Spatial organization of the flow of genetic information in bacteria

被引:0
|
作者
Paula Montero Llopis
Audrey F. Jackson
Oleksii Sliusarenko
Ivan Surovtsev
Jennifer Heinritz
Thierry Emonet
Christine Jacobs-Wagner
机构
[1] Cellular and Developmental Biology,Department of Molecular
[2] Yale University,Department of Physics
[3] New Haven,undefined
[4] Connecticut 06520,undefined
[5] USA,undefined
[6] Howard Hughes Medical Institute,undefined
[7] Yale University,undefined
[8] New Haven,undefined
[9] Connecticut 06520,undefined
[10] USA,undefined
[11] Yale University,undefined
[12] New Haven,undefined
[13] Connecticut 06520,undefined
[14] USA,undefined
[15] Section of Microbial Pathogenesis,undefined
[16] Yale School of Medicine,undefined
[17] New Haven,undefined
[18] Connecticut 06510,undefined
[19] USA,undefined
[20] Current address: Cutaneous Biology Research Center,undefined
[21] Massachusetts General Hospital,undefined
[22] Harvard Medical School,undefined
[23] Charlestown,undefined
[24] Massachusetts 02129,undefined
[25] USA.,undefined
来源
Nature | 2010年 / 466卷
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摘要
Eukaryotic cells spatially organize mRNA processes such as translation and mRNA decay. Much less is clear in bacterial cells where the spatial distribution of mature mRNA remains ambiguous. Using a sensitive method based on quantitative fluorescence in situ hybridization, we show here that in Caulobacter crescentus and Escherichia coli, chromosomally expressed mRNAs largely display limited dispersion from their site of transcription during their lifetime. We estimate apparent diffusion coefficients at least two orders of magnitude lower than expected for freely diffusing mRNA, and provide evidence in C. crescentus that this mRNA localization restricts ribosomal mobility. Furthermore, C. crescentus RNase E appears associated with the DNA independently of its mRNA substrates. Collectively, our findings show that bacteria can spatially organize translation and, potentially, mRNA decay by using the chromosome layout as a template. This chromosome-centric organization has important implications for cellular physiology and for our understanding of gene expression in bacteria.
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页码:77 / 81
页数:4
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