Issue 3, 2011

Gene clusters reflecting macrodomain structure respond to nucleoid perturbations

Abstract

Focusing on the DNA-bridging nucleoid proteins Fis and H-NS, and integrating several independent experimental and bioinformatic data sources, we investigate the links between chromosomal spatial organization and global transcriptional regulation. By means of a novel multi-scale spatial aggregation analysis, we uncover the existence of contiguous clusters of nucleoid-perturbation sensitive genes along the genome, whose expression is affected by a combination of topological DNA state and nucleoid-shaping protein occupancy. The clusters correlate well with the macrodomain structure of the genome. The most significant of them lay symmetrically at the edges of the Ter macrodomain and involve all of the flagellar and chemotaxis machinery, in addition to key regulators of biofilm formation, suggesting that the regulation of the physical state of the chromosome by the nucleoid proteins plays an important role in coordinating the transcriptional response leading to the switch between a motile and a biofilm lifestyle.

Graphical abstract: Gene clusters reflecting macrodomain structure respond to nucleoid perturbations

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
28 Sep 2010
Accepted
04 Nov 2010
First published
16 Dec 2010

Mol. BioSyst., 2011,7, 878-888

Gene clusters reflecting macrodomain structure respond to nucleoid perturbations

V. F. Scolari, B. Bassetti, B. Sclavi and M. C. Lagomarsino, Mol. BioSyst., 2011, 7, 878 DOI: 10.1039/C0MB00213E

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