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Shawn C. Massoni

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Jarukit E. Long

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Jesse D. McCool

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Ruethairat Boonsombat

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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