Adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) is the major energy currency of all living organisms. Despite its important functions, the spatiotemporal dynamics of ATP levels inside living multicellular organisms is unclear. In this study, we modified the genetically encoded Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based ATP biosensor ATeam to optimize its affinity at low temperatures. This new biosensor, AT1.03NL, detected ATP changes inside Drosophila S2 cells more sensitively than the original biosensor did, at 25 °C. By expressing AT1.03NL in Drosophila melanogaster and Caenorhabditis elegans, we succeeded in imaging the in vivo ATP dynamics of these model animals at single-cell resolution.
MuB is an ATP-dependent nonspecific DNA-binding protein that regulates the activity of the MuA transposase and captures target DNA for transposition. Mechanistic understanding of MuB function has previously been hindered by MuB's poor solubility. Here we combine bioinformatic, mutagenic, biochemical, and electron microscopic analyses to unmask the structure and function of MuB. We demonstrate that MuB is an ATPase associated with diverse cellular activities (AAA+ ATPase) and forms ATP-dependent filaments with or without DNA. We also identify critical residues for MuB's ATPase, DNA binding, protein polymerization, and MuA interaction activities. Using single-particle electron microscopy, we show that MuB assembles into a helical filament, which binds the DNA in the axial channel. The helical parameters of the MuB filament do not match those of the coated DNA. Despite this protein-DNA symmetry mismatch, MuB does not deform the DNA duplex. These findings, together with the influence of MuB filament size on strand-transfer efficiency, lead to a model in which MuB-imposed symmetry transiently deforms the DNA at the boundary of the MuB filament and results in a bent DNA favored by MuA for transposition.Phage Mu | nucleoprotein filament D NA transposons are ubiquitous in the genomes of all forms of life and play important evolutionary roles in generating gene diversity and in shaping genomic landscapes (1). Although typically transposons exhibit no strong sequence selectivity for the target DNA site, certain transposons avoid self-destructive insertion (reviewed in ref.2), a phenomenon called "target immunity" because the presence of a copy of the transposon renders nearby DNA sites "immune" to additional insertion by the same transposon (3-8). MuB plays critical roles in this selfimmunity in the bacteriophage Mu transposition process.Phage Mu is one of the most complex and efficient transposable elements (reviewed in refs. 3 and 4). Two phage-coded proteins, MuA and MuB, are essential for efficient Mu transposition. MuA is the transposase responsible for synapsing the two Mu end sequences and for all of the DNA cutting and joining steps in the initial stages of transposition. However, transposition is inefficient in the absence of MuB, and the residual Mu insertion that takes place uses only DNA target sites near or within the transposing element, often leading to self-destruction (9-11). MuB is a small (35-kDa) ATP-dependent nonspecific DNA-binding protein with relatively low ATPase activity (10,12,13). Upon ATP binding, MuB polymerizes preferentially on DNA, but in the absence of DNA it still can form polymers of variable sizes (14, 15). When observed by total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy, GFP-MuB-ATP binds along the DNA molecule forming many short separate segments of polymers, and, as more GFP-MuB is added, the protein-covered segments elongate to form an apparently continuous polymer that fully coats the DNA. Hydrolysis of ATP reverses this process, triggering disassembly of the MuB polymer (16-18)...
Escherichia coli RecA protein plays a role in DNA homologous recombination, recombination repair, and the rescue of stalled or collapsed replication forks. The mgsA ( rarA ) gene encodes a highly conserved DNAdependent ATPase, whose yeast orthologue, MGS1 , plays a role in maintaining genomic stability. In this study, we show a functional relationship between mgsA and recA during DNA replication. The mgsA recA double mutant grows more slowly and has lower viability than a recA single mutant, but they are equally sensitive to UV-induced DNA damage. Mutations in mgsA and recA cause lethality in DNA polymerase I deficient cells, and suppress the temperature-dependent growth defect of dnaE486 (Pol III α α α α -catalytic subunit). Moreover, recAS25P , a novel recA allele identified in this work, does not complement the slow growth of ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ mgsA ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ recA cells or the lethality of polA12 ∆ ∆ ∆ ∆ recA , but is proficient in DNA repair, homologous recombination, SOS mutagenesis and SOS induction. These results suggest that RecA and MgsA are functionally redundant in rescuing stalled replication forks, and that the DNA repair and homologous recombination functions of RecA are separated from its function to maintain progression of replication fork.
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