Bacterial plasmid partitioning systems segregate plasmids into each daughter cell. In the well-understood ParMRC plasmid partitioning system, adapter protein ParR binds to centromere parC, forming a helix around which the DNA is externally wrapped. This complex stabilizes the growth of a filament of actin-like ParM protein, which pushes the plasmids to the poles. The TubZRC plasmid partitioning system consists of two proteins, tubulin-like TubZ and TubR, and a DNA centromere, tubC, which perform analogous roles to those in ParMRC, despite being unrelated in sequence and structure. We have dissected in detail the binding sites that comprise Bacillus thuringiensis tubC, visualized the TubRC complex by electron microscopy, and determined a crystal structure of TubR bound to the tubC repeat. We show that the TubRC complex takes the form of a flexible DNA-protein filament, formed by lateral coating along the plasmid from tubC, the full length of which is required for the successful in vitro stabilization of TubZ filaments. We also show that TubR from Bacillus megaterium forms a helical superstructure resembling that of ParR. We suggest that the TubRC DNA-protein filament may bind to, and stabilize, the TubZ filament by forming such a ring-like structure around it. The helical superstructure of this TubRC may indicate convergent evolution between the actincontaining ParMRC and tubulin-containing TubZRC systems.FtsZ | X-ray crystallography | DNA segregation L ow copy number plasmids often encode their own segregation machinery, ensuring that copies are partitioned into each daughter cell. These plasmid-partitioning systems organize replicated plasmids and actively separate them. The known plasmidpartitioning systems are minimalist and elegant. They consist of just three components: a DNA centromere, an adapter protein that binds the centromere, forming the centromeric complex, and a nucleotide triphosphate-dependent filament-forming protein, which produces the force to move the plasmids (1, 2).Plasmid partitioning systems have been divided into types I-III, based upon the homology of their filament-forming proteins to known protein families (2, 3). Type I plasmid partitioning systems (4, 5) are based on deviant Walker A ATPases (6, 7), type II (8) on actin-like proteins (9), and type III (10-12) on tubulin/FtsZ-like proteins (13,14). Although the structure of the filament implicated in segregation has been determined for all three systems (9, 14-16), only examples of type I and II centromeric complexes have so far been resolved (17)(18)(19).The centromeric complex of the type II (actin-like) ParMRC plasmid partitioning system is formed by the binding of adapter protein ParR to parC, a series of parallel (direct), 11-base pair (bp) repeats (20). The superstructure this complex forms is helical, right-handed, and places the parC DNA on the exterior of the helix and ParR on the interior (18,19). This arrangement clusters the interaction surfaces between ParM and ParR, which are located at the tip of the ParM filament and ...