Replication of the Escherichia coli chromosome is initiated at a unique site, oriC. Concurrent initiation occurs at all oriC sites present in a cell once, and only once, per cell cycle. A mechanism to ensure cyclic initiation events was found operating through the chromosomal site, datA, a 1-kb segment located at 94.7 min on the genetic map that titrates exceptionally large amounts of the bacterial initiator protein, DnaA. A strain lacking datA grew normally but exhibited an asynchronous initiation phenotype as a result of extra initiation events. This mutant phenotype was suppressed by DnaA-titrating plasmids. Furthermore, mutations in a 9-bp DnaA-binding sequence (the DnaA box) in datA were enough to induce the mutant phenotype. Thus, datA is a novel chromosomal element that appears to adjust a balance between free and bound DnaA for a single initiation event at a fixed time in the bacterial cell cycle. Titration of DnaA to newly duplicated datA during oriC sequestration, which is mediated by hemimethylated GATC sequences in oriC and the SeqA protein, would contribute to prevention of reinitiations when oriC is desequestered.
The chemotherapeutic agent 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) causes intestinal mucositis with severe diarrhoea, but the pathogenesis is not fully understood. In this study, we investigated the pathogenic effects of 5-FU in mice, focusing on apoptosis, enterobacteria and inflammatory cytokines. Repeated administration of 5-FU caused severe intestinal mucositis on day 6, accompanied by diarrhoea and body-weight loss. TNF-α expression increased 1 day after exposure to the drug, and spiked a second time on day 4, at which point myeloperoxidase activity and IL-1β expression also increased. Apoptotic cells were observed in intestinal crypts only on day 1. 5-FU also induced dysbiosis, notably decreasing the abundance of intestinal Firmicutes while increasing the abundance of Bacteroidetes and Verrucomicrobia. Twice-daily co-administration of oral antibiotics significantly reduced the severity of intestinal mucositis and dysbiosis, and blocked the increase in myeloperoxidase activity and cytokine expression on day 6, without affecting apoptosis and TNF-α up-regulation on day 1. In cultured colonic epithelial cells, exposure to 5-FU also up-regulated TNF-α expression. Collectively, the data suggest that crypt apoptosis, dysbiosis and expression of inflammatory cytokines are sequential events in the development of intestinal mucositis after exposure to 5-FU. In particular, 5-FU appears to directly induce apoptosis via TNF-α and to suppress intestinal cell proliferation, thereby resulting in degradation of the epithelial barrier, as well as in secondary inflammation mediated by inflammatory cytokines.
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